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Tamil Nadu medicos end strike, doctors to report to duty

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TN Doctors Strike
The doctors had returned to duty after the state government had issued an ultimatum to the protesting doctors threatening to replace them if they did not report to duty.
File image | Image for Representation
Following Tamil Nadu Government’s ultimatum to the protesting doctors, the strike has now been called off, a week after it began. The government of Tamil Nadu also has withdrawn the 'Break in service' action initiated against the protesting doctors, after a representation from the doctors met with State Health Minister C Vijayabaskar on Friday.  A group representation from the Federation of Government Doctors Association (FOGDA) attended the meeting with Vijayabaskar with the presence of Beela Rajesh, the state health secretary on Friday. After the meeting the government thanked the doctors for returning to work and announced that it will consider the reasonable demands of the doctors.  Speaking to TNM Dr Rama from the Federation of Government Doctors Association (FOGDA) had earlier told TNM that the protest was being called off since the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu had appealed to the doctors to report to duty and then attend the talks with the government. The Tamil Nadu government had issued an ultimatum to protesting doctors on Thursday, threatening to replace them if they did not report to duty. Health Minister Vijayabaskar said that a count will be taken of missing doctors and the vacancies will be filled through fresh recruitment or transfers. Nearly 16,000 government doctors across Tamil Nadu launched an indefinite strike on October 25 over four demands. The demands include periodic salary raise and promotions from the state health department; rectification of all inconsistencies in GO 4(D)2 (the government order implementing the staffing pattern to the hospitals so as to strengthen the health care delivery systems and sanctioning of posts as per the Medical Council of India guidelines and hiring people according to patient strength; 50% state-wise reservation for PG speciality and super speciality courses; and fourth, transparent counselling while appointing those who have completed their PGs. The protesting doctors belonged to various groups under FOGDA in the state. The protest at the Rajiv Gandhi General Hospital was led by five doctors, who belong to Chennai, Tiruvallur and Tiruvannamalai districts. The doctors have been sitting on a hunger strike in front of the hospital from Friday. The state government has refused to give in to their demands. This, however, is not the first time government doctors in Tamil Nadu are going on a strike insisting on their demands of pay parity. On July 10, government medical officers in Trichy, Chennai and Salem organised a day-long hunger strike emphasising their demands. On August 20, the doctors, interns and their families formed a human chain to draw attention to their demands. 
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Pollachi sexual assault: Goondas Act dropped against 2 accused due to cops' incompetence

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Sexual Assault
Thirunavukkarasu and Sabarirajan, the two main accused in the Pollachi sexual assault case, can now apply for bail because of police ineptitude in filing proper papers.
Sheer incompetence on the part of the Tamil Nadu police has allowed two of the main accused in the Pollachi sexual assault case to no longer be detained under the Goondas Act. The Madras High Court on Friday quashed the Goondas Act invoked against Thirunavukkarasu and Sabarirajan (alias Riswandh) citing unclear documentation on the part of the police. Under the Tamil Nadu Prevention of Dangerous Activities of Bootleggers, Drug Offenders, Forest Offenders, Goondas, Immoral Traffic Offenders, Slum Grabbers and Video Pirates Act, 1982 or Goondas Act, an accused can be imprisoned without bail for up to a year. However, failure on the part of the Tamil Nadu police to put in place proper documentation means that the two men who allegedly lured the survivor and then sexually assaulted her, will now be able to apply for bail. The quashing of the Goondas Act came on Friday as the Madras High Court was hearing a petition moved by the parents of the accused Thirunavukkarasu and Sabarirajan. In their petition, they had stated that sexual crimes must be investigated only under the specific laws and that the details about the imposition of Goondas Act on Thirunavukkarasu and Sabarirajan were not informed to their families. The petition was heard by a bench consisting of Justice MM Sundresh and Justice RMT Teekaa Raman, who stated that the relatives of the accused were not provided with the relevant documents informing that he accused were detained under the Goondas Act. The judges also stated that the documents related to the Goondas Act being invoked are unclear and thereby cancelled the District Collector’s orders. The District Collector of Coimbatore had approved adding provisions of Goondas Act against the four men accused in the Pollachi sexual assault case in March 2019. Based on the Collector’s orders, the four men -- Thirunavukkarasu, Sabarirajan, Sathish and Vasanthakumar -- were remanded to judicial custody with the provisions of the Goondas Act added to the FIR. The case relates to a complaint filed by a Pollachi-based woman on February 24, stating that four men -- Thirunavukkarasu, Sathish, Sabarirajan and Vasanthakumar – allegedly sexually assaulted her in a car under the pretext of a friendly meeting on February 12. The police also confirmed that the accused in the case had videographed the act and used it later to extort money from the survivor. Sabarirajan, Vasanthakumar and Sathish were arrested on February 24 and Thirunavukkarasu was apprehended on March 5. After alleged police inaction and huge public outcry, the probe was transferred to the CBI, which filed the first chargesheet in the case in May. The Pollachi case, however, is not the first time that police incompetence has allowed accused in a sexual assault case to walk free. In 2017, Dhasvanth, the main accused in the child sexual assault and murder of a seven-year-old girl in Chennai’s Mugalivakkam, was allowed to walk out on bail after the Madras High Court  set aside the Goondas Act invoked against him. At the time, police delay in booking the accused under the Goondas Act had allowed him to be released on bail. Within months of his release, he went on to allegedly murder his mother.  Also read: What is the Pollachi sexual assault and extortion case: A detailed explainer
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Over 60 fishermen from TN missing, families suspect they were caught in cyclone

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Missing Fishermen
According to authorities, five boats out of 770, that left from Kanyakumari and Thoothukudi districts are currently missing.
(Image for representation)
It has been over two weeks since 6 men from 48-year-old Janet's residence in Kanyakumari district embarked on a journey into rough waters for deep sea fishing. Her two brothers, uncle, brother-in-law and two nephews had left on October 16, in what has become an annual practice. This year however, Janet fears that they will not return. In the last month alone, over 100 boats left from Vallavailai where Janet lives. And while the other fishermen have either returned home or made it safely to the shores of Kochi, Goa or Mumbai, the location of six boats remains unknown."The boat belonged to us. Along with my relatives it also carried four neighbours in it," says Janet. "Except for one boy, Jino Raj, who is 18, the rest are all married and have children. Families including wives and children are terrified that they could have gone missing in the Kiyar cyclone," she adds. In 2017, Janet's husband had been out at sea in December when cyclone Ockhi struck and her barely made it out alive."His boat was shattered into pieces and he was holding on to wooden pieces for dear life when the coast guard and navy personnel rescued him. Since then he has completely stopped going to sea," she laments. "I am afraid that if the government doesn't act fast, we may not be as lucky this time," she adds, her voice choked with emotion. According to district administration, six boats out of a total of 770, that left from Kanyakumari and Thoothukudi districts are currently missing. From Kanyakumari alone 60-65 fishermen have not returned home."Till now, no authorities have come to meet us," says Janet. "Nobody from the government, no MLA or MP," she adds. District Collector Prashant M Wadnere however points out that necessary steps to find the fishermen have already been initiated."We have been in touch with the Fisheries department. They in turn are in touch with the Indian navy and coast guard. We have even contacted the Oman coast guard. We didn't have the initial location so it has been hard to contact them. We have communicated with other boats but only 6 boats are still unreachable," he says. "We had broadcasted warnings about the Kiyar cyclone but we are not sure if it reached them," he adds. But families of missing fishermen say the warnings came too late. 35-year-old Jency whose husband Thiyagu left to the sea on October 14, says the first warning regarding the cyclone only came on October 23."My husband left with three of my elder brothers and seven others from the neighbourhood," she says. "We are praying everyday for their return. If they knew a cyclone was brewing, they would have never gone."  
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Now, you can 'walk through' Keezhadi excavation sites at an exhibition in Madurai

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Archaeology
The Archaeological Department will be displaying about 70% of the 6,200 items excavated. This includes gold jewellery, pots and faces made of clay.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami on Friday inaugurated an exhibition of artefacts excavated at Keezhadi in Sivaganga district during the fourth and fifth phases. The items have been displayed in Madurai and are open to the public. Of the total 6,200 items excavated, the Archeological Department will be displaying about 70% of the items. This includes gold jewellery, pots and faces made of clay. Replicas of the scenes from the excavation themselves have been put on display, from wells to settlements. The exhibition will be open from 11 am and to 7 pm everyday. Speaking to TNM, T Udhayachandran, Commissioner of TN Archeological Department, said, "When you visit the excavation site, you can see the live action but we couldn't display the items category wise. But in this exhibition we can categorise from iron objects to pottery. In addition to this, there will be cultural text showing evidences of links to Sangam literature. So you can get a better understanding of the items." There will also be trained guides and members of the Archeological Department present there, to help visitors draw inferences. "We have also set up a virtual reality corner where you can have the experience of walking over the excavated sites. So, in a single location you will get the experience of the entire site," said the commissioner. The fourth and fifth phase of excavations at the site have led to major discoveries. Artefacts found there have determined a possible link between the scripts of the Indus Valley Civilisation and Tamil Brahmi, which is the precursor to modern Tamil. Another important discovery was that there was an urban civilisation in Tamil Nadu that was contemporary to the Gangetic plain civilisation.   The findings of the Archeological Department also indicate another major discovery — that an urban civilisation was thriving on the banks of the Vaigai River in Tamil Nadu in 6th Century BCE, around 2,500 years ago. What this suggests is that the Sangam era - considered Tamil Nadu’s golden age - began much earlier than what was once thought. With the five phases of excavations at Keezhadi in Tamil Nadu providing a rich haul of material and data about the past, the next excavation at the spot would begin by the end of January 2020.  
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Niece Deepa moves Madras HC seeking stay on release of Jayalalithaa biopics

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Court
Deepa submitted before the court that her explicit permission was required to make the film and web series.
J Deepa, the niece of former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa, has approached the Madras High Court seeking to restrain the release of two biopics on her aunt's life, one a feature film and another a web series.  The feature film in the works is directed by AL Vijay. Titled Thalaivi in Tamil and Jaya in Hindi, the film will have Bollywood actor Kangna Ranaut in the lead. The web series, on the other hand, directed by Gautham Menon, is titled Queen and stars Ramya Krishnan. Deepa submitted before the court that the full script of the productions be made available to her and that her explicit permission was required to make the film and web series. Deepa raised privacy concerns with regard to the portrayal of the late AIADMK supremo as well as herself. Her petition stated, “Dr J Jayalalitha is a great political personality and the said life story cannot be filmed without adding the life of [J Deepa] as part of the film. In such an event, the same would amount an interference of the privacy of [J Deepa]. More so, [J Deepa] is not aware of the story, script, screen play, dialogue, etc., prepared by the [directors and producer] in producing the said movie and for the web serial. [J Deepa] fears that the [directors and producer] may portray Dr J Jayalalitha and her personal life in the life story and [J Deepa] part in the life story may also be depicted by the [directors and producer] in their own version which may affect the family privacy and [J Deepa’s] privacy.” Earlier, Deepa's brother J Deepak had raised issues with Gautham Menon's web series, stating that the family's permission was needed for the portrayal of Jayalalithaa on screen.   Deepa also sought an interim injunction to restrain the filmmakers from promoting the film without her consent.
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TN Min Velumani graft case: DVAC given last chance to file inquiry report

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Court
Tamil Nadu's Minister for Municipal Administration is facing allegations that he indulged in unfair practices and corruption in awarding tenders.
The Madras High Court on Friday provided a ‘last chance’ to the Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) in Tamil Nadu to wrap up its pending preliminary enquiry into allegations of corruption against SP Velumani, Minister for Municipal Administration and Rural Development. The court mandated that the enquiry be completed by December 18.  Chennai-based anti-corruption NGO Arappor Iyakkam and the DMK had alleged that the minister had indulged in unfair practices and corruption in awarding Chennai and Coimbatore Corporation tenders. They had argued that there was sufficient evidence for the filing of a First Information Report (FIR) in the case. A division Bench of Justices M Sathyanarayanan and N Seshasayee held, however, that an FIR is a prerequisite for a detailed investigation. A "detailed investigation cannot be done under the garb of preliminary inquiry," they observed, according to one report in The Hindu. In October, the court had sought a status report from the DVAC and came down heavily on the anti-graft body for delaying the preliminary inquiry. The newspaper reports that judges directed Superintendent of Police R Ponni, the court-appointed officer leading the inquiry, to complete it within 48 days. Meanwhile, arguing their case for the registration of an FIR, Arappor Iyakkam had pointed out that multiple tenders bidding for corporation contracts had been filed from the same IP address. State Public Prosecutor A Natarajan refuted the allegations against the minister, stating that they were politically motivated to gain publicity. In a counter affidavit filed by the minister, he denied having been part of formulating the criteria for tender bids. He denied any interference from his part into the tender process or the granting of these tenders. He also claimed that no other contractor had challenged the validity of the final tenders granted, proving that there was no grounds for a lack of fair play or level playing field.
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Superstar Rajinikanth to get 'Icon of Golden Jubilee' award at IFFI 2019

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Film
The announcement was made by Union Minister Prakash Javadekar on Saturday and Rajinikanth has accepted the honour.
The Ministry for Information and Broadcasting has announced that the award for 'Icon of Golden Jubilee' of the International Film Festival of India, will be given to Superstar Rajinikanth. The announcement was made by Union Minister Prakash Javadekar on Saturday. The 50th edition of the film festival will be held in Goa from November 20 to November 28. Over 200 films from across the world will be screened at the venues. A tweet put out by the Minister stated, "In recognition of his outstanding contribution to Indian cinema, during the past several decades, I am happy to announce that the award for the ICON OF GOLDEN JUBILEE OF #IFFI2019 is being conferred on cine star Shri S Rajnikant." He further told the media that he was happy to note that the actor had accepted the award.  In recognition of his outstanding contribution to Indian cinema, during the past several decades, I am happy to announce that the award for the ICON OF GOLDEN JUBILEE OF #IFFI2019 is being conferred on cine star Shri S Rajnikant. IFFIGoa50 pic.twitter.com/oqjTGvcrvE — Prakash Javadekar (@PrakashJavdekar) November 2, 2019   The actor turned politician took to social media to say, "I thank the government of India for this prestigious honour bestowed upon me on the golden jubilee of the International film festival of India."  I thank the government of India for this prestigious honour bestowed upon me on the golden jubilee of the International film festival of India #IFFI2019 — Rajinikanth (@rajinikanth) November 2, 2019   Celebrated French actor Isabelle Huppert has also been announced as the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award. While Russia will be the partner country for the festival, in its golden jubilee year, the event is expected to showcase 50 films from 50 women filmmakers to acknowledge the contribution of women to cinema. Bollywood actor and Dadasaheb Phalke Award winner Amitabh Bachchan's selected seven or eight films will also be showcased at the movie gala.  
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In maps: How flooding will impact Chennai in 2030

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Environment
Climate Central's report confirms what activists have been saying for long.
PTI/Image for representation only
On October 29, 2019, Climate Central – a US-based climate think tank – released a report that has just made climate change shockingly real, immediate and local by confirming what activists have been saying for long. Using a highly accurate digital elevation model (DEM) assisted by machine-learning, the organisation’s scientists have established that earlier models – based on NASA’s Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) – had underestimated the extent of low-lying lands along the coast. The CoastalDEM used by Climate Central pegs the total number of people living in areas that will be affected by annual ocean flooding at 30 crores (300 million) by 2050. Of this, 75% will be in Asia – China, Bangladesh, India, Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam. 36 million people in coastal India will be affected by coastal flooding and inundation as a result of sea level rise, even if moderate cuts in CO2 emissions are undertaken. Unlike floods due to rains, coastal flooding leaves long-lasting damage – permanent damage if the events happen annually. Sea level rise will cause salinisation of land, damage to built structures due to corrosion, water scarcity due to salinity intrusion into freshwater aquifers, and outright destruction to critical infrastructure like ports and harbours, roads, and coastal power plants and desalination plants. Metropolitan cities like Kolkata, Chennai, Kochi and Mumbai are set to take a bad hit, if the model’s results are to be believed. Indian GIS experts like Raj Bhagat Palanichamy have pointed out that the current model too suffers from errors that may overstate the impact of sea level rise and associated inundation and flooding. He advises “extreme caution” when the document, the methods and data are used in local context, suggesting that “It’s better to do ground surveys for projecting the risks in these places.” He concludes that “Alarmist false positives are as bad as false negatives.” One should not resort to falsehoods to cause alarm. However, the “Precautionary Principle” states that one does not have to wait for conclusive proof of harm before taking action to protect oneself. The Government of India and its people do not appear prone to alarm. In fact, we seem to be remarkably alarm-proof. Even as global science came out with shocking revelations about the extent of climate change-induced sea level rise, the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change diluted the coastal protection rules – where the earlier rules prohibited construction within 100 metres of the High Tide Line, the new rules notified by the Ministry downgraded that to 10 metres from the HTL. In 2011, the Indian Space Research Organisation’s Space Applications Centre prepared a report identifying areas prone to submergence and coastal flooding. That was a conservative model based on 2007 projections of sea level rise by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Since then, the extent of sea level rise has been revised upwards to between 70 cm (best case) to up to 2 metres by 2100. Normal human beings would have been shocked and alarmed into action. At the very least, if the Government of India attached any importance to ISRO’s report, it would have commissioned the kind of ground-truthed detailed data for India’s coast. By now, we would have had a nuanced picture of the threats posed by sea level rise to the entire Indian coast. The magnitude of damage, and the likely social unrest and upheaval that will result from the revenge of the seas to cities like Chennai can only be surmised by taking a closer look at the area-level damage. Here’s a look at Chennai in 2030 – barely 10 years away -- as one travels from the North to the South. 'Moderate cuts in emissions' as well as 'moderate luck' have been chosen for the projections. Heeding Palanichamy’s advice, the below slides have been separated into “Good Reliability” and “Uncertain Reliability.” Slides identified as “Good Reliability” are from areas where ISRO data and Climate Central’s data are not radically different. Slides identified as “Uncertain Reliability” are areas that are not reflected in ISRO’s study. Regardless of the reliability of these maps, it would be safe to say that the people of India should be alarmed if not at the prospect of climate change, then at the total lack of preparedness in terms of data and action plans by our governments. To get a closer look to see if your home or office is in a risk-prone area, use the excellent interactive map here.  Slide 1 (Good Reliability): The Ennore Pulicat wetlands, where the Government of Tamil Nadu attempted to do away with entire stretches of Kosasthalaiyar’s backwaters by fudging the Coastal Zone Management Plan, is a scene of marine havoc and poetic justice. More than 1000 acres of the backwaters have been converted into industrial real estate. Local fisherfolk have waged a valiant battle to keep state and Central government Public Sector Units from preying on the low-lying areas, warning them that interfering with the backwaters can have disastrous consequences for low-lying areas elsewhere. Ennore area in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org The Climate Central map shows the Kamarajar Port Ltd (KPL), L&T Port, KPL’s coalyard and most of its proposed infrastructure to be affected by coastal flooding, with portions of it likely to be submerged by the ocean. Adani Ports has proposed to set up a Rs. 53,000 crore port and industrial estate obliterating nearly 2000 acres of the Ennore-Pulicat tidal wetlands. Most recently, fishers from Lake Pulicat wrote to the Expert Appraisal Committee of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change warning them about how the proposed port and industrial estate will harm the area when sea levels rise. The experts, who have ignored their warnings, are likely to see the folly of their unscientific decision in their lifetimes. We may have missed the bus on arresting or reversing climate change, but we can still avoid worsening it. That would require cutting down on emissions and bad land-use changes. Unmindful of the science and the needs and rights of future generations, TANGEDCO, the state electricity utility, wants to add more than 3000 MW of coal thermal power plants in Ennore. Slide 2 (Uncertain Reliability): East India Company’s trading post established around Fort St. George houses some of the earliest and grand colonial buildings. This densely populated hub of commerce and administration – the Secretariat is located in the Fort – is likely to be affected by inundation and periodic flooding. With Chennai harbour drowned by the sea, the Bay pushes in through the Cooum and the Buckingham Canal. North Chennai in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org The Madras High Court is shown to be prone to annual sea floods. Perambur, Purasaiwalkam, Washermanpet, Tondiarpet, Periamet, Vepery the Kodungaiyur garbage dumpyard and former Chief Minister’s entire assembly constituency of R.K. Nagar will be exposed to the ocean. Slide 3 (Uncertain Reliability): Chennai’s favourite outdoors recreational space is the Marina beach, which was artificially created when Chennai harbour’s breakwaters blocked the northward drift of sand along the shore. By 2050, when Chennai harbour is swallowed by the sea, the Marina will be under water. With the tide lapping at the steps of the state police headquarters, Chennai police will have bigger anxieties than having to deal with public protests on the beach. Many of our chief ministers who were laid to rest on the beach are likely to be disturbed if the model’s findings hold true. Marina beach area in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org Slide 4 (Uncertain Reliability): Adyar’s southern bank houses the Besant Nagar beach, the fishing villages of Urur Olcott Kuppam and Odai Kuppam, the famous Velankanni church. The fishing villages are likely to be seriously affected. Most of the hip and happening tourist beach will disappear or be periodically flooded. One would need scuba gear to visit Schmidt Memorial and the Governor Bungalow. The famed church and the nearby Ashtalakshmi Temple too will take a beating. Beasant Nagar beach area in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org Slide 5 & 6 (Good Reliability): In the 2015 floods, one of the worst affected regions in Chennai was along the IT corridor. Built on low-lying areas of the Pallikaranai marshlands over the last 15 years, this area is destined to become a watery grave. What the rains did to remind Chennai of its hydrological offences by temporarily drowning homes, shops, malls and IT offices built on areas reserved for water, the sea will do by annual flooding events. IT Corrdior in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org The Sholinganallur ELCOT IT Special Economic Zone built over the Pallikaranai marshlands will witness ocean floods, unmindful of the fact that many of the IT offices have received Gold and Platinum certificates from international Green Building certifying agencies. IT Corrdior in 2030, with moderate cuts in emissions and moderate luck. Image credit: www.climatecentral.org The key conduit to conveying the deadly effects of Sea Level Rise through the length of the city is a much-celebrated Colonial era engineered water body called the Buckingham Canal. The IT Corridor used to be drained by the Buckingham Canal through the Kovalam Creek into the Bay of Bengal. In the era of climate change, everything reverses and the Bay enters through Kovalam Creek and the Buckingham Canal to flood the Pallikaranai. Panic is not the answer. There is an urgent need for detailed ground-truthed high-resolution data on coastal elevation, particularly for urban centres along the coast. There is a crying need for acknowledgement by the government that the coast is vulnerable. This acknowledgement can come in the form of a declaration that areas already under tidal influence and known low-lying areas hydrologically connected to the sea will be No Development Zones. (With inputs from K Saravanan, a fisher rights activist from Urur Kuppam) Nityanand is a writer and social activist based in Chennai. Views expressed are author's own.
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Kudankulam at cyber risk: Why the govt needs to be more transparent, prepared

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Nuclear Security
India's Nuclear Power Corporation experienced a malware attack this week, by a North Korean hacker group.
On October 28, cyber attack fears hit the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP) when Pukhraj Singh, a former official at the National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO), tweeted that a server computer (domain controller) had been accessed at the plant in Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu. His tweet was in response to an account that pointed out a potential attack on the plant’s systems by an online virus called 'DTRACK'. This virus, reportedly developed by a North Korean hacker group called Lazarus, can be used to remotely extract data from a system. The spyware (virus) extracts data such as keylogging, browser history, IP hosts, running processes and all files on a computer. Further, Pukhraj Singh, who is also a cyber security expert, said in his tweet that extremely 'mission-critical targets were hit. Even as fears of cyber espionage by a foreign actor caused outrage, KKNPP denied the incident on October 29, terming it ‘baseless’. “The software in all nuclear power plants in the country is an independent one and not tied to any external network. It is false propaganda. Both power plants are running now and generating power,” KKNPP told TNM. A day later, on October 30, the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL)— the governing body for nuclear power plants in the country—  admitted that a ‘malware’ was identified in one of their systems. NPCIL said that the matter, conveyed to them by the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) on September 4, was immediately investigated. However, the carefully crafted statement did not categorically say whether the identification of malware was at the Kudankulam plant as had been pointed out by security researchers the previous day.  Thus, the past week saw two government agencies saying two different things and there is still no answer from the NPCIL or the Department of Atomic Energy to the original question of whether a system in the nuclear plant in Tamil Nadu was exposed to a cyber attack. With concerns rising about nuclear security at the southern tip of the country and no answers forthcoming, experts have called for a re-look at the existing policies, both in terms of India’s nuclear regime as well as its cyber security infrastructure.  Speaking to TNM, G Sundar Rajan of Poovulagin Nanbargal, an environmental group in the state, cautions that it is risky to continue running nuclear plants in densely populated areas, when the cause of an untoward incident is no longer just human error or a natural disaster.  He says, “Luckily for us, the malware was detected in an administrative system and not control system. But even in that case, the system is strategically important. That is where information on maintenance routines, nuclear waste, storage, personnel manning the plant, etc is stored. Those who have hacked the system have likely accessed all this data, exposing our vulnerabilities. In 2017, nuclear watch dogs had warned that the Indian nuclear reactors were vulnerable to cyber attacks. Even after this, if our cyber security systems are not failure-proof, it is very risky to run this plant in a densely populated area.”  Echoing the need for up-to-date systems for a highly consequential national security apparatus, Shibani Mehta, defence and foreign affairs analyst at the Bengaluru-based Takshashila Institution questions the preparedness to thwart potential attacks. “An attack is only as significant as the impact it creates. The incident at KKNPP itself is no reason to panic. It does, however, warrant cyber threats to nuclear plants and brings to question the preparedness to thwart such threats,” she says.  On the question of transparency, she says, “While transparency is critical to public trust, it cannot always be the operating principle, and almost never at the cost of national security. There are procedures to identify and contain threats and protect critical security infrastructure— especially when it comes to cyber and related technology. Governments must continue to strive to stay ahead of the curve and predict and prevent threats new age tech may pose.” Sundar Rajan, on the other hand, believes that the latest incident presents another opportunity for us to radically re-think our nuclear policy. “Even after investing thousands of crores of rupees in nuclear power over 60 years, we only get 6,000 MW of power from these plants annually. That's very little. A nuclear disaster, however, will not stop at Kudankulam or Tirunelveli, it will affect all of south India. This latest incident only makes our conviction stronger that nuclear reactors and humans cannot co-exist. Only one or the other can exist.” he adds.
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Missing Thoothukudi fishermen safe, search still on for Kanyakumari fisherfolk

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Missing Fishermen
The 39 fishermen who were in five boats had left for deep sea fishing before a cyclone warning was announced and it was suspected that they were trapped in rough waters.
Fishermen missing from Tharuvaikulam from Thoothukudi district have all been traced and found to be safe, two weeks after they ventured out to sea. The 39 fishermen who were in five boats had left for deep sea fishing before a cyclone warning was announced and it was suspected that they were trapped in rough waters. However, Thoothukudi MP and DMK leader Kanimozhi confirmed to TNM that authorities have communicated with all five boats. While four boats reached their home towns on Friday, one more missing boat has reached Minicoy island in Lakshadweep. All the missing fishermen from Tharuvaikulam have returned safely. I would like to thank the @HMOIndia , the coast guard who helped the missing boat of fishermen reach Minika island safley and the district collector of tuticorin who was continuously following up. — Kanimozhi (கனிமொழி) (@KanimozhiDMK) November 1, 2019 Meanwhile, the Kanyakumari Collector Prashant M Wadnere told TNM, that the five boats missing from his district are yet to be traced. According to the district administration, over five boats and 60-65 fishermen have not returned home. These boats left coastal villages between October 14 and October 16. The Collector had told TNM on Friday that the district administration was in touch with the Fisheries department and they were in turn co-ordinating with the Indian Navy and Coast Guard. He said that even Oman Coast Guard had been alerted. The Coast Guard meanwhile has deployed two vessels to find the missing fishermen.  When TNM contacted the Coast guard they maintained that nine boats were yet to come back to shore, of which they have communicated with six and told them to return. Three boats continue to remain incommunicable. "We had broadcasted warnings about the Kiyar cyclone but we are not sure if it reached them," said the Collector. Families of the missing fishermen however alleged that the warnings came too late. 35-year-old Jency whose husband Thiyagu left to the sea on October 14, says the first warning regarding the cyclone only came on October 23."My husband left with three of my elder brothers and seven others from the neighbourhood," she says. "We are praying everyday for their return. If they knew a cyclone was brewing, they would have never gone.". 
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30-year-old TN man arrested for allegedly murdering mother, grievously injuring father

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Murder
Early on Saturday, Prakash attacked his mother Pappathi (49) and his father Arumugam (53) with a weightlifting rod.
The Trichy police on Saturday arrested a 30-year-old man for allegedly murdering his mother and grievously injuring his father. The accused, identified as Prakash of Ganesapuram attacked his mother Pappathi (49) and his father Arumugam (53) with a weightlifting rod over an argument in the early hours of Saturday. He then surrendered before the Golden Rock Police at around 3.00 am on Saturday. While Pappathi died on the way to the hospital, Prakash’s father is currently undergoing treatment at Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Government Hospital. Prakash was allegedly involved in a verbal argument with his mother during the wee hours of Saturday when the attack took place. He had just returned home after having dropped his wife off at her parents’ house in Oddanchathiram, Dindigul. Due to repeated quarrels between her and his mother, Prakash’s wife had decided to spend some days at her maternal home. Prakash had married nine months ago and his mother Pappathi was allegedly not on good terms with her daughter-in-law. Unable to take the constant fights in the house, Prakash grew angry with his parents for making him send his wife away to her parents’ place. A case of murder has been booked against him and he has been arrested. According to TOI, Prakash is unemployed. In December last year, the Tambaram bus terminus in Chennai bore witness to a gruesome murder as a man hacked his mother to death and attacked his sister, allegedly over a property dispute. The accused, Devarajan, had filed a case in the Chengalpattu district civil court against his mother, Muthamma, and sister, Vijayalakshmi, seeking a share in the property. In the court, Muthamma stated that Devarajan was not taking care of her and that it was her daughter who was doing it. She had said that she did not consider Devarajan to get a share in the property. Enraged, Devarajan attacked both of them while they were on their way back home after the hearing. 
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One dead, 13 injured as TNSTC bus hits container truck in Chennai

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Accident
The accident took place during the early hours of Saturday, killing the bus conductor and grievously injuring 13 others, including the driver.
Image for Representation
A Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) bus rammed into a container truck at Thathankuppam in Villivakkam, Chennai during the early hours of Saturday, killing the bus conductor and grievously injuring 13 others, including the driver. The accident reportedly took place at 2.40 am on Saturday at 200 Feet Road in Thathankuppam, near Padi flyover. The deceased, Veeramuthu, (42), was a resident of Red Hills and succumbed to his injuries soon after the collision. The bus driver, Govindasamy (53), a resident of Alamathi, has been admitted to Kilpauk Medical College (KMC) Hospital with critical injuries. The other injured passengers are undergoing treatment at the hospital. The bus was coming from Nellore and was heading towards Koyambedu Mofussil bus terminus. According to The Hindu, the police suspect that the bus driver could have dozed off at the wheel, causing the accident. Thirumangalam Traffic Investigation wing have registered a case and investigation is underway. In September this year, three people were killed and 33 injured as a Tamil Nadu government bus collided with a lorry in Krishnagiri district. According to reports, the accident happened around 4 am on the Krishnagiri-Hosur highway near Samalpallam. The bus, owned and operated by the Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC), was going to Hosur from Tiruvannamalai. As the bus was crossing Samalpallam area, around 60 kilometres from Hosur, the bus collided with a lorry that was coming from the opposite direction. In the impact, the bus driver Vediyappan died on the spot while conductor Sudhakar and a passenger Chinnakkannu died in hospital shortly after. In November last year, one person was killed and five others were injured in an accident near Trichy when a bus, trying to avoid a crossing motorcycle carrying three people, ran into a bus stop near Trichy. As the bus approached Ramji Nagar, a motorbike with three persons on it allegedly tried to cross the road. In order to avoid hitting the bike, the bus swerved to the side of the road, thereby hitting the bus stop at the Ramji Nagar bus stop.
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'Life goes on': TN’s ‘idli paati’ says she’s still waiting for promises to be fulfilled

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Human Interest
Kamalathal, who became famous for making and selling idlis for Rs 1, received a host of promises from various quarters after her video went viral.
Months after she shot to fame for making and selling idlies for a rupee, 80-year-old Kamalathal from Coimbatore district, today waits for better times. Promises made to her are yet to be fulfilled, she says. Kamalathal is still waiting for the promised house that is to be built on land to be given by the government. "Life goes on. People came and took videos and went. My life goes on," she tells TNM from the sidelines of 'We the Women' in Bengaluru, an event curated by Barkha Dutt for Facebook and UN Women. The idli paati, as she is fondly called, says that the quality of life has not changed much after the coverage she got. "After many people took videos, some people came and told me that they will give me land. I am still waiting for that," she explains. A source close to Kamalathal adds that people close to the local MLA had allegedly promised to give land. "Based on that, the District Collector had promised to arrange to construct a house on that land under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (a central government housing for all scheme). Neither of it has happened for paati," the source says. After videos and stories of Kamalathal making idlis in a woodfired stove went viral, help poured in for her from various quarters. While all three public sector petroleum companies in India -- Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited, Indian Oil Corporation Limited and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited -- offered free gas stoves and a lifetime supply of commercial gas cylinders, Anand Mahindra, Chairman of the Mahindra group of companies had also promised to invest in her business. "We are getting the help promised by the gas companies. They are prompt in supplying cylinders for her within hours of the older one gets finished," says the source. One commercial gas cylinder lasts for about a week for Kamalathal. Her shop is in the front portion of her humble house near Pooluvapatti village, in the outskirts of Coimbatore. "When it rains, the shop gets filled with water. That day it will be tough for me to cook. I don't depend on anyone to help me either," she explains about the need for a decent house. For Kamalathal, making and selling idlis is her entire world. "I am selling 500-600 idlies every day. Sales has not gone up much. But it is good. In the last 30 years I have been selling idlis, I may have abstained from cooking for around 180 days. I don't know anything other than this," she says humbly. TNM has reached out to the Coimbatore District Collector for a comment. However, he is yet to respond to TNM’s queries. 
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After a parched summer, water levels at Chennai reservoirs begin to rise

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Water
While Chennai received excess rains during the southwest monsoon season, the city received 5% increase in rains in October as part of the northeast monsoon.
Poondi | Wikimedia Commons
Thanks to a generous southwest monsoon and an on-track northeast monsoon, water levels in Chennai’s reservoirs that supply the city its drinking water, have begun to rise once again, after nearly two years. Except for Poondi, the three other lakes had run dry and had not a drop of water in them between July and September this year. As of Saturday, storage at Poondi stands at 1694 mcft against its full capacity of 3231 mcft. This is 52.43% of its full capacity. Storage this time last year was less than half at 682 mcft. Cholavaram holds 208 mcft against its full capacity of 1081 mcft (19.24%) while in Redhills it is 863 mcft against 3300 mcft (26.15%). Chembarambakkam currently holds the least at 97 mcft against its full capacity of 3645 mcft (2.66%). At Veeranam, against its full capacity of 1,465 mcft, storage stands at 1180.40 mcft, just over 80% of its total capacity. Total storage in all four reservoirs put together stands to a quarter of its full capacity. Water levels measure 2,862 mcft (25.42%) against a total capacity of 11,257 mcft. Last year the levels stood at just 1,761 mcft. Poondi’s inflow is at 915 cusecs a day. The Poondi reservoir has been receiving its share of Krishna water from Kandaleru and Ammapalli reservoirs in Andhra Pradesh. According to a report in Times Of India, water from Poondi is being sent to Red Hills and Chembarambakkam. As on November 2, the 776 cusecs outflow from Poondi is being shared between Redhills with an inflow at 440 cusecs a day and Chembarambakkam with 257 cusecs a day. This southwest monsoon between June and September, Chennai received 587.8 mm of rainfall as opposed to its normal measurement of 439.6 mm, according to the information provided on Regional Meteorological Centre’s web page. Between October 1 and 30, Chennai received 5% increase in its northeast monsoon rainfall, recording 263.9 mm against its normal measure of 251 mm. After almost a decade of neglect, desilting works began in these lakes in September this year. According to reports which have quoted sources in the Water Resources Department, the Chembarambakkam lake, which covers an area of 2316 hectares, will be desilted over a period of eight years. Further, 25.30 lakh lorry loads would have to clear 151 lakh cubic metres of silt from the lake to improve storage capacity.  Desilting is a process which aims to rid the lake bed of accumulated silt to improve storage capacity. Prior to it, the lakes were only four storing water at 80% of its capacity, due to the presence of silt accumulated over decades.  In Cholavaram lake, at least 70,000 cubic metres of silt has been removed. The Redhills lake was expected to be desilted soon after an order to desilt the lake was issued seven months ago. According to a senior officer in CMWSSB, the last time desilting work was carried out in two of the four reservoirs was in 2008.
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Thiruvalluvar in orange robes: DMK and CPI(M) slam BJP for 'saffronising' legendary poet

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Controversy
MK Stalin, the DMK President responded to BJP’s tweet stating that BJP’s attempt to appropriate Thiruvalluvar is a betrayal for Tamils.
While Prime Minister Narendra Modi used a Tirukkural as an example to drive home a point in his speech in Thailand on Saturday, the BJP Tamil Nadu chapter came under severe criticism the same day for trying to 'saffronise' Thiruvalluvar, the poet who wrote Tirukkural. Controversy broke out after BJP Tamil Nadu’s official Twitter handle posted a tweet with Thiruvalluvar in orange robes and holy ash smeared on his forehead. The tweet picked a Tirukkural which asked what is the use of education when all they do is defame God and earn the wrath of believers. “Dravidar Kazhagam, the Communists, whose existence dependent on the DMK and their media organs must know and understand these words said by Tiruvalluvar,” the remaining part of the tweet read. While the content of the tweet may otherwise have been ignored by social media, it is the picture of Thiruvalluvar accompanying the tweet that sparked widespread outrage. Thiruvalluvar, the legendary Tamil poet, who gave the world the Tirukkural, was shown wearing saffron robes. What’s more, he was also shown wearing rudraksha beads on his neck and arms and holy ash and vermilion on his forehead and arms. For most people in the state, the image of Thiruvalluvar involves the poet clad in white robes without any visible marks on his forehead or jewellery on his body. The tweet garnered sharp reactions from Tamil Twitter users with many calling it a misinterpretation of the Tirukkural quoted in the tweet. By 6 pm on Sunday the hashtag #BJPInsultsThiruvalluvar had garnered over 20,000 tweets and was trending at the national level. MK Stalin, the DMK President responded to BJP’s tweet stating that BJP’s attempt to appropriate Thiruvalluvar is a betrayal for Tamils. “How much ever you colour, it will fade. Stop colouring and read Tirukkural and reform yourselves,” his tweet read. Sharply reacting to the BJP’s tweet, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) also released a statement of condemnation stating that since BJP does not have its own rich history, it’s attempt to appropriate icons for themselves by changing their identities and painting them with colour is hereby strongly condemned by the state committee of CPI(M). However as the war of words escalated, many right wing supporters on Twitter argued that Dravidian forces had made the legendary poet a Tamil icon, and taken away his Hindu credentials. This is my Thiruvalluvar, the and only Thiruvalluvar known to me and not the saffron clad. #BJPInsultsThiruvalluvar pic.twitter.com/HV3BykTUpc — பொன்னன் (@Ponnane) November 3, 2019 Saffron to Gandhiji..! Saffron to Ambedkar..! Now Saffron to Thiruvalluvar ? Who next ? #Periyar ?#BJPInsultsThiruvalluvar pic.twitter.com/uq4rfZ4VqS — venkysplace (@venkysplace) November 3, 2019 There have been 1000's of organisations, political parties & social movements in TN. None of them gave a communal colour or linked #Thiruvalluvar to their ideology. Be it left or right. It's sad that even #Thiruvalluvar is not spared today. pic.twitter.com/uQYWHrz5SX— Shabbir Ahmed (@Ahmedshabbir20) November 2, 2019 Thiruvalluvar wrote Tirukkural, a collection of 1330 couplets of worldly wisdom, which came to be known as the Universal common code, or ‘Ulaga podhu marai’.
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Anna Univ can follow 69% reservation even after Eminence status: Centre to TN govt

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Education
The clarification comes after the state government wrote to the Centre seeking clarity on reservation policy to be followed after the Institution of Eminence status.
Possibly accelerating the process of Tamil Nadu’s Anna University in getting the tag of ‘Institution of Eminence’ (IoE), the central government has stated that the university will get to maintain the existing reservation policy that it follows for admissions in future also. The clarification comes after the university wrote to the Government of India seeking clarity on the reservation system upon receiving the IoE tag. According to reports, the Ministry of Human Resources Development (MHRD) had issued a notification stating that institutions conferred with the IoE tag shall follow 49.5% reservation in admissions. However, Anna University, Tamil Nadu’s premier public university in charge of technical education in the state, currently follows the state’s policy of allocating 69% reservation system for admission to its courses. The MHRD, in a letter sent to the university last week, made the clarification about the reservation policy. This has quickened the process of the university receiving its IoE tag from the MHRD. Now, the only major issue remaining between Anna University and the IoE status is the state government’s Letter of Commitment related to funding. The university has also submitted its funding requirements for the next five years -- Rs 2570 crore -- to the central government to attain the IoE status. Anna University will also remain a state university after receiving the IoE status, as per the reports. Anna University was the only public university from Tamil Nadu to be chosen for the IoE tag by the MHRD. However, the status was contingent upon the state government’s approval. The other two institutions of higher education that were picked from Tamil Nadu were Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) and Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham. VIT received its IoE status a few months ago. The tag of ‘Institution of Eminence’ comes with financial support for research and infrastructure in the selected institutions. The IoE status will also grant financial autonomy and independence in decisions related to fees and faculty hiring. A grant of Rs 1,000 crore is expected to be given for public institutions over a 5-year period. 
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TN govt removes mandatory ‘Class-8 pass’ condition for driving commercial vehicles

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Law
The move comes after the Central government did away with the mandatory educational qualification condition in the amended Motor Vehicles Act.
Image for representation/PTI
The government of Tamil Nadu has removed the minimum educational qualification mandatory for applying for a driver’s license in the state. The move comes after the central government issued an order to effect the same last month. As per reports, the government of Tamil Nadu has removed the educational qualification criteria required to apply for a driver's license in the state with effect from October 29. Earlier, it was compulsory that the applicant must have passed Class 8 in order to be eligible to apply for a license to drive commercial vehicles like trucks, buses and cabs. The condition was put in place to ensure that the drivers knew how to read the names of places, warning signs and also fill out trip sheets and consignment notes. However, many unions and associations had submitted several petitions over time to get this rule revoked since they all had a severe shortage of drivers. The scraping of the educational qualification rule is expected to push more people into driving commercial vehicles for a living and bridge the gap between the number of vehicles available and the number of drivers available to operate them. Data also did not support the insinuation that educated drivers made better drivers. As per Times of India, less around 7,700 road accidents were caused by drivers who had education upto class 8 while the number of accidents caused by those educated above class 8 stood at a staggering 60,000. The idea of doing away with this rule was mooted months ago, by which employment opportunities will be boosted. “In a move to benefit skilled persons from economically underprivileged sections of the society, the Ministry of Road, Transport and Highways has decided to remove the requirement of minimum educational qualification for driving a transport vehicle,” an official statement said. It was also perceived to be a way to open up work opportunities for at least 22 lakh persons in the transport and logistics sector.  
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Govt spying allegations: DMK chief MK Stalin calls for inquiry into WhatsApp hack

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Politics
Stalin has sought a Supreme Court guided probe into the issue.
DMK chief MK Stalin has called for a fair inquiry into allegations that the phones of several journalists, human rights activists and politicians were hacked into by an Israeli software and that the BJP government had asked for the hack. This comes days after Facebook-owned messaging service WhatsApp confirmed that a number of users in India were hit by the Pegasus spyware that infected about 1,400 users of the platform worldwide. While the hack itself took place in May this year, the issue made headlines after WhatsApp accused and sued Israeli tech firm NSO Group for the program last week in an American federal court.  Stalin tweeted on Sunday, “If reports about political leaders' phones having been under illegal surveillance are true, then the Union Government owes an explanation to the country. The Government must also launch a fair inquiry guided by the Supreme Court's ruling on the right to privacy #WhatsAppSpygate”  If reports about political leaders' phones having been under illegal surveillance are true, then the Union Government owes an explanation to the country. The Government must also launch a fair inquiry guided by the Supreme Court's ruling on the right to privacy #WhatsAppSpygate https://t.co/vil5deKWbA— M.K.Stalin (@mkstalin) November 3, 2019 The DMK's national ally, the Indian National Congress, has said that party leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra was among those snooped on. “Layers of BJP Govt’s conspiracy & collusion in the illegal & unconstitutional hacking of cell phones through surveillance software ‘Pegasus’ are unraveling everyday. BJP Govt is the deployer & executor of this illegal & unconstitutional snooping & spying racket,” Congress’s media cell chief Randeep Singh Surjewala tweeted along with a statement issued by the Congress party. Layers of BJP Govt’s conspiracy & collusion in the illegal & unconstitutional hacking of cell phones through surveillance software ‘Pegasus’ are unraveling everyday. BJP Govt is the deployer & executor of this illegal & unconstitutional snooping & spying racket. Our Statement: pic.twitter.com/p5qbffgayC— Randeep Singh Surjewala (@rssurjewala) November 3, 2019 Ravi Shankar Prasad, Minister for Electronics and Information Technology issued a statement on Thursday that the government was concerned 'at the breach of privacy of citizens of India.'“We have asked Whatsapp to explain the kind of breach and what it is doing to safeguard the privacy of millions of Indian citizens. Govt is committed to protecting privacy of all Indian citizens.Govt agencies have a well established protocol for interception, which includes sanction and supervision from highly ranked officials in central & state governments, for clear stated reasons in national interest.” (sic) said the statement. While the NSO Group has said that it sells to government clients, WhatsApp had notified the Indian government in May 2019 soon after it pushed out an update to fix the hack. In May, WhatsApp had sent a Vulnerability Note to CERT-in, the central nodal agency handling cyber security threats. However, Indian government sources speaking to media houses, in an attempt to bail themselves out, called the communication 'pure technical jargon'. 
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Thiruvalluvar statue desecrated in TN, Stalin slams AIADMK for not preventing vandalism

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Crime
The Thiruvalluvar statue in Thanjavur district was smeared with black paint and cow dung by unknown miscreants.
Even as social media is abuzz with the controversy around Thiruvalluvar’s robes, unidentified persons desecrated a statue of the legendary poet in Thanjavur district. The Thiruvalluvar state was smeared with black paint and cow dung. The incident allegedly happened at midnight on Monday in Pillayarpatti, around six kilometres from Vallam in Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu. A group of miscreants painted the statue’s eyes black and threw cow dung on it and fled. Shocked by this desecration, passersby immediately alerted the Vallam police station from where officials arrived at the spot. The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Vallam division arranged for the statue to be cleaned and garlanded immediately and ordered probe into the incident.  Speaking to TNM, Vallam DSP Seetharaman said, “Since the issue happened in the midnight, we are investigating the issue. We have not filed any FIR in this regard yet. The statue has been cleaned after the incident.”  For the people of Tamil Nadu, the desecration of the statue of Thiruvalluvar, who has been loved and respected across caste and communal lines for his work Tirukkural, comes as a shock. MK Stalin, the Leader of the Opposition in Tamil Nadu and the President of the DMK condemned the vandalism on his official Twitter page. Slamming the AIADMK, Stalin said that it has become a usual activity in the state to insult anybody who worked for the Tamils like Periyar and Thiruvalluvar.  “Insulting Periyar statue, painting Thiruvalluvar in saffron - insulting his statue in Pillayarpatti etc. It has become a regular affair to disrespect those who have worked for Tamil. AIADMK government must be ashamed of itself as the police have no control to prevent these kinds of activities,” he tweeted in Tamil. The vandalism sparked protests across the district with students of Tamil University in Thanjavur sitting on protest in front of the university, demanding that the police nab the miscreants at the earliest. The incident comes hours after controversy raged on social media about the appearance of Thiruvalluvar. BJP’s Tamil Nadu unit recently tweeted a picture of Thiruvalluvar in orange robes, complete with rudraksh beads on his neck and arms and mark on his forehead. This triggered a controversy among Twitter users. While the BJP and its supporters contended that Thiruvalluvar was a Hindu saint and therefore justified the orange robes, members of the DMK, Dravidar Kazhagam claimed that Thiruvalluvar wore white robes and did not have any visible marks on his body like rudraksha beads or marks on his forehead. They also accused the BJP of attempting to ‘saffronise’ the legendary poet. In 2018, miscreants vandalised a statue of Periyar EV Ramasamy in Vellore, hours after H Raja, National Secretary of the BJP posted inflammatory comments related to Communist leader Lenin and Periyar on his verified Facebook page. “Who is Lenin? What is his connection to India? What is the connection of communists to India? Lenin's statue was destroyed in Tripura. Today Lenin's statue, tomorrow Tamil Nadu's EVR Ramaswami's statue," he had posted.
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Chennai family attacked for allegedly exposing drugs dealers in locality

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Crime
"The women threw chilli powder and abused all of us, while the men were attacking and threatening us with knives. They kept telling us to mind our own business," says 19-yr-old Chevandhi.
On November 1, 19-year-old Chevandhi, a resident of Ambedkar Nagar in Chennai chanced upon a group of men and women huddled near her house, just a street away. They were handing out tiny boxes, she recalls and were surrounded by young boys ready with money. Within minutes she realised what was happening."They were selling drugs to the boys. There were a total of 11 distributors in that group," she tells TNM. "I know them by face because we all live in the same area. But the minute they saw me lurking they began abusing me. They called me a prostitute and demanded to know if I am going to the police. I got scared and came running back home," she adds. Chevandhi lives in a home with nine other relatives, including her cousin, 20-year-old Doulraj. As soon as she went home, she described what she saw to him in detail."My brother then went and told the dealers to stop all this because young children in our area are getting affected," she says. "When they just dismissed him, he went to the Adambakkam police station. But the police there refused to lodge a complaint against the drug dealers. They told us instead to not get involved in these matters," she alleges. The family claims to have resigned to the fact that no investigation will take place, but little did they expect that they would be attacked for their efforts. On Sunday evening at around 7.30 pm, some of the alleged dealers arrived at the family's doorstep and demanded to know where Doulraj was. His mother Alamelu told them that he had stepped out and tried to evade further questioning. The minute the men and women retreated, she ran to the Adambakkam station again to inform the police of a potential attack. The group returned in some time and attacked the family."The women threw chilli powder and abused all of us, while the men were attacking and threatening us with knives. They kept telling us to mind our own business," she says. "Their main objective was to kill my brother but he was not at home," she alleges. In the attack that followed, Chevandhi was slashed on her ear and has six stitches to show from the encounter. The others meanwhile sustained minor cuts. Alamelu's efforts to reach out to the police too, was unfruitful, she says."When I got there and told them of an impending attack, they waved me off and said I should not get involved in matters related to drugs. They refused to take my complaint," she tells TNM. The family has now approached the Commissioner of Police in connection to the case and to request protection. When TNM contacted the Adambakkam station however, they denied that it was an assault over the sale of drugs. An investigating official stated that it was a fight between two families due to previous enmity.   
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