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No Coronavirus in TN, 242 who came from China being monitored: Health Minister

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Coronavirus
The minister asked people not to panic and wanted them to take precautions like washing their hands and ensuring personal hygiene.
Image for representation
Tamil Nadu Health Minister C Vijayabaskar on Friday asserted that there was no case of coronavirus in the state and said 242 people who returned from infection hit China were being monitored. A day after he said 78 people who had arrived from the dragon nation were under 'house quarantine,' he told reporters at Pudukottai that the number of returnees has climbed to 242."As of today, 242 have arrived from China and the Public Health Department is in direct touch with all of them. They are all normal. There is no case of coronavirus in Tamil Nadu," he said. Such returnees were being monitored and were under home quarantine, he noted. As regards a techie who recently returned to his native place in Tiruvannamalai district from China, there was no manifestation of any cornavirus symptom in him, he said. Hence, there was no need as of now to take the software engineer's blood sample to check if he had contracted the infection and similar was the status of a student who has come back to Krishnagiri district, he pointed out. The minister asked people not to panic and wanted them to take precautions like washing their hands and ensuring personal hygiene since the pathogen may spread through airborne droplets. Besides, a woman has tested positive for the virus in neighbouring Kerala, he noted. The Dean, Madras Medical College and Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, R Jayanthi, told reporters in Chennai that a 40-year-old woman who returned from China last night has been admitted in the isolation ward for observation though she was found to be normal. The woman was referred to the RGGGH by a government facility in suburban Chennai after she had gone there with "very mild fever." Examination by a team of experts, however, found that she was very normal and did not exhibit any symptom of the virus. The top hospital authority said that the woman has been admitted for "only observation." To a question, she said the city would soon get a coronavirus testing facility. People were being sensitised through IEC (Information, Education and Communication) materials like flyers and brochures about the infection that originated from China and precautionary measures that were needed like hygiene,she said. Apart from isolation wards, full body masks, triple layer masks for covering the nostrils and mouth, goggles to protect the eyes for health care professionals and the people were in place in adequate numbers, she said. The RGGGH, commonly known as GH in Chennai, is one of the biggest and oldest state-run hospitals in the country.
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After two decades, TN to conduct survey to identify and rescue bonded labourers

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Bonded Labour
In 1996, when the survey was last conducted, 25,000 bonded labourers had been identified in Tamil Nadu.
(Rescued bonded labourer with her children)
The number of bonded labourers forced to work inhumane hours in brick kilns and fields in Tamil Nadu currently remains an unquantifiable figure. However, with the Labour Department now getting set to conduct a statewide survey after a gap of two decades, this problem may soon be addressed. The survey will be conducted as per the Central Sector Scheme for Rehabilitation of Bonded Labourers (2016). It includes the need for a survey to identify bonded labourers, rescue them and aid in policy decision. The amount of assistance for the survey of bonded labourers, according to the scheme, will be Rs.4.5 lakh per district. While the state government is expected to initially fund the project, the union government will share half the cost, upon satisfactory performance in the identification project. Speaking to TNM, PM Saravanan, Additional Commissioner of the Labour Department, says, "Initially, we will be conducting the survey in 11 districts which have a high occurrence of bonded labour incidents." And while the districts are not finalised, he says this is likely to include Tiruvallur, Kancheepuram, Vellore and Thanjavur. It would cost the government Rs.49.5 lakh to carry out this survey."This is aimed at developing policies that will aid the rehabilitation of victims of bonded labour. Tamil Nadu already has a robust system in terms of rehabilitation of rescued labourers. This will further boost our knowledge of the conditions on the ground. It will also look at permanent solutions to stop rescued persons from entering bonded labour again," he adds. Non-governmental organisation working to rescue bonded labourers, including International Justice Mission (IJM), while lauding the move, have also shared their opinion on the matter."We need to look at evolving nature of bonded labour and take into consideration different forms of employment that do not fall under the traditional definition of bonded labour," says Sharon Jabez of IJM. "The initial Act for abolishing bonded labour was made with an agrarian economy in mind. So the questionnaire being presented in current times needs to delve further into various forms of employment," she adds. The Additional Commissioner, however, assures that this will be looked into."We are also including questions on working hours and minimum wages, so as to gain a holistic perspective," he says. The Labour Department will also simultaneously be conducting rescues when any form of bonded labour is identified."We are merely waiting for funds to be released to start the survey," says the Additional Commissioner.  In 1996, when the survey was last conducted, 25,000 bonded labourers had been discovered in Tamil Nadu. When asked about the large gap between surveys, the labour department claims the subject was not under their purview till 2016.  
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15 men found guilty in sexual assault case of 11-year-old girl in Chennai

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Court
While the exact charges found by the court are not known, one man — accused no 15, a gardener named Gunasekharan — has been acquitted by the court.
Fifteen men accused in the rape of an 11-year-old hearing-impaired girl over the course of a few months in 2018 have been found guilty by a special Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) court in Chennai. The accused were part of the housekeeping, plumbing and lift operations in a building in Chennai’s Ayanavaram area where the survivor lived with her family. One man has been acquitted by the court — Accused no 15, a gardener named Gunasekharan, while another, Accused no 10, a lift operator named Babu passes away during the trial. The quantum of punishment and the exact charges proven against individual convicts will be announced in court on February 3. 12 of the total 17 accused were charged by the police under Section 5(g) of POCSO Act for gang penetrative sexual assault while all 17 (including the deceased) were charged with Section 6 POCSO for penetrative sexual assault. In addition to this, charges of criminal intimidation and attempt to murder were also included by the police. The men found guilty by the court on Saturday are — Ravikumar (56), Suresh (32), Rajasekar (40), Erald Bross (58), Sugumaran (65), Abishek (23), Murugesu (54), Paramasivam (60), Palani (40), Jayaganesh (28), Deenadayalan (50), Jayaraman (26), Surya (23), Raja (30) and Umapathy (42). Background  In July 2018, the gruesome story of a minor who was sexually assaulted allegedly by as many as 17 men in her apartment complex in Ayanavaram, Chennai, over a six-month period of time, came to light. The men who allegedly sexually assaulted the hearing-impaired child included the elderly liftman in the apartment and many other men in their twenties who worked in various housekeeping and security roles in the apartment complex. The police also invoked the Goondas Act on them in September. Though the charges under the Goondas Act against the accused were ultimately quashed by the Madras High Court in January 2019, their request for bail was rejected. Babu, one of the accused, died after a brief illness in February. The trial in the case began at the Mahila court in Chennai in January last year, in which all the accused had individual lawyers representing them. Speaking about the trial, Public Prosecutor N Ramesh had told TNM that all 17 of the accused were given sufficient time to cross-examine all the witnesses in the case. “From the prosecution side, we have submitted 120 pieces of evidence and had 36 witnesses from our side. The defence side had seven witnesses on their side. In fact, the cross-examination of the police officer who investigated the case lasted for almost a month. That is how much time the defence got in the trial,” he explained. The deposition by all the witnesses in the case runs upto 1,500 pages, he said.   
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SSI Wilson murder: TN police arrest IS sympathiser suspected of funding assailants

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Crime
The accused Dawood is also allegedly linked with ISIS suspect Khaja Moideen, who ran the Al-Hind trust, which radicalises youngsters to wage wars in the name of Islam.
Ramanathapuram police on Saturday arrested a suspected Islamic State (ISIS) sympathiser from a fishing hamlet in the district. The 32-year-old suspect, A Shaik Dawood is said to be linked to the murder of Special Sub Inspector Y Wilson in Kanyakumari district who was shot down on January 8. According to ToI, Shaik Dawood was found in an abandoned hut hiding amongst gym equipment. Dawood is also allegedly linked with ISIS suspect Khaja Moideen, who ran Al-Hind trust, which radicalises youngsters in the name of Islam, the police said. Dawood reportedly admitted to heading a group of members who believed in eliminating those who spoke or acted against Islam. They were also working towards freeing their leaders who were imprisoned in the state, by force and were mobilising funds to purchase weapons through foreign handlers. Ramanathapuram district superintendent of police RV Varunkumar told the media that Dawood had transferred funds to one of Wilson's alleged murderers, Abdul Shamin, via his father's name. Dawood had already been arrested by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) in 2019 for allegedly radicalising youth from poor backgrounds. He was released later on bail but the police claim he continued his illegal activities. He had been underground till now and the murder of the SSI finally led the police back to him again. Y Wilson had been stationed at the Kaliyakkavilai check post to check the movement of medical and poultry waste from Kerala into Tamil Nadu. On January 8, he was shot dead by two men, who were later identified as Abdul Shameem and Thoufiq. The accused were then arrested at the Udupi railway station in Karnataka on January 14. They were then produced before a court and remanded to judicial custody. They are currently lodged at the Palayamkottai prison in Tirunelveli district. Kanyakumari Superintendent of Police N Sreenath stated that the accused were upset over the arrest of their aides and hence killed Wilson to take revenge on the police. The SP noted that they had also allegedly planned coordinated attacks using suicide bombers on Republic Day.   
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DMK demands TN Minister Rajenthra Bhalaji's resignation over 'Hindu terrorism' remark

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Politics
The Minister had alleged that if Islamic fundamentalism is allowed to grow, then the rise of Hindu terrorism cannot be stemmed.
The DMK has demanded that Minister Rajenthra Bhalaji be removed from his post in the AIADMK cabinet and action be initiated against him for inciting communal violence. This after the Minister, in an interview to Puthiya Thalaimurai, alleged that if Islamic fundamentalism is allowed to grow, then the rise of Hindu terrorism cannot be stemmed. The Minister's statement came when he began talking about the murder of a BJP functionary named Vijaya Raghu in Trichy. He was murdered on January 27, allegedly by a man named Mittai Babu and his accomplice M Hari Prasad. And while the police have maintained that the crime was committed over previous enmity, the Minister claimed that the murder was communal in nature."In Trichy, a BJP functionary was killed by a Muslim extremist," the Minister said on the TV programme. And when the anchor pointed out that the police have dismissed this claim, he added, "He could have been murdered for several reasons. But the manner in which he was murdered was religious. Instead of coming from the front, they have hacked him on the back. This was planned for a month by Mittai Babu. Can we forget?" The minister went on to say, "Yes there was a previous enmity. They would have said — You have a previous enmity. You finish him. We will take care of you. If they keep allowing Islamic fundamentalism to grow, if they continue killing Hindus, if DMK supports organisations that kill Hindus, then nobody can stop Hindu terrorism from rising." He also accused the DMK of criticising the actions of one community but ignoring the action of another. Some parties with the intention of creating Islamic terrorism, are politicising this matter. Then, he claimed, 'we can't stop Hindu terrorism'. While acknowledging the loss of Muslim votes over the AIADMK's support for the Citizenship Amendment Act, the Minister said, "In areas where Muslims live, we used to get half the votes. But today, we don't even get 10. I am not even denying this. They have taken a stand that the DMK is fully supporting them. Innocent Muslims are being brainwashed and are being made to pick up weapons. They incite violence, try to get the Muslim vote bank and sacrifice Hindus who are in the majority." Responding to these allegations, DMK Chief MK Stalin said on Twitter, "With hate in his heart, and venom in his words, Minister Rajenthra Bhalaji is taking the state towards a path of violence. We condemn this. He took an oath to become Minister but is becoming unlawful. The Governor must remove him from his post and action must be taken against him."  
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Retd TN cop allegedly abducts pregnant daughter who married out of caste, on the run

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Crime
20-year-old Deepika, who has been married for 6 months, was pregnant when her father allegedly abducted her.
Image for Representation
A retired police constable allegedly attempted to abduct his pregnant 20-year-old daughter from her marital home in Tiruvallur district on Friday. This, after she reportedly refused to leave her husband in the face of her father’s objection to her marrying out of her caste. Deepika (20) married Saikumar, an AC mechanic, six months ago. While she belongs to the Yadavar community, Saikumar belongs to the Balija Naidu community (Backward class). Her father, Balakumar, had objected to their relationship and later their marriage as well. But Deepika left her house to marry Saikumar and moved with him to Bengaluru. After she became pregnant, Saikumar reportedly brought her to his parents’ home in Tiruvallur district. On January 31, her father came to know her whereabouts and went to Saikumar’s residence with four of his friends. “He tried to convince Deepika to leave once again. He claimed that her husband was not right for her because of the difference in their communities, and that she should divorce him,” a senior police official told TNM. “When she refused, he pulled out a handkerchief laced with some chemical and placed it on her face. It was not any acid or anything. It caused mild discoloration on her face,” he added. Deepika’s mother-in-law Bagyalakshmi and sister-in-law Divya tried to stop him but couldn’t. Balakumar then took her forcefully to his friend’s house in Sriperumbudur. And while this incident happened at 10.45 am, Deepika was brought back to her husband’s home at 8 pm by her father and his friends. Saikumar’s family, however, had not given any police complaint till then. When Deepika was brought back home, they took her to a local hospital. “We got a call from the hospital about what happened,” an investigating official said. “After we got to know about the incident, we conducted enquiries and filed an FIR,” he added. Balakumar and his friends have been booked for harassing a woman and the police is currently on the lookout for them. “He has been against his daughter’s marriage from the very beginning because the husband is from a different community,” said the official adding, “We will trace him soon.”
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Former AIADMK MP Sasikala Pushpa joins BJP

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Politics
Sasikala Pushpa's entry into the BJP comes a year before Tamil Nadu Assembly elections.
Former AIADMK MP to Rajya Sabha Sasikala Pushpa Ramaswamy joined BJP on Sunday. Sasikala is among the Rajya Sabha members whose term comes to an end this April. Between 2011 and 2014 she served as Thoothukudi’s Mayor following which she served as an AIADMK MP in the Rajya Sabha. Sasikala’s entry comes at a time when Tamil Nadu is heading towards Assembly elections next year. The TN BJP President post too remains vacant following Dr Tamilisai Soundarrajan’s appointment as Governor of Telangana. Following an altercation with DMK MP Tiruchi Siva at the Delhi airport in 2016, it was believed that Sasikala Pushpa was expelled from AIADMK. In a statement released by the then Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and AIADMK General Secretary, Jayalalithaa had said Sasikala had been expelled for “going against the party's aims and rules, causing disrepute and going against the party orders, and for acting in ways that go against the party's interests and principles.” Following this, Sasikala Pushpa in her interviews had called AIADMK “a party of slaves” and claimed that she was being “compelled to resign by her party leader.”  However, in July 2017 the Supreme Court did not find any expulsion notice from the party and therefore it was concluded that she was not expelled from the party. According to reports, both Siva and Sasikala were on the same flight to Chennai from New Delhi when the incident reportedly took place. Soon after the incident, Sasikala claimed that she had slapped the DMK MP after he spoke ill about the AIADMK and its cadres while it was reported that Siva de-boarded the flight when he came to know that Sasikala was on it. It is interesting to note that following Jayalalithaa’s demise, Sasikala Pushpa moved a civil suit against Sasikala Natarajan’s elevation to party General Secretary claiming that the latter was expelled in 2011 and so was not eligible to even contest for the post. In March 2018, Sasikala Pushpa’s wedding to Dr B Ramaswamy whipped up a controversy after the two went ahead despite a court order staying the wedding. The Madurai court intervened on the basis of a complaint filed by a woman named Sathyapriya, 34, who had alleged that she hadn’t yet officially divorced Ramaswamy.
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DMK hires Prashant Kishor's I-PAC for their 2021 election campaign

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Elections
I-PAC’s most recent success was in Andhra Pradesh in 2019, where they helped overthrow the Chandrababu Naidu government and ensured a huge mandate to YS Jagan Mohan Reddy.
File photo/PTI
DMK president MK Stalin on Sunday announced that Prashant Kishor’s Indian Political Action Committee (I-PAC) will strategise their 2021 election campaign. Making the announcement, Stalin tweeted, “Happy to share that many bright & like-minded young professionals of Tamil Nadu are joining us under the banner of @IndianPAC to work with us on our 2021 election and help shape our plans to restore TN to its former glory!” Thanks Thiru @mkstalin for the opportunity. The @IndianPAC Tamil Nadu team is excited to work with DMK to help secure an emphatic victory in 2021 elections and contribute in putting the state back on the path of progress and prosperity under your able leadership. https://t.co/PXmRLWMrQz — I-PAC (@IndianPAC) February 2, 2020 Replying to Stalin’s tweet, I-PAC said, “Thanks Thiru @mkstalin for the opportunity. The @IndianPAC Tamil Nadu team is excited to work with DMK to help secure an emphatic victory in 2021 elections and contribute in putting the state back on the path of progress and prosperity under your able leadership.” In November 2019, Stalin's long-time advisor, Konelelu Sunil, resigned from the leader's team. Incidentally, Sunil himself had been a part of Kishor's team, co-founding the publicity firm Citizens for Accountable Governance (CAG), until he set off on his own. Sunil set up OMG, another private consulting firm, and had been a key confidant of the DMK chief following the party's massive defeat in the 2014 General Elections. Sunil had been hired after the parliamentary polls that saw rival AIADMK emerge the third largest party in the Lok Sabha, prompting speculations of a national role for then Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa. It was I-PAC which had successfully engineered the political campaign of the BJP in 2014. Interestingly, the political advocacy group now has been roped in to work with the BJP’s rivals in West Bengal, Delhi and Tamil Nadu for the ensuing elections. I-PAC is statergising the campaign of  Mamata Banerjee’s TMC in West Bengal, and Arvind Kejriwal's AAP in Delhi. I-PAC’s most recent success was in Andhra Pradesh in 2019, where they helped overthrow Chandrababu Naidu’s TDP and ensured a huge mandate to YS Jagan Mohan Reddy and YSRCP in both Assembly as well as Parliamentary elections. I-PAC was also roped in by Nitish Kumar’s JD(U) in 2015. Subsequently, Kishor joined the JD(U). However, Nitish and Kishor had a fallout over JD(U)’s support to the controversial Citizenship (Amendment) Act which was introduced by the BJP-led Union government. Earlier, this week, Nitish claimed that Kishor was inducted into the party because former BJP president Amit Shah recommended him. Calling Nitish a liar, Kishor said, “@NitishKumar what a fall for you to lie about how and why you made me join JDU!! Poor attempt on your part to try and make my colour same as yours! And if you are telling the truth who would believe that you still have courage not to listen to someone recommended by @AmitShah?”  .@NitishKumar what a fall for you to lie about how and why you made me join JDU!! Poor attempt on your part to try and make my colour same as yours! And if you are telling the truth who would believe that you still have courage not to listen to someone recommended by @AmitShah? — Prashant Kishor (@PrashantKishor) January 28, 2020
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NIA to probe SSI Wilson murder as police suspect larger network at work

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Crime
SSI Wilson was shot dead at a check post in Kanyakumari district by two armed assailants on January 8.
The murder case of Special Sub Inspector (SSI) Y Wilson has been transferred to the National Investigation Agency (NIA). While the Superintendent of Police of Kanyakumari district has said that the agency will take over the probe, an order is yet to be issued in this regard.  As per reports, the case has been transferred since the police suspected that the accused arrested so far could be a part of a larger network and the expertise of a special agency is needed to probe into it. Twenty-two suspects have been arrested in the case till date. The NIA has also reportedly filed an FIR on the case in Kochi on Saturday.  SSI Wilson was shot dead by two armed assailants at a check post in Kaliyakkavila in Kanyakumari district on January 8. Following the murder, the police zeroed in on the suspects using CCTV footage of the check post and identified them as Abdul Shamim and Thoufique. The duo was arrested on January 14 from Udupi railway station. The police took the duo for custodial interrogation for ten days from January 21 and they also retrieved the guns and knives used by the men to kill Wilson. During the interrogation, the men also reportedly stated that they had killed Wilson to avenge the arrests of Khaja Moideen, their leader, and his aides Syed Abdul Nawas and Abdul Samad in Delhi.  Meanwhile, the pistol which was used to shoot Wilson has been recovered and is being examined by experts. The police also recovered bullets, a bloodstained knife and bloodstained shirts which are also being examined by forensic experts. The reports pertaining to the examination are yet to be issued.  Recently, the Ramanathapuram police arrested a suspected Islamic State (ISIS) sympathiser, 32-year-old A Shaik Dawood, from a fishing hamlet in connection with the case. 
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After Kalakshetra cancels, large crowd turns up for TM Krishna book launch in Chennai

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Controversy
'Kalakshetra refusal shows Manu Dharma still exists', said Thol Thirumavalavan at launch of TM Krishna's book 'Sebastian & Sons'.
Twitter/Karthikavk
As performers seated themselves on the dias of the Asian College of Journalism in Chennai, percussion players took centre-stage even as vocalists were settled down by the wings, all ready to render a scintillating performance. Leading this performance, on Sunday, were not the singers but Mridangam players who had the audience enraptured with the beat of their fingers. This arrangement, in essence, made the priority of the evening clear to the audience. The event in question was the release of Carnatic musician TM Krishna's book 'Sebastian & Sons', which outlines a brief history of Mridangam makers. What would have been just another book launch, drew more eyeballs after Kalakshetra Foundation, a Chennai-based arts and culture academy, withdrew permission for the event at its premises, citing fears of ‘political, cultural and social disharmony.’ The decision followed the publication of an excerpt of the book titled ‘Keeping the cow and brahmin apart’ in The Hindu on Tuesday.  The chapter touched upon how the world of Carnatic music is dominated by Brahmins but mridangam makers are primarily from Dalit communities. It addresses a dichotomy in the Brahmin culture where the community insists on cow worship and restrict consumption of the animal's meat but still uses the mridangam made of cow skin. Specifically, it refers to the reluctance of celebrated Brahmin artistes in acknowledging that the mridangam meant needing the skin of the cow. And in the presence of close to 50 mridangam creators (who were featured in the book), all present at the venue, two chief guests - VCK founder Thol Thirumavalavan and writer Rajmohan Gandhi reiterated that Kalakshetra's refusal proved how deep rooted the caste system is in the state."This entire controversy shows that Manu dharma still exists in our society," said Thol Thirumalavan. "As soon as I heard the event is cancelled, my first thought was that, it was because I was called. They probably also thought why should 'he' come for this event (Thirumavalavan is a Dalit leader). But I think the cancellation just gave the event more publicity and made it more successful," he added. Thirumavalavan further reflected on his conversation with a mridangam maker who alleged that they received no recognition from the government, how they were ignored in award functions and why a pension could help the cause."It got me thinking, if this was the situation of the mridangam makers, then imagine those who make the parai, " he pointed out. "It was continuously looked down upon because it was used by the working classes. It cannot be played in temples like the mridangam," he added, drawing parallels to communities, as he described the instrument. The VCK chief further mused, "I (a Dalit) make the mridangam holding it between my feet, but the instrument is allowed into your puja room, and I am not." Raj Mohan Gandhi meanwhile pointed out the cancellation of the event in Kalakshetra, only reflected on the larger politics attempting to grip the nation."Today, thanks to some people I should not name - Gandhi, Tagore, Ambedkar, Periyar, Subash Chandra Bose and Nehru, I see something common in all of them. Because of the drive to foist on our social hierarchy, our legal and constitutional hierarchy, of one religious group on top and others well below. It is because of this drive today, that we see all these figures as one. Secular Indians and devout Hindus are banding together to resist this legal and constitutional hierarchy, this bid to alter the constitutional design that is made Indian democracy a proud feature," he said. He further termed the book pathbreaking and credited it with having brought those kept in darkness, to the light."The top layer (in society) needs the bottom layer. In the relationship, there is mutual need for each other. There is also ignorance and contempt at one side and silent indignation on the other side. Krishna has captured the relationship,” said the writer. In a panel discussion that followed however, TM Krishna himself admitted that he was unsure about how this book would change the lives of the mridangam makers. "Will this change anything? I don't know," said TM Krishna. "People will engage with these makers with more seriousness but beyond that, change will require political will. What we need is a combination of literature, social consciousness and political will," he added. Krishna further acknowledged his own caste privilege and admitted that he had faced criticism for taking up the subject."No matter how much I speak about caste, I don't lose my privilege. I have privilege in terms of my gender, my caste and my ability to converse in English. I am in a catch 22 situation. A lot of people said I have taken the discourse from the Dalits. Why do I get to be the bridge? I am still conflicted about this," he told the audience. 
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50-yr-old teacher arrested in Coimbatore for allegedly sexually harassing students

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Crime
Natarajan has been working as a Science teacher at a government school near Annur in Coimbatore for the last 23 years.
Image for representation
A 50-year-old teacher was arrested by the Coimbatore police for allegedly sexually harassing female students. The accused S Natarajan, has been working as a Science teacher for classes 6 and 8 at a government school near Annur for the last 23 years. According to the police, Natarajan recently touched a class 7 student inappropriately in the school. When the student took up the issue with the higher authorities, he also allegedly threatened her with dire consequences if she pursued the case. Since the school higher-ups did not take any action against Natarajan in spite of a complaint from the student, her parents approached the Thudiyalur All Women’s Police Station and filed a complaint on Saturday. According to the complaint filed by the victim’s father, the student had informed about the incident to her class leader, who reportedly said that she has also been at the receiving end of such misbehaviour. As the two girls took the issue up with a female teacher in the school, she reportedly advised them to drop a complaint at the complaint box installed in the school premises. Following this, an inquiry was held and the students were allegedly forced to withdraw their complaint. S Natarajan The Thudiyalur police registered an FIR under sections 7 (Sexual Assault) and 8 (Punishment for sexual assault) of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act and arrested the teacher. He has been remanded to judicial custody in Coimbatore central prison. As per reports, police suspect that at least six students might have faced harassment at the hands of Natarajan and have also roped in Child Welfare Committee to provide counselling and support to the affected students. Recently, police had booked the principal and three teachers of Kendriya Vidyalaya, Sulur for allegedly sexually harassing two male students. According to the police, the boys were harassed on the pretext of frisking to check if they had mobile phones on them. 
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Tamil Nadu gets its first facility for testing coronavirus in Chennai

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Coronavirus
The inauguration comes as almost 800 people in the state are under observation for coronavirus in various homes and hospitals across the state.
Image for representation
A testing facility for the detection of novel coronavirus was unveiled at a premier state-run institute here on Sunday as over 800 people are under observation in homes and hospitals in Tamil Nadu. The testing facility was inaugurated at the King Institute of Preventive Medicine and Research, Guindy by state Health Minister C Vijayabaskar who said five blood samples have been received at the institute from the health authorities. Besides, four specimens had already been dispatched to the National Institute of Virology, Pune, for diagnosis, he said, adding the results will be available in 48 hours after the receipt of samples."All of them (whose blood specimen have been collected) are clinically normal (does not exhibit symptom presently)," he said. After chairing a high-level meet in Chennai on prevention, monitoring and precautionary measures for the China-origin infection, the minister said 799 people were under house quarantine in the state and the Directorate of Public Health was monitoring them. Of the 799, 646 had travelled to China and 153 to other countries close to it, he said. Besides, 12 people have been admitted to hospitals. So far, thermal screening had been done on 5,543 people at Chennai, Tiruchirappalli, Madurai and Coimbatore airports in the state and all of them were normal. Asserting that there was no positive case of coronavirus in Tamil Nadu as yet, he said the state was assiduously following the Central government protocol for all aspects, including testing, prevention and monitoring for the virus. He also added that the Centre has said that blood samples of travellers from Wuhan, considered the epicentre of the virus, should be collected irrespective of whether they exhibited symptoms not. Ten people have been admitted to isolation wards of Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital in Chennai and one each in Tiruchirappalli and Ramanathapuram districts so far and are being kept on observation. Though all of them under observation were normal and did not show any symptoms of the virus, they have been placed under watch considering factors like contact and travel history, he said.
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How to be a good ally? Artistes discuss identity, appropriation at Chennai panel

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Identity
Writer Jacob Boehme who's from an indigenous community in Australia, Tamil indie musician Tenma and trans woman activist and artiste Kalki Subramaniam spoke on race, caste and gender.
“What do we do with the imaginary spear?” As puzzling as this question is, an evening with three diverse and brilliant artistes -  writer and performer Jacob Boehme who comes from an indigenous community in Australia, Tamil indie musician Tenma and trans woman activist and artiste Kalki Subramaniam - turned into an enlightening session on identity, assertion, assimilation and appropriation. The panel discussion organised by dancer Swarnamalya Ganesh’s Ranga Mandira Academy of World Dance/Performance and Indic Studies was curated by Radhika Ganesh, activist and co-founder of Kaani Nilam, a collective that works with diverse, marginalised communities, and took place on January 31 at Curioplay in Chennai. The conversation began with the spear - the imaginary spear. In the year 2015, Australian football player Adam Goodes, who's from an indigenous community, was ridiculed and hounded by Australian media, the football association and its people for celebrating a goal by performing an indigenous war dance that showed him throwing a spear. The episode that followed the projectile of the “invisible spear” became a terrifying example of racism in Australia. Assertion and representation “He made an assertion of his cultural identity when he kicked a goal. But people were up in arms - “How dare you bring your culture into the game of football?” The entire country bullied him so much over a period of two years that he quit his passion, the game he loved. All for throwing an imaginary spear,” Jacob Boehme said, speaking about the incident and how prevalent racism is in Australia. “We still do not have recognition in our country’s Constitution. We were given citizenship in 1967 and up until then, we were considered under the Flora and Fauna Act,” Jacob said. Radhika began the conversation that evening by saying, “Throwing the spear is a natural instinctive image for any community that has been in the hunter-gatherer culture in the historic sense - it is a show of courage and valour. I’ve seen similar gestures in tribal communities in India. But here, it turned into a space for hate. How do you cope with it?” she asked, setting the stage for a discussion on assertion of identity, both as self and as a community. Radhika continued, “The question of assertion is also parallel with appropriation. Representation is where you are kept. India is at that space today where we are questioning about who should be talking about what. Where do you fit? Are you an ally? Are you in or out? Do you represent or are you part of the dialogue?” Born to a mother of European descent and a father from Australia’s Narungga community, Jacob spoke in great detail of his experiences and responsibilities to his community as a light-skinned indigenous man. “I came out looking like my mother. I had a very different life than that of my brother and sister and a much different life than that of my father and my grandmother. I know exactly what privilege is,” he explained while the crowd sat captivated. Tenma, who formed The Casteless Collective in 2017, spoke next and brought to the table his experiences as a musician from north Chennai. “We wanted to break the labels first. Gaana musicians would get arrested for no reason because they were returning late in the night. Isiavaani (The Casteless Collective’s only female musician) was pushed into the light music scene but we found a fiery gaana performer in her. We barged into places, we jumped into parks. We did not care if they chased us out,” he said. On stereotyping, Tenma said, “North Chennai is stigmatised as a place with gangsters. I've also seen bloodshed but it doesn't mean it comes from a specific area. Auto Shankar came from south Madras. Even this word ‘pullingo’ became a slur. Boys with coloured hair and those who sang gaana are called pullingo. It's a nice way of being casteist. I had no choice than to speak about it vigorously.” The word 'pullingo' gained popularity around the release of Vijay's Bigil last year was criticised for its casteist connotation. The word was used to mock young men specifically from north Chennai areas, stereotyping their looks and behaviour. “It is difficult because people are not aware of the implications of these labels. We have no choice other than driving the point home forcefully. We have no time for sympathy. I will live whether you like it or not,” he said, while the audience erupted in cheers. Kalki, on the other hand, spoke about how liberating rejection can be. “A trans woman does not follow fashion, we create our own fashion. There is this urgency in us to express our beauty. In that sense, we feel more deeply than a woman. Women are oppressed in this society and when we aren't accepted as women, it gives us the freedom to express completely. That rejection has given the freedom to be myself. I have said so in my poetry as well,” she said. She explained that for the trans community, art is the most important way of expressing oneself. “Be it joy or rejection, we express it through dance and music and theatre performances,” she added. ‘We need accomplices’ The evening also saw discussions on how one can become strong allies without becoming appropriators. Swarnamalya put forward a question on the insider-outside conundrum. “Can an outsider participate in this discourse and how? How do we participate in this journey with you? When you try to right the wrong, you may in a way try to become appropriators. How do you do it?” she asked. In response, Kalki said, “Allies will have to be listeners first. We should teach our children that it is okay to be anyone they want to be and to not stereotype." Tenma added that an outsider can be of most help as an enabler. “In any sort of power struggle, it is very easy for one’s privilege to take over everything in the movement. It is best for an outsider, therefore, to become an enabler. It is time to pass the mic,” he said. But the sharpest answer that evening came from Jacob. “If you really want to assist, shut up,” he exclaimed and added, “everyone talks about ally-ship but allies change.” “We need accomplices, not allies,” he continued. “People in position of power are not changing. Allies will help you but accomplices will watch the door while you get to the safe. They have a stake in it. When a window of opportunity opens, you hold the door open with one hand and with the other you pull in as many people as you can before the door shuts,” he explained. “I am very aware of what I’m walking into and how privileged I am because of how I look. But there’s also this funny feeling of being a traitor. On the one hand, it is my job to make it inside so I can make space for my people and on the other hand, you feel like a traitor because you are let in. You understand?” he asked, laying bare an intense turmoil that comes with being a torchbearer of against oppression who happens to be of mixed parentage. 
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Five men get life term for raping child in Chennai apartment over many months

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Court
The rape of a 11-year-old girl with a hearing disability shook the state in July 2018.
Five out of 15 men convicted in the rape and assault of a 11-year-old child in Chennai were sentenced to life on Monday by a special Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) court in the city.  The prime accused in the case, lift operator Ravikumar (56) was sentenced to two counts of life till death. Two others, Suresh (32) and Palani (40) were sentenced to life till death while Rajasekar (40) and Abishek (23) were sentenced to life. All five were found guilty of aggravated penetrative sexual assault (including gang penetrative sexual assault of a child below 12 years of age) under Section 6 of the POCSO Act.  Delivering the quantum of punishment for the convicts on Monday, Special Judge RN Manjula sentenced Erol Bras (58) to seven years' rigorous imprisonment. All others, including Sukumaran (65), Murugesan (54), Paramasivam (60), Jayaganesh (28), Deenadayalan (50), Jayaraman (26), Surya (23), Raja (30) and Umapathy (42) were handed five year sentences each. They were all found guilty of charges including intimidation and forceful confinement under the POCSO Act.  36-year-old lift operator Babu, who was among the accused, died of illness during the trial in February last year. The shocking case first came to light in July 2018, when the 11-year-old child with a hearing disability experienced pain and confided in her sister about the months-long abuse she had undergone. All the convicted men were employed by two firms— UKFS and FOCUS— in service roles in the apartment complex where the child’s family stayed.  The 17 men, between the ages of 23 and 60, responsible for the crimes like assault, confinement and intimidation were employed as lift operators, plumbers, gardener, housekeeping and security staff in the apartment complex.  Speaking to media persons, Special Public Prosecutor N Ramesh said that the government had sought maximum sentences. Pronouncing the verdict on Friday, the POCSO court had acquitted Gunasekaran (A15), the 55-year-old who worked as a gardener in the apartment, citing lack of evidence. "We will discuss with the government and senior officers of the police department and decide on an appeal of the acquittal," said the Public Prosecutor. The Chennai police swiftly filed a chargesheet in the case soon after investigations began. 12 of the total 17 accused were charged by the police under Section 5(g) of POCSO Act for gang penetrative sexual assault while all 17 (including the deceased) were charged with Section 6 POCSO for penetrative sexual assault. In addition to this, charges of criminal intimidation and attempt to murder were also included by the police. Apsara Reddy, an activist who has worked with the family closely said, "I welcome the judgement. It will be a deterrent for anyone even thinking on the lines of sexual violence against children. In this particular case I personally know the trauma, agony and the fear that the child was dealing with in her day to day life."
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Ganja peddler’s confession helps Chennai cops crack 10-month-old murder case

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Crime
Sivakumar, who was arrested by the police for peddling ganja, spilled the beans on his brother’s crime since they were not on good terms.
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A ganja peddler’s confession about his rival group’s escapades helped the Chennai police crack a 10-month-old ‘Missing person’ case, who was ultimately murdered. Police also arrested three persons in connection with that case and are on the lookout for three more men. According to reports, Lokesh, who was a regular ganja smoker, was a member of the six-men gang. However, he got close to a rival ganja peddler, which was viewed with animosity by the original gang. On April 5, 2019, Lokesh left his house in Anakaputhur in the morning and did not come back. His parents could not contact him either since his phone was switched off. Fearing something was amiss, his parents approached the Shankar Nagar police station with a ‘Missing person’ complaint. Though the police searched far and wide, they could not find Lokesh anywhere.  On Sunday, the police arrested Sivakumar for peddling ganja in Kancheepuram and Chennai districts. During interrogation, Sivakumar allegedly revealed to the police that his brother Batcha was involved in Lokesh’s murder. He turned his brother Batcha in, reportedly because he was not on good terms with him. Sivakumar also told the police that he had overheard Batcha telling his accomplices about how he had killed Lokesh due to business enmity, since Lokesh was luring away their customers and selling them ganja. Batcha had made Lokesh come to a deserted area in Anakaputhur, where he and his gang allegedly murdered him in April. They then dumped his body in a well. Based on his statement, the police arrested Batcha, who is already in prison for another offence. Police also arrested Nithish and Praveen in connection with Lokesh’s murder. The three others of the gang are at large and police have launched a search for them. 
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TN govt mulls capping ticket rates for special shows of mega releases

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Entertainment
In 2017, the Tamil Nadu government had hiked movie ticket prices to Rs 150 in multiplexes with three screens or more.
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Exorbitant prices for special shows of big budget movies might become a thing of the past soon as the state government is planning to fix ticket rates for such shows as well. At present, the government of Tamil Nadu regulates the ticket prices of normal shows in theatres across the state. As per reports, Kadambur Raju, the state Information and Broadcasting Minister said that the government of Tamil Nadu was considering fixing ticket prices for special shows of big budget movies which release during festivals. Speaking to reporters, Kadambur Raju said, “Theatre owners requested the government to fix the rates for special shows to eliminate the possibility of tickets being sold exorbitantly. Revenue to the government will also go up.” He also added that this decision would probably reduce the ticket prices during festival days, when the norm in Tamil Nadu is to sell tickets at exorbitant rates. Adding that the government might also look into the feasibility of building infrastructure to facilitate online ticket sales, the minister said that this was being mulled since producers had flagged online platforms charging internet or convenience fee for every ticket being sold on their platforms. Meanwhile, reacting to the minister’s comment, renowned film distributor Tiruppur Subramanian told The Hindu that he welcomes the decision and that anyway special shows are being given only for select actors and high prices are being charged only for one show of those films. In 2017, the government of Tamil Nadu hiked the base price of tickets in multiplexes with more than three screens to Rs 150. The minimum price of tickets sold in theatres across the state was also hiked to Rs 15. It was Rs 10 earlier. Other multiplexes with less than three theatres were allowed to charge anywhere between Rs 106.30 and Rs 118.80. These prices were excluding GST. 
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By cancelling TM Krishna’s book launch, Kalakshetra chose to remain a regressive space

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Opinion
TM Krishna’s ‘Sebastian and Sons’ has no intent of creating any kind of disharmony but in fact tries to bring some kind of harmony into a disharmonious atmosphere.
TM Krishna is negotiating a very thin space. Inside the world of Carnatic music, he is a rebel. For the last few years, Krishna has not been performing in the much famed Margazhi festival citing the inequality in Carnatic music as a reason. There should be some effort to set this right, he once told me. Outside of it, he is still perhaps an outsider. In his latest book Sebastian and Sons, Krishna pauses on occasions, checking his privilege to understand if he is right in doing what he does – asking people about their lives as mridangam makers. But that does not make him any less articulate or powerful. In bringing his music out of its ivory tower to streets and restaurants, Krishna single-handedly strives to democratise the rigid traditional space. His decision to have his book launch in Kalakshetra is by extension another attempt towards democratisation of such spaces. In fact, everything about the book is. The title, I thought, was a challenge to the notion of conventional hierarchy-based institutions that so proudly proclaim themselves as sons. But sons of Sebastian are strikingly different in that they are not from one family. “Every mridangam maker is a son of Sebastian,” Krishna said at the launch. The schedule for the book release had an interesting and diverse line up of events. There was a musical offering to the creators of the mridangam, followed by the launch. Right from the start, Krishna had Lok Sabha MP and VCK chief Thol Thirumavalavan as one of the two names to launch the book. In withdrawing permission for the book launch, Kalakshetra has chosen to remain a regressive space that vehemently disallows any kind of democratisation. The withdrawal of permission came soon after the piece in The Hindu which speaks about Palghat Mani Iyer’s internal conflict in making life out of an instrument made of cow skin and how he overcame it. The book, Kalakshetra declared, will create political, social, cultural disharmony and had strong ‘political overtones.’ Sebastian and Sons as most of us would now know is about the makers of mridangam. The 300-odd page book travels across the length and breadth of Tamil Nadu, some parts of Kerala and Andhra Pradesh to bring us the authentic accounts of people involved in making mridangams. It rues the fact that mridangam making is seen as labour and not art. In interviewing maker after maker, in walking with them, in trying some processes, in going to the abattoir despite their protests, Krishna lays bare the laborious, exacting work that generations of mridangam makers continue to do. And why is this important? Because as Krishna rightly point out, their work passes off as labour despite the detail and acumen it demands. Because in making mridangams they have to work with cow skin which is seen as stuff of cheap labour while the end product itself (which still remains the cow skin in different form) is sacred. In laying bare the glorious details of creating the mridangam, Krishna does what Rajaji warned Mani Iyer against. He not only sees the antecedents himself but shows it to the world. Again, why is this important? Because the mridangam makers, despite their backbreaking work and tremendous talent, have remained invisible all along. There are some who are extraordinarily talented and share a warm relationship with the musicians but even they are not spared of castiest slurs. In bringing them out of the darkness that they have been consigned to, Krishna attempts to set right an historical wrong. The book will definitely let the world know of them but whether it will help the people themselves is still a tall order. “Honestly, I don’t have an answer,” Krishna told me at the conversation during the book launch, “But now we can at least use this book to campaign for some benefits for them like pension etc.” I knew the book would ruffle a few feathers. When I finished reading it, I realised it would do more than ruffle just a few feathers. It would most likely leave you either deeply guilty or flagrantly unsettled depending on who you are. The kneejerk reaction of Kalakshetra, and of some people on social media is perhaps a reaction to this unsettling feeling that Sebastian and Sons will leave you with. It is an expression of contempt towards Krishna’s decision to show you the mirror. It is that feeling of discomfort when the pedestal is shaken even if slightly by the knowledge of what or who goes into building it. Krishna’s book, as writer Rajmohan Gandhi pointed out, was more sociological and anthropological in nature, not political. But it is something beyond the comprehension of Kalakshetra’s rigid gates. Also, it has no intent of creating any kind of disharmony. The book in fact tries to bring some kind of harmony into a disharmonious atmosphere that is almost violent to some people. Because the disharmony and violence are silently and almost wilfully accepted by those at the receiving end, does it mean that they do not exist? If caste hegemony is not disharmonious in India, what is? If caste discrimination is not violence, what else is?  Peace, you know, is not absence of war. Kavitha Muralidharan is a journalist with two decades of experience, writing on politics, culture, literature and cinema. 
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TN student attacked in Canada remains critical, family seeks funds

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Crime
The student from Nilgiris in Tamil Nadu was stabbed and shot.
The 23-year-old student from Tamil Nadu, who was stabbed and shot in Toronto last month, continues to remain in critical care. Her family, from Nilgiris district, have launched a fundraiser as they are set to travel to Canada to look after their daughter.  On January 23, Rachel Albert, a Master’s student at York University in Toronto, was brutally assaulted by an unidentified man when she was walking near her campus. Toronto police said that she had been knocked to the ground and dragged, and was transported to hospital in life-threatening condition. Two days later, the police said, “Through investigation, it has been determined the victim was both stabbed and shot.” However, nearly two weeks since, the suspect is still at large and the firearm has not yet been recovered.  Speaking to TNM, Albert, Rachel’s father says, “She is still in critical care. She has not yet come out. Treatment is ongoing. They have conducted major surgeries in the neck and head. The doctors have said that she is responding to medication.” The Ministry of External Affairs responded to the family’s request for a speedy visa to visit Rachel. However, given the grievous injuries and the slow pace of recovery, the family is now seeking funds to help meet their expenses. “Even though our travel funds have been met, we have other pressing needs as we go to Toronto. We expect to stay there for a minimum of six months. Our priority is to be with our daughter as she recuperates. The injury has been very grievous and the recovery is going to be very slow. The doctors are doing their best to stabilise her as she is going through multiple surgeries,” says the family. A bright student, Rachel is currently pursuing Supply Chain Management in Canada with the help of a scholarship from the university. She is due to graduate in May this year. You can contribute to the fundraiser here. Meanwhile, the police are still on the lookout described as an Asian male in his early to mid-20s, between five-foot-nine and five-foot-eleven in height, wearing “stylish” glasses and a black puffy jacket at the time of assault.
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Relief for thousands of students, TN govt scraps public exams for classes 5 and 8

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Education
The announcement was made on Tuesday by School Education Minister KA Sengottaiyan, who said that the decision was taken based on requests from various quarters.
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In a move that will bring cheer and relief to thousands of students across the state, the government of Tamil Nadu has struck down its order introducing public exams for classes 5 and 8. This announcement cancels the public exams that were scheduled to be held this March-April across the state.  Tamil Nadu Minister for School Education KA Sengottaiyan made the statement on Tuesday cancelling the earlier government order (GO). In his statement, the Minister said that the decision to withdraw the GO issued on September 13 has been taken after the government received representations from various stakeholders. Sengottaiyan also said that the schools will continue to follow the existing system of examination and evaluation for the students in classes 5 and 8.  This announcement to scrap public exams for classes 5 and 8 comes as a sudden development. On Monday, the Commissioner for School Education Sigy Thomas had given details regarding the evaluation scheme for the board exams for these two classes.  In September 2019, the government of Tamil Nadu announced that board exams will be conducted for students of classes 5 and 8. A day after the government order was issued, KA Sengottaiyan said that the results of these examinations will not be published by the government for the first three years. The Minister had added that leniency was being provided so that students could have time to improve their skills gradually over this period of time and that this proposal had received good feedback from parents. However, the announcement faced severe backlash from political parties in Tamil Nadu including AIADMK’s ally PMK, and the opposition DMK and CPI(M). 
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Rajinikanth summoned by Thoothukudi firing probe committee

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Thoothukudi firing
After visiting people who had been shot and injured in the police firing, actor Rajinikanth claimed anti-social elements had infiltrated the agitation.
PTI
The single-judge commission probing the police firing on 13 civilians in Tamil Nadu’s Thoothukudi has summoned actor-politician Rajinikanth for questioning. Rajinikanth, who visited people who had been shot and injured in the police firing during anti-Sterlite protests, claimed that “anti-social elements and toxic germs had infiltrated” the agitation. His comments, which came after the shocking death of 13 civilians, was slammed for its insensitivity and lack of evidence.  Speaking to TNM, Vadivel Murugan, the counsel for the retired Justice Aruna Jagadeesan probe committee, confirmed that the actor had been summoned in light of his remarks to the press on the infiltration of the protests by anti-social elements. The actor has been asked to appear before the commission on February 25. “He would be questioned and asked for proof of his allegations. He may also be cross-examined by parties involved in the probe,” the counsel said. Calling the events an intelligence failure, Rajinikanth had said that the police did not expect people to indulge in violence. Flaying protests in the state, Rajinikanth had also emphasised the need to save the industrial climate of the state, which, he said, would go through a lean patch if protests continued.  On May 22, the 100th day of the anti-Sterlite agitations in the coastal district, police fired into a gathering of protesters that had marched in defiance of the restriction imposed in the area against the pollution caused by the Sterlite copper smelter. The firing, into the thousands-strong gathering, resulted in the death of 13 civilians. Over a hundred people were injured, some grievously. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami, who, too, had claimed instigation of people by anti-social elements, had justified the firing as a natural response to protesters attempting to set fire to the district collector's office and damage property. This shooting and the police action following it sent shockwaves across the country. Several questions to the state government and police department remain unanswered in the aftermath of the shooting, including the necessity to open fire at protesters. A one-woman committee was set up a day after the firing to inquire into what transpired on May 22. As of January 2019, the commission, which has sought multiple extension to submit its report, had completed 18 rounds in inquiries. Recently, counsel for the probe said that they were yet to receive CCTV footage from the Thoothukudi collectorate.  In August last year, following calls to probe the actor on his comments, the probe committee had said that Rajinikanth may be summoned if required.
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