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Maha' Governor Vidyasagar Rao to take charge of TN, no extension for Rosaiah

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Governor
The tenure of Tamil Nadu Governor K. Rosaiah ended on Tuesday while that of Madhya Pradesh Governor Ram Naresh Yadav will come to an end on September 7.
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President Pranab Mukherjee on Wednesday gave Maharashtra Governor C. Vidyasagar Rao additional charge of Tamil Nadu, and Gujarat Governor Om Prakash Kohli of Madhya Pradesh.

The tenure of Tamil Nadu Governor K. Rosaiah ended on Tuesday while that of Madhya Pradesh Governor Ram Naresh Yadav will come to an end on September 7.

"The Governor of Maharashtra, Chennamaneni Vidyasagar Rao, (will) discharge the functions of the Governor of Tamil Nadu, in addition to his own duties, until regular arrangements for the office of the Governor of Tamil Nadu are made," said a communiqué from Rashtrapati Bhavan.

"Om Prakash Kohli, the Governor of Gujarat will discharge the functions of the Governor of Madhya Pradesh, in addition to his own duties, until regular arrangements for the office of the Governor of Madhya Pradesh are made," it added.


Remembering Immanuel Sekaran: Brave Dalit leader who lost his life to savarna brutality

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Caste
On September 11 every year, the man who fought to emancipate Dalits is remembered.
Vinavu.com

Defying all caste norms and leading the Dalit struggle in the early 1900s in a district as caste-ridden as Ramanthapuram in Tamil Nadu is no easy feat. And that is exactly what Dalit leader Immanuel Sekaran became the face of. To emancipate the Dalits, educate them, allow them freedoms and make their place known in a caste entrenched society, Immanuel sacrificed himself for the Dalit struggle.

D Karthikeyan writes in The Hindu, “The riots in Mudukulathoor district that led to his death, and struggles of Dalits like him, did not figure even in the Dravidian discourse or Non-Brahmin Movement as a problematique.”

Today, film and political circles are abuzz with a rumour that a movie could be made about him. In all likelihood, this will remain a rumour as a movie on him could lead to violent clashes between communities.

So, who was Immanuel Sekaran?

According to The Hindu, Immanuel Sekaran was born to Vedhanayagam, a school teacher and founder of Devendra Kula Vellalar Sangam, on October 9, 1924 in Sellur village in Mudukulathur, Ramanathapuram. He participated in the Quit India movement at the age of 18 and was imprisoned for three months by the then British government.

In 1945, he joined the Indian Army as Havildar Major. After serving the Army for a few years, he returned to Paramakudi to become a Youth Congress leader. He worked towards uplifting the Dalits and organised 'Annihilation of Caste Conference' in Madurai. The conference was presided over by B.R. Ambedkar. He was highly educated and knew seven languages including Russian. 

During the colonial period of 1930s, Ramanathapuram district was known to be notorious for its violent caste based discrimination. Dalits were systematically denied any form of symbols that were associated with superior status. JH Hutton, the then Census Commissioner, in his book Caste in India; Its Nature, Function, and Origins (Oxford University Press, London, 1963) describes the eight prohibitions imposed on Dalits by dominant castes, which included ban on wearing jewelery, ornaments and getting educated. 

D Karthikeyan writes “The ban was later re-imposed with a stronger set of eleven prohibitions. Sekaran defied all of the existing norms and fought for making the Dalits as emancipated subjects.”

Immanuel was actively involved in the 'depressed classes' movement in and around Sellur and propagated the importance of education among Dalits and asked them to fight against oppression. 

There were attempts by the Congress, particularly by Chief Minister K Kamaraj, to make Immanuel a member of the Legislative Assembly so that he could be given protection as per the law. In order to contest the elections, Immanuel converted to Hinduism and became Immanuel Sekaran. In 1956, following the demise of B. R. Ambedkar, Immanuel organised a condolence meeting.

In 1957, Forward Bloc leader Muthuramalinga Thevar won from the Arupukottai parliamentary constituency and the Mudukulathoor assembly constituency. Because he resigned from the Mudukalathoor assembly constituency, a by-poll was held on 1 July, 1957. Immanuel Sekaran, now of the Congress Party, wanted to contest the election, but Kamaraj preferred to nominate a Maravar. Immanuel Sekaran campaigned for the Congress. Sasivarna Thevar, a candidate of the Forward Bloc won the election. 

However, the Dalits and the Nadars had voted for entirely for the Congress. Angered by this, the Maravars started unleashing greater oppression against the Dalits and the Nadars. In order to offer sacrifices to the Badrakali temple, the Maravars kidnapped 9 Dalit men from the village of Katamangalam and took them along. 42 Dalits were slain in the Muukalathoor riots. Considered as one of the worst caste clashes in the post-colonial period, it marked a new phase in the struggle against caste based oppression in which Dalits started to question their subjective position.

The then District Collector CVR Panikkar made arrangements for talks between the Dalits, Maravars and Nadars on 10 September 1957. Perumal Peter and Immanuel Sekaran represented the Dalits. Muthuramalinga Thevar suggested that all the leaders could address the people in a public meeting. 

VCK leader Thirumavalavan writes in his book Uproot Hindutva: The Fiery Voice of the Liberation Panthers, “The Dalit representatives feared that Muthuramalinga Thevar could use the meeting to create further tension, suggested that all the leaders sign an agreement, which could be distributed among the people. When Muthuramalinga Thevar had entered this meeting, everybody including the Collector stood up with the exception of Immanuel Sekaran. The Collector asked Immanuel why he did not stand up when a leader entered. Immanuel replied, 'He is not a leader to me. He wanted to destroy my whole community.'”

This angered Muthuramalinga Thevar very much. As a consequence, the talks came to an abrupt end without any solution in sight. 

On 11 September 1957, Immanuel Sekaran who was returning to Peraiyur, was attacked by the Maravars and murdered on the spot. Periyar passed a resolution seeking the arrest of Muthuramalinga Thevar. Kamaraj, the then Chief Minister, immediately arrested Muthuramalinga Thevar and all the Maravars who were responsible for the riots. Later, the C.N.Annadurai-led DMK government released all those arrested in connection with the 1957 riots. Today, there is a memorial for Immanuel Sekaran in Paramkodi in southern Tamil Nadu.

According to Anand Teltumbde in Counter Currents, on September 11, 2011, Immanuel Sekaran's 54th death anniversary, police firing on participants observing the memorial day in Paramkudi had claimed three lives

Mainstream discourse has carefully weeded out any but the barest references to him. Every exercise to black out memories of Immanuel seems to have only strengthened the resolve of the Dalits of Tamil Nadu to remember him, cherish his memory.

Links: Immanuel Sekaran in the vanguard of Dalit struggle by D  Karthikeyan, The Hindu

Killing Pallars To Propitiate Thevars by Anand Teltumbde, Counter Currents

Case filed against Collector, The Hindu

Uproot Hindutva: The Fiery Voice of the Liberation Panthers by Thirumavalavan

 

 

Protests intensify in Coimbatore over Kerala’s Siruvani dam project

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Political activists are demanding that the project be abandoned immediately.
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With Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa’s appeal to Prime Minister Narendra Modi against the Siruvani dam in Attappady in Kerala not receiving any response, farmers and political activists have stepped up protests against the project in Coimbatore since the last week.

On August 27, Jayalalithaa had written to the PM asking him to intervene to withdraw a central committee recommendation for an environmental impact assessment study on the proposal to build the dam. The continuation of the project proposed by the Kerala government is dependent on environmental clearances granted by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, since it affects parts of the Western Ghats that have been declared as ecologically sensitive by the MoEF.

The Siruvani is a sub-tributary of the Cauvery which flows through and supplies water to districts in Tamil Nadu and Kerala.

The protestors in Coimbatore say that they have been protesting the dam project since 2002 because of the effect it will have on three districts in Tamil Nadu. “It will affect three districts – Coimbatore, Tirupur and Erode. Siruvani river is the main source of drinking water for these places. It will also affect the agriculture in these areas,” said K Ramakrishnan, President of Thanthai Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam.

Political activists are demanding that the project be abandoned immediately, and no environmental clearances be given for it. Dr Krishnasamy, President of Puthiya Tamilagam, said, “The Central government should not provide approval for this project. This is our request. It will affect three districts which has about one crore people residing in them,” said Krishnasamy.

Meanwhile, the DMK has announced a protest meeting in Chennai on September 3, targeting both the Kerala government’s decision to go ahead with the project, and the Tamil Nadu government’s failure to prevent it.

 

 

Amma bonanza: Nine months maternity leave for TN govt employees

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Maternity leave
She also proposed upgrading of facilities in various small government hospitals at a cost of Rs 131.43 crore.

Here’s some good news for women government employees. The Tamil Nadu government has increased the maternity leave from six to nine months.

On Thursday, Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa announced on the floor of the assembly that maternity leave has been increased to nine months.

According to The Times of India, she said, "In 2011, my government increased the maternity leave from 90 days to six months. Now, the government is increasing the maternity leave from six months to nine months."

Jayalalithaa also announced plans of constructing more buildings at various hospitals like Madurai Rajaji Government Hospital, Kilpauk Government Hospital and Coimbatore Government Hospital. It would include more services like cardio thoracic, kidney, ENT etc. These facilities will cost about Rs. 356.50 crore.

She also proposed upgrading of facilities in various small government hospitals at a cost of Rs 131.43 crore.

Last month, the Rajya Sabha had passed an amendment bill to provide maternity leave of six months to all working women.

The bill is yet to be passed in the Lok Sabha. It mentions that women who adopt children or get children from surrogate mothers will also be given a leave of 12 weeks.

 

The one indulgence Karunanidhi cannot live without

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Cricket
Whenever India lost a match, he would go into a foul mood wondering why they ended up on the losing side.
Courtesy: Sify

Forty seven years ago, a relatively young Karunanidhi was the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. Flanked by his two like-minded companions, both ministers in his cabinet, the trio would make trips to the Chepauk cricket stadium to proudly display their share of the love for the game. The two ministers were PU Shanmugam, a four-time minister in the DMK government and S Madhavan, a former Industries minister. Both Karunanidhi's closest companions in terms of their taste in cricket.

They hardly missed a match. If not in the stadium, they would ardently listen to the match commentary. Today, the 90 year-old DMK supremo’s love for the game has not diminished one bit. His company may have changed but the passion still remains intact. In 2014, the DMK leader tweeted a picture of himself reading batting legend Sachin Tendulkar’s autobiography ‘Playing it my way’. Praising him for his humility despite his huge success, the politician had only praise for the retired sportsman.

The five-time Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu has always led a busy life. But when it came to cricket, he would make time. Cricket matches were screened only on one channel, Doordarshan, back then. “He would be travelling and attending meetings. Every time there was a match, he would call home and ask for the score. I would pick the call sometimes and ask what match. He would tell me to pass the phone to my mother,” said Kanimozhi, his daughter about her father’s craze for cricket.

If that was not quite enough, the DMK head would re-schedule or even cancel appointments if important matches were going on. “He would somehow adjust meetings, or even cancel them,” his staff member told The News Minute. “He always has some company while watching matches, sometimes just District Secretaries who would have come to meet him. He will keep commenting on the match, discussing what’s happening and the others would be lost as to how to react,” said Kanimozhi.

Karunanidhi was never an indifferent spectator. Whenever India lost a match, he would go into a foul mood wondering why they ended up on the losing side. Over the years, Karunanidhi has always been vocal about his support for cricketers.  After Sachin’s emotional retirement speech, Karunanidhi said that he was moved by the cricketer’s “touching and tearful farewell speech”. He said "You (Sachin) have walked into history and history is bejewelled by your presence. It is quite natural that the Government of India has announced the Bharat Ratna for you in recognition of your unmatched records."“You have set grand standards,” he said. have received d book #Playingitmyway, the autobiography written & published recently @sachin_rt.

He was asked a few years ago who his favourite cricketer was. His answer, ‘Balaji’. Also a fan of Kapil Dev, his favorite was Chennai’s adopted son-in-law MS Dhoni himself. The politician makes it a point to attend Chennai Super Kings matches in the city to get to see his favourite sportsman. But after a surgery a couple of years back, the DMK chief doesn’t go to stadiums often. In recent years, he found a new companion in the form of K Ponmudy who was the minister for Higher Education in Tamil Nadu during DMK's rule. That was not all. After India’s 2011 World Cup victory, Karunanidhi awarded Dhoni and his team a whopping Rs.3 crore. He also gave Rs. 1 crore to off-spinner R Ashwin who hails from the state. Now that’s really saying something. Karunanidhi is also extremely proud of former cricketer and captain Srikkanth who comes from Tamil Nadu. Even Muttiah Muralitharan who has married into a Tamilian family is a visitor at the Karunanidhi residence.  

(This is an updated version, first version appeared in 2014)

Aircel-Maxis deal: Karti Chidambaram fails to appear before ED, may be taken into custody

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Aircel-Maxis
The Aircel-Maxis deal is being probed under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) as part of the larger probe into the 2G scam.

Former finance minister P Chidambaram’s son Karti Chidambaram on Wednesday failed to appear before the Enforcement Directorate (ED) at its headquarters in New Delhi, where he was summoned in connection with the Aircel-Maxis deal.

ED is now considering taking Karti into custody for his refusal to appear before it, according to a report by Pradeep Thakur in The Times of India.

The agency is probing the 2G spectrum scam amid allegations that Malaysia-based Maxis was forced into selling its stake in Aircel and some of the firms in question had been served by Karti as director.

Karti’s links with Advantage Strategic Consulting, which had deals with Aircel just before the latter changed hands after receiving a major investment from Maxis, are being probed.

The Aircel-Maxis deal is being probed under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) as part of the larger probe into the 2G scam.

In the 2G scam case, the ED has already filed a charge sheet against former Telecom Minister Dayanidhi Maran, his brother Kalanithi and also attached their properties worth Rs 742 crore.

 

After top babu suspensions, TN IAS officers’ association seeks meeting with Jayalalithaa

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News
The association unanimously resolved to seek an appointment with the CM on recent developments.
File photo: PTI

The Tamil Nadu IAS Officers Association on Thursday reportedly sought an appointment with chief minister J Jayalalithaa to discuss “various issues” faced by them in the state. This comes after the recent suspension of two top bureaucrats in the state.

Reporting for the Times of India, Julie Mariappan writes:

The association had called for a special general body meeting in the secretariat, close on the heels of the suspension of former chief secretary and TIDCO chairman K Gnanadesikan and commissioner of geology and mines Atul Anand, ostensibly without holding any inquiry. The meeting which went on for an hour on Thursday evening saw officials of various capacities participating and expressing their concerns over the punitive action faced by the officials.

It is further reported that the association unanimously resolved to seek an appointment with the chief minister for representing the concerns on these issues and recent developments. Around 50 members attended the meeting. 

On Monday, journalists received information that a senior IAS officer, K Gnanadesikan, was suspended from service. The former Chief Secretary had been suspended, official sources confirmed, but no official announcement was made, and no reasons given.

It later emerged that another IAS officer Atul Anand, officers in the geology department and three executive engineers in the pollution control department were also suspended.

While the reasons for the suspensions are unknown, there are many speculations doing the rounds. 

While some reports say that Gnanadesikan was in the line of fire after a central report pointed out discrepancies in mining in the state, other reports say he was in trouble over power sector contracts.

In view of the unexplained suspensions, IAS officers banded together to take the issue to the CM.  

Read - Will mysterious suspension of top babus lead to a face-off between IAS lobby and Jaya govt?

Meanwhile, in a separate development, the DMK staged a walkout of the state's Assembly proceedings after Speaker P Dhanpal reportedly refused permission to raise the issue of the suspensions.

Speaking to the media later, DMK leader Stalin said "We raised the issue in the assembly during the zero hour as we wanted an explanation from the government. But the speaker said issues concerning officials could not be raised in the House and expunged whatever I said“

 

Madras HC orders stay on 18 defamation cases against Nakkeeran editor Gopal

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Defamation Cases
Gopal was also excused from personal appearance in courts dealing with the complaints.
YouTube Screenshot

Tamil biweekly Nakkeeran’s editor, R Gopal has got some relief from the 18 defamation complaints filed against him, as the Madras High Court has ordered a stay on all further proceedings.

Justice P N Prakash granted the interim relief on Wednesday. Gopal was also excused from personal appearance in courts dealing with the complaints according to a report in the Times of India.

“The 18 complaints were lodged by the city public prosecutor in the principal sessions judge in Chennai on behalf of chief minister Jayalalithaa, her cabinet colleagues and some IAS officers,” Gopal’s legal counsel Perumal told ToI.

Gopal had sought the Supreme Court’s intervention, challenging the legal validity of Section 499 of the IPC under which the defamation complaints were lodged.

The Supreme Court clubbed Gopal’s petition along with similar ones filed by Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, BJP leader Subramanian Swamy, Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, actor-politican Vijayakant and others. 

Since 2006, a total of 213 defamation complaints have been lodged against Gopal by the Tamil Nadu government.

 

Also Read: 'I have 211 cases against me' - Nakkeeran Gopal on his battle with criminal defamation


Strike fails to affect normal life in Tamil Nadu

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Strike
Public transport buses plied on the roads but in less numbers.

Normal life was largely not affected in Tamil Nadu owing to the nationwide strike by major trade unions protesting against the central government's anti-labour and economic policies.

The trade unions are also demanding implementation of their 12 demands.

Public transport buses plied on the roads but in less numbers. Educational institutions functioned as usual even school buses plied on the roads with students.

However, branch banking operations were affected as bank unions had declared their participation in the strike.

Bank employees and officers all over the country including in the Reserve Bank of India observed the strike successfully in support of the 12 point charter of demands of the National Trade union Convention.

General Secretary, All India Bank Employees' Association (AIBEA) C.H.Venkatachalam, said in a statement that they opposed the anti-people economic policies and anti-worker labour reforms of the Government. .

In Tirupur, hosiery units were shut down. Inter-state buses to Kerala were halted at the state borders putting the passengers into difficulty.

However, factories located in the industrial belt like Maraimalai Nagar, Sriperumbudur and others were functioning as usual.

What's in a name? Tamil Nadu's stormy past with caste names on street corners and institutions

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Caste
How caste names have stoked tensions and violence

Recently, the Madras High Court closed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) petition that sought a direction to the Tamil Nadu government to remove caste names prefixed and suffixed to the names of government and government-aided educational institutions in the state.

According to The Hindu, the petitioner’s contention was that several go­v­e­rnment-run or -aided educational institutions in the state continue to have caste na­mes. The petitioner su­bmitted a brief list of schools which included ‘Chikkaiah Naicker College’, ‘Yadava College’, ‘Government Kallar Higher Secondary School,’ ‘Nadar Saraswathi HSS and Sri Krishna Iyer Government Higher Secondary School.’ Some of the institutions might have been named after the persons who constructed or donated land for the schools. Some others were named after leaders.

The government sh­ou­ld strive to remove the ca­ste system, without le­tting it infiltrate the mi­n­ds of students, the petitioner said.

The state government submitted that aided private colleges were maintained solely by private trusts and agencies, and most of them were minority institutions. The government was in no way involved in the process of naming of aided colleges. The government also said it was not running any college under a particular caste or community name. First Bench of Chief Justice SK Kaul and Justice R Mahadevan urged the petitioner to approach the relevant department of the government accordingly.

Whatever the outcome of the petitioner’s efforts, the plea is a stark reminder of Tamil Nadu’s violent history with caste names.

It’s not just educational institutions – roads, districts and state transport corporations once bore names of caste leaders.

When the DMK first came to power in 1967, its first act was to rename Madras state as Tamil Nadu. Between 1967-1976, the party also created three transport corporations after the three great Tamil empires—Cheran, Cholan and Pandian.

In Outlook, Paneerselvan writes how during his first term as chief Mini­ster in 1979, MG Ra­mach­an­dran had ordered the rem­oval of caste surnames from street names. So for instance, a Balakrishna Mudaliar Street became just Balakrishna Street.  But this did not apply to universities, districts and transport corporations, which were named after prominent leaders.

But again, the advent of Jayalalithaa as chief minister in 1991-1996 witnessed a disturbing trend—many districts were renamed after a prominent caste leader from the dominant community, obviously done with the vote-bank in mind.

For instance, when the AIADMK government bifurcated Trichy district, the Mutharayar-dominated area was named Mutharayar district. The Vanniar-dominated Villupuram was carved out as Ramaswamy Padayachiar, where Padayachiar is a caste prefix for Vanniyars.

But it took a bus depot in Srivilliputhur to stoke tensions. In late April 1997, when the government announced the creation of a new transport corporation in Virudhunagar district in the name of a Dalit soldier of Veerapandi Kattaboman's army (the Veeran Sundaralingam Transport Corporation, VSTC) Thevars, the higher caste-Hindu OBC community, opposed the proposal. Caste riots broke out in southern Tamil Nadu. By now, Karunanidhi was in power, and he decided to revoke all names in government institutions named after caste-leaders.

Christodas Gandhi in Human Rights Watch writes, “The problem arose only when a Dalit name was accepted. If a Dalit leader is being projected as equal to an OBC leader, there’s a problem. Dalits cannot get their due here. The solution was to remove caste names because no political party in TN can be seen as neglecting the intermediate OBC constituency, you cannot do anything at the cost of that.” 

After the riots, at the government-convened all-party meeting held in the first week of June, most of the political parties, barring the AIADMK faction led by Jayalalithaa, favoured the removal of all names. 

To date, caste names are seen on street corners. Goplakrishna Narayanaswamy Chetty Road is now GN Chetty Road. Chamiers Road remains Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar Salai. But some streets, like Brahmin Street in Saidapet, remain just ‘Street’. 

Links: 

The pattern of abuse: Southern district clashes in Tamil Nadu and the state’sresponse by Christodas Gandhi, Human Rights Watch

Name of The Game by A S Panneerselvan, Outlook

PIL plea to remove caste names attached to govt. institutions closed by The Hindu 

Madurai street with caste name draws public ire by The New Indian Express 

All in the name of heritage

 

Chennai fishermen’s call to residents: Join our campaign to save Ennore Creek, save our city

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Environment
A power plant will last only 30 or 40 years. A port will last a hundred. The river is forever.

For nearly four years now, I have been visiting the region that I will generally refer to as Ennore. It has taken me that many years to comprehend the wisdom that was so ordinarily being handed to me about the Ennore creek by several fishermen and a few women over many boat trips and detailed interviews. What seemed plain and simple to them befuddled me. It is one thing to learn about the Ennore wetland complex from satellite images and toposheets, and quite another to have the boat you are in as the central point from which perspectives are shaped.

The fisherfolk of Kaattukuppam and Mugathwarakuppam, and the Irular fishermen of Irular Colony in Sadayankuppam taught me about the hydrology, river ecology, the movement of tides, fish and fishing techniques both extinct and extant, and about how the mainstream of the river is really meaningless without its margins – just like human society. They taught me what unspoilt river sediment ought to look like and how the different insults to the different parts of the river can be understood just by looking at the sediment. They would rattle off names of the tiny streams parting the mangroves, and of the big ones.

The stories never came out easily and never in one cogent piece as it is told below.

During the December 2015 floods, the fisherfolk witnessed first-hand the consequences of the damage done to the Creek. Within a month of the floods, they saw Kamarajar Port doing more of what damaged the Ennore wetlands and aggravated the floods in the first place. They realised that the damage being done to the Creek is not and never was just about river, fish and fishing livelihoods. They asked me to write this as a return favour for all the lessons I got from them gratis.

I hope this is an accurate rendition of my understanding of what the fisherfolk I met told me.

Ennore Fishers' Invitation to the Rest of Chennai

Dear Friends from Chennai,

We are writing as Chennaiites to Chennaiites to invite you to join us in saving the Ennore Creek. Even as you read this, uncaring people in the government and private sector are harming the river. As fisherfolk, we are the first in the line of fire; the degradation of the creek affects us daily. But this is no longer merely about us. The river holds the key to our shared environmental fate as a city.

It concerns the flood safety of the very densely populated North Chennai. Those living south of the Cooum may not know that there is a north to Chennai. But we exist – Basin Bridge, Korukkupet, Washermanpet, Thiruvotriyur, Kasimedu, Tondiarpet, Kodungaiyur, Ernavur, Manali, Sadayankuppam, Burma Colony.

Last December, during the floods, even as our villages were under water, our youth were out on boats rescuing people from Ernavur, Manali, Sadayankuppam, Sathyamoorthy Nagar and surrounding areas. We went out in 120 boats and rescued 30,000 people. We know the river, and we know that the reason these areas were flooded is because the river's exit to the sea was blocked by industrial encroachments and pollution.

If you knew the river as well as we do, you will be terrified to hear of what is happening to it, and what the consequences will be for all of us if we allow the damage to continue unchecked. Last year's floods stopped operations at the Chennai Petroleum Corporation Ltd's (CPCL) Manali refinery for two days. Next time, we may not be so lucky. If the CPCL refinery goes under water, Tamil Nadu will be paralysed -- no petrol, diesel, kerosene or aviation fuel.

Know the Creek

The Ennore Creek actually drains two rivers, not one. The Araniyar drains into the Pulicat lake near the Sriharikota Island. From there, the waters flow south to Puzhuthivakkam and turn east to enter the Bay of Bengal at Mugathwarakuppam. The 136 km long Kosasthalaiyar is longer than both the Adyar and Cooum taken together. The Kosasthalaiyar also drains a much larger land area than Adyar and Cooum taken together. As it approaches Sadayankuppam, the Kosasthalaiyar splits into several branches and spreads out to form the southern arm of the Ennore Creek. It runs north from Manali to Puzhuthivakkam where it meets Araniyar's waters and turns east to empty into the Bay of Bengal at Mugathwarakuppam. Ennore Creek drains both the Kosasthalaiyar and the Araniyar. As fisherfolk, we know that playing with water is even more dangerous than playing with fire.

The Kosasthalaiyar splits into several branches as it enters the Ennore Creek.

For 30 years, we have watched with distress as our river was turned into a receptacle for garbage, sewage and industrial effluents. The first cut came a long time ago, when the British built a railway bridge connecting Chennai to North India. The pillars of the bridge interfered with the flow of the river. But the effect was negligible as the area between pillars was dredged to its original depth to minimise disruption of the flow, and there was only this one bridge.

In the 1960s, the Ennore Thermal Power Station was set up. In those days, the river was bountiful. Fish would literally jump into our boats. White prawns (vellai iral), black prawns (karuppu iral), sand prawns (mann iral), tiger prawns, green crab, irun kezhuthi, mullet (madavai), oodan, kezhangan, uppathi, keechan, kalvaan, panna, koduva -- we did not have to work hard to get enough to eat and for a surplus. In those days, our river was a busy place: boats laden with casuarina, shells for limestone, salt from the Athipattu salt pans and grain would go up and down the Canal through the locks. The salt pans employed a large number of people. We would fish in the river, the canal and the various mangrove-fringed streams and canals around the salt pans.

In the late 1980s, the industries of the Manali Industrial Area began discharging their effluents into the Buckingham Canal. The municipalities along the route too began discharging untreated sewage into the Canal. We watched the Canal die in front of our eyes. There was a time when we could walk out of our homes and fish in the Canal and return home in no time with enough for the day. We protested against the pollution. But we were not heard. The Canal and the river was our life. But the rest of the city had turned its back to them. We lost the Canal, but the creek was still a source of livelihood. It still ran unhindered and relatively clean.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the North Chennai Thermal Power Station (NCTPS) was set up in Mugathwarakuppam. We opposed it because an entire village was evicted and relocated to the southern shore of the estuary. It was a government project; the Government promised to relocate us and offered jobs in Tamil Nadu Electricity Board. We accepted it in good faith. At least one person from each family would have a government job. The others would still have the river. We never bargained to lose the river. Had we known that the jobs were on offer in return for the river, we would not have accepted.

NCTPS began discharging hot water into the creek. It gobbled up salt pans and fish ponds to set up its ash pond in Seppakkam. The ash from these huge ash ponds leaked into the creek and silted up the river. Ash pipelines were laid on platforms that blocked the flow of the river. As if that were not enough, the leaky pipelines spilt the ash slurry into the river forming a cement-like layer that choked all life. With every tide, the flyash would be spread along the river bed till it formed a carpet of death over a large area. The depth of the river was drastically reduced. Waters where three of our tallest men could stand feet upon shoulder over one another are now ankle deep in low-tide. We have to push our boats across these islands of flyash.

Ash spilling from leaky pipelines have choked the river and the Canal.

In 2001, Kamarajar Port Ltd (earlier known as Ennore Port Ltd) set up a mega port on Kattupally Island. Within years, they dumped the ocean sand dredged to build the port on the Athipattu salt pans and constructed the Chettinad Iron Ore and Coal yard. The fine sand from the dumped earth leaked into the river. Now, the depth of the river is reduced in that area too. Then a road was built to the coal yard blocking the river. Where the river had a width of more than 500 metres to run through, now only a small portion about 10 metres is left open for the waters to flow.

Above: Chettinad coal yard in 2004. Below: Chettinad coal yard in 2016

Kamarajar Port's entire expansion hinges on converting at least a thousand of acres of wetlands into land.

Salt pans, an important part of this wetland complex, have all been allocated for different hazardous industries. Earlier this year, Kamarajar Port began encroaching on a larger portion of the river, and all of us got together and physically stopped it. The State Coastal Zone Management Authority and the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board are the ones that are supposed to protect the river. But they are useless. They watch silently as the river dies.

Destroying mangroves to expand port facilities

Just north of Kamarajar Port, in Kattupally island, now there is another port. It was earlier called L&T Port. Now it is owned by Adani. They too are dumping on the river and canal. The Central Government has notified the Buckingham Canal as a national waterway. But if you visit the stretches near the two ports or NCTPS, the Canal resembles a national highway.

In the mid 2000s, NTPC and TANGEDCO set up a power plant in Vallur by flattening mangroves and filling up salt pans. Important drains that we used to fish in were filled up, and tidal mud flats were built on. This power plant's ash pond has been constructed right inside the Kosasthalaiyar. Entire streams that break off from the main river to reach the creek have been swallowed by the pond. Here too, ash leaking out of this pond has reduced the depth of the river. Once it is built, the Ennore Thermal Power Station's (ETPS) new 660 MW power plant will also discharge its ash in this ash pond.

Saltpans are an important tidal wetland. The Vallur power plant's ashpond was built on saltpans, and cuts off critical distributaries of the Kosasthalaiyar before they can reach the creek.

As if all this is not enough, just across the river from the ash pond, ETPS has dumped earth and totally blocked the Buckingham Canal. They say they are constructing a bridge for a conveyor belt. It will have about 300 pillars, most of which will fall inside the river. The Indian government says it can shoot rockets to moon and mars. Surely they must have a technology to construct a conveyor belt without harming the river. ETPS and its contractor Lanco continued dumping in the river and extending the road despite our objections. Now the Buckingham Canal is totally blocked, and there is broad mud road blocking nearly 100 metres of the river.

We went to lodge a complaint at the M5 Police Station. But the Inspector spoke demeaningly to us and threatened to file cases against us. If left unchallenged, they will run the road all the way to Puzhuthivakkam to NCTPS. That is the plan.

There are now 11 bridges and roads criss-crossing the river at various points. While the roads completely block the river leaving only a small gap for waters to flow, the bridges too drastically reduce and alter the flow. Their pillars slow down the flow of floodwaters especially because the space between two pillars has not been dredged back to its original depth. Last year, there were entire localities where floodwaters did not drain for more than a week.

Corrupt contractors have failed to remove construction debris between the columns of the bridge. This impedes water flow, and creates dangerous turbulence for fishing craft.

It is not one thing that is hurting the river and making it a dangerous flood hazard. The river is dying a death by a thousand cuts. The river's reduced depth because of flyash, sewage and refinery sludge compromises its capacity to carry flood waters. It is like a block in an artery. Shrinking the river's width by destroying mangroves and salt pans, or constructing coal yards, power plants and oil storage tanks is like reducing a six-lane highway to a single-lane street.

All this means that rainwaters coming from Manali, Ernavur, Korukkupet, Washermanpet, Tondiarpet, Kodungaiyur, Sadayankuppam and Satyamoorthy Nagar will not drain quickly. If there is a rain tomorrow, you will see what we mean.

Last year, we saw the distress the rains caused. It doesn't have to be this way. If the Ennore Creek is healthy, we will all be safe. It is easy to pump life into the Ennore Creek. The flyash has to be removed. The gaps between the columns of bridges must be dredged. Illegal roads must be removed. Places where land has been created by dumping on water must be reclaimed and returned to the river. Not an inch of the river should be diverted for any other use in the future. All these waterbodies are classified as Poromboke – Uppankazhi (tidal floodplains), kalvai (canal) and aaru (river). The word poromboke has become a bad word. People in the cities don't realise the value of Poromboke. Only if the Poromboke areas are healthy can we have a livable city. But the government thinks Poromboke is worthless and builds things that they think are valuable on top of eris, marshlands, rivers, floodplains and canals. That is why we got flooded.

We keep talking about jobs and growth. A power plant will last only 30 or 40 years. A port will last a hundred. The river is forever. As long as the river is healthy, the economies it supports will survive. It is not so much about Saving the Ennore Creek. It is about letting Ennore Creek save you.

As told to Nityanand Jayaraman

Images: David Grossman

Maps credit: Pooja Kumar

For the third time in a row, Tamil Nadu reports highest number of child marriages in India

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Statistics/Crime
The state accounted for 26.2% all child marriage cases in India.
Image for representation

Tamil Nadu has reported the highest number of child marriage cases in the country for 2015. This is the third consecutive year that the state has topped the number of child marriage cases. According to National Crime Records Bureau, the state accounted for 26.2% all child marriage cases in India with 77 such cases being reported in 2015.  Overall, 293 child marriages were stopped across India in 2015.  

According to Adarsh Jain’s report in the Times of India, the 2011 Census data on fertility revealed that there were 82.52 lakh girls below 15 years of age in Tamil Nadu at the time of documentation. Of these, 62,500 were already married and 16,855 underage girls were mothers to at least one child. Economic burden was the main reason for marrying girls off early, child rights activists told TOI, with urban areas reporting more cases of child marriage due to higher population.

Tamil Nadu reported the third highest number of crimes under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012.  2015 was the first time the NCRB was recording data on child trafficking. 51% of all trafficking cases in India involved children below 18 years and a majority of them were girls being trafficked for prostitution, reports Deeptiman Tiwary in the Indian Express. Tamil Nadu witnessed 13 cases of child trafficking in 2015, accounting for 0.4% of the cases in the country.

While the latest data shows that Tamil Nadu crimes like murder and rape decreased in 2015, the state reported the third highest number of trafficking cases in India and the highest in the south, constituting 19.3% of all such cases reported in the country.

Crimes against women

Not only did rape go down by 7.4% in 2015 from the previous year, Tamil Nadu continued to have the least number of rape cases reported among the southern states. However, in over 96% of the cases, the perpetrator was known to the victim. Kerala recorded 1256 cases, the highest in the south, followed by Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka respectively.

No custodial rapes were reported in any of these five states in 2015.

Tamil Nadu also had the least number of stalking cases in the south as well as least incidence of assault on women with the intent to outrage her modesty. While Telangana reported the most number of stalking cases, Andhra Pradesh witnessed the highest number of cases of assault on women in the south.

While only four cases were reported under the Domestic Violence Act in Tamil Nadu, the state had 333 cases under dowry prohibition – the 6th highest in India and the most reported in the south. Dowry deaths, however, decreased by 31.5% from 2014.

Marriage was also found to be the most popular motive to kidnap and abduct women in 2015. 1104 cases such cases were reported from Tamil Nadu in 2015, the highest across India, as compared to 1080 from 2014.

However, Geeta Ramaseshan, senior lawyer at the Madras High Court argues that the high numbers could also be because many parents register kidnapping and abduction cases when girls elope with their partners. “Especially when an inter-caste couple is involved, there is a lot of urgency to register a case,” she says.

But the most alarming figure recorded in the state with relation to women’s security pertained to sexual harassment – from 46 cases in 2014, the figure rose by 328% in 2015 to 197. While Geeta says that this could also be because of increased reporting and registration of such cases, she warns that unless there is a breakdown of who is the complainant and the circumstances involved, the numbers may be misleading when taken in absolute form.         

Rioting and caste crimes

4% of all rioting cases reported in India in 2015 were from Tamil Nadu and caste riot cases increased by about 101% in 2015. While 211 cases of rioting due to caste conflict were reported in 2014, the number shot up to 426 in 2015. 17.8% of all caste riots victims were also from Tamil Nadu.

While the number of cases reported under SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act decreased by 87.3% in 2015 from 2014, the figure was still the second highest all over India, next only to Uttar Pradesh.       

Caste related violence has been increasing in the state for many years now. From being 9th in India in caste-related crimes in 2005, the state has been in the second position for the last two years.

Crimes against senior citizens

The state was fourth highest incidence of crimes against senior citizens in the country and second in the number of murder cases reported against older persons. The most murder cases were reported in Maharashtra (167), with Tamil Nadu trailing close behind with 162.

The third highest number of senior citizens were robbed in Tamil Nadu with Maharashtra and Karnataka topping the list. Tamil Nadu also had one of the highest incidence of senior citizens being cheated in the country.

Past data has revealed that most senior citizens are murdered for gain and many of them live alone, making them easy targets. On most occasions, the perpetrator is a known to the victims.

While Chennai has witnessed a spate of crimes against senior citizens, K Shankar, Additional Commissioner of Police denied that there was an increase in such incidents.  "The crimes against senior citizens in Chennai has decreased in the last couple of years. We are taking extra effort and don't see much cases. We try to reach the senior citizens, we have all the details and we go and meet them. We try to make them feel comfortable. The reasons for the crimes cannot be stated without going through all the data," he said. 

No CBI probe into Swathi murder, Madras HC calls conspiracies a figment of imagination

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Swathi murder
Ramkumar's mother had alleged a larger conspiracy, asking for the case to be transferred to the CBI

The Madras high court on Friday refused to entrust the Swathi murder case probe with the CBI and called the allegations that police were doing a cover up job and trying to shield the 'real culprits' in the case as a “figment of their imagination”

At present the Swathi murder is being investigated by the Nungambakkam police. 

The murder of the young girl at the Nungambakkom railway station shook the entire city, leaving it to question the safety of women. 

According to The Times of India, Justice P N Prakash ruled that the court did not find any infirmity in the investigation being conducted by the assistant commissioner of police and the Nungambakkam police station, which warranted transfer of the case to CBI.

On June 24, Swathi was hacked to death while she was waiting for a train at Nungambakkam platform station.

A weeklong manhunt led the police to P Ramkumar of Tirunelveli. His arrest was largely aided by CCTV footage obtained from the railway station.

Ramkumar’s mother Pushpam alleged a larger conspiracy resulting in the murder and involvement of more than one person.

She said her son was innocent, and that he had been falsely implicated in the case.

But Justice P N Prakash cited the Supreme Court's views that in such cases, orders should not to be passed as a matter of routine or merely because a party has levelled some allegations against the local police.

"This extraordinary power must be exercised sparingly, cautiously and in exceptional situations where it becomes necessary to provide credibility and instill confidence in investigations or where the incident may have national and international ramifications or where such an order may be necessary for doing complete justice and enforcing the fundamental rights," the apex court had said.

The Sandwich Prince: The humble man who built Chennai’s Royal Sandwich syndicate

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Food
Meet Sheik Dawood, whose cheesy sandwiches with the delicious green chutney inspired a city.

Dawood is everything his name does not inspire.

Sheik Dawood, Chennai’s Sandwich Don, is a soft-spoken man who embodies humility. He has mild mannerisms and would go unnoticed in a crowd. He does not attract attention, and finds more happiness in putting his head down and toasting a cheesy sandwich than anything else. You can hardly hear his voice when he speaks and he doesn’t speak too much. There is more learning in listening.

And the hard lessons that he has learned in business has made him who he is today.

When he started a small sandwich stall outside a general store on TTK Road in Chennai, Dawood sold just about 5 sandwiches a day. “That’s half a loaf of bread,” he says, laughing off the initial miseries of business, “the financial loss was painful.”

Today, his empire doles out more than 2000 sandwiches a day to customers who are willing to patiently wait for a taste of his mysterious magical chutney between two slices of fresh bread.

In a country with high unemployment and a strong belief that a government job could be the panacea to a poor family’s woes, Dawood’s entrepreneurial journey from being an errand boy at a vegetable market to a fast-food operator with three stores and 20 franchisees is more inspiring than the success story of any fancy startup.

Errand boy at Koyembedu

Dawood was born in 1983 at Vadipatti village, 13 kilometres from Madurai town. His father, Suleiman Seth and mother Barisa Begum, brought the family along to Chennai in 1992, where Seth would later start a juice shop outside the popular Mummy Daddy store in Kilpauk. Apart from a sister, he has two brothers, Shahul and Jinnah, who are also in the sandwich business now.

Soon after Dawood graduated from the Choolaimedu Corporation High School, he went looking for work in the city. His first job, which paid him a paltry Rs.1500 every month in daily wages, was that of a shop boy at an onion wholesaler in Koyembedu Market. “I used to work the 3 am to 12 noon shift, and did that for 4 years,” he recalls. Later, he put in four more years at a tomato wholesaler’s at the Aminjikarai Market.

Dawood cherishes these experiences, because he sees in them what Steve Jobs saw in his own calligraphy lessons. Jobs, an inspirational figure whom Dawood admires immensely, often talked about calligraphy classes which helped him develop an aesthetic sense for Apple’s products. Ditto for Dawood. “The contacts I made during those years helped me procure vegetables for cheap rates, so it helped my margin immensely,” Dawood explains.

In 2006, Dawood’s elder brother, Shahul Hameed, was working at the Alsa Mall sandwich shop, another immensely popular joint in Chennai. Shahul had by now understood the business, and saw a great opportunity in it. So, he told his brother to start his own stall. To learn the trade, Dawood worked at a shop in Anna Nagar for three months, and then set out on his own.

 “That time, nobody knew sandwiches. People would usually go for idli or dosa, or even chaat, but not so much sandwiches,” Dawood says. For three months, Dawood set up shop in Tambaram, pedalling 36 kilometres every day with his supplies from his home at Maduravayol.

The stall was a failure, and after three months of accumulating losses, he took his brother’s advice and moved to a storefront on TTK Road. Sadiq, the owner of Royal Shoppe on TTK Road, was a kind man who had been in business for more than 4 decades. When Dawood asked him if he could use his storefront to set up a stall, not only did he allow him, he also told him that he could use it for free for a month and then pay him whatever he could afford the rent. He named his stall Royal Sandwich.

For Dawood, this was the turning point.

Tasting success

It started with just 5 sandwiches a day, but the business slowly picked up, and went on to become a rage among students and young professionals. His cheese sandwiches with the special green chutney contributed to the gastronomic satisfaction and fattening of hundreds of Chennaiites, including this writer.

In the beginning, his cheapest sandwich, plain veg, was for just Rs.6. His most expensive one, from the menu of 10 varieties, was Rs.12. After a month, he made enough money to pay a rent of Rs.50 a day to Royal Shoppe.

But these were also days of immense struggle. Dawood says: “For 6 months, I made no real money. I have even been hit by people on the road over accidents. Or locals would threaten me asking for money for some event, it was not easy.”

The rage for his sandwiches grew with the IT boom. “People needed tasty food on the go. They would come here and be done with their meal in a few minutes,” Dawood points out, “It was faster than fast food.”

When he saw that there were a lot of repeat customers, he understood the potential, and started looking at ways to expand. “I searched on the internet for good recipes, and picked up some great ideas. I wanted to have a foreign style with Indian masalas. So I brought in more variants like gobi, sweet corn and paneer,” he says.

His weapon, however, was his green chutney. “The recipe is still a secret, and we don’t tell anyone what it is made of,” he smiles.

A lesson he learned early is that initially, market acquisition was more important than profits: “I made very little money, but I wanted more and more people to come and have the sandwiches first. I wanted to create a culture of local residents eating sandwiches every day.”

In a couple of years, his brother Jinnah set up another stall down the road, and he too moved to his own store on TTK Road. By then, Dawood’s menu had grown to about 110 varieties of sandwiches, he had hired one more person to help him and was clocking 200 sandwiches a day. “Innovation is very important. The taste should always be good, but people always want new stuff,” Dawood observes.

And he took advice from all and sundry. “In fact, it was a customer from Bengaluru, Bhavana, who gave me the idea for the chocolate sandwich, and it has been a roaring success,” he recounts. And therein lies another little talent he has – he does not forget the names of his frequent customers.

Soon, his elder brother Shahul, who introduced him to the business, also started his own store on St Mary’s road.

The Sandwich Brothers had now arrived. Filmstars and celebrities came to meet Dawood, and he got bulk orders for college fests and parties where he would sell hundreds of sandwiches in a day. Students loved him and his food. Soon after, he moved to yet another store on TTK Road to increase capacity. He now has three employees and sells about 400 sandwiches a day at this outlet, including panini and pita sandwiches.

The most popular sandwich? Chicken mayonnaise!

Chicken mayonnaise sandwich

 

Going global with Sandwich Square

In 2014, his wife’s brother, Nasser, and his friend Tanveer, asked him why he didn’t think even bigger.

Four of them, Dawood, Jinnah, Nasser and Tanveer, met at the Café Coffee Day opposite his store, and discussed the possibilities of a franchisee model.

Sandwich Square was born.

“Nasser wanted to take it to the next level. We could not open more stores, but the franchisee model allowed us to grow,” Dawood says.

And they did it with intelligence. They did not use the “Royal” brand, making sure no harm would come its way if the experiment failed.

Their first franchisee was at Spencer Plaza.

Today, they have 15 franchisee-run Sandwich Squares across Chennai, and one in Vijayawada and Trichy. They have 5 of their own outlets too.

The entire operation is run out of a centralized kitchen in Purasawalkam. From bread and cheese to vegetables and the magic chutney, everything is supplied to the franchisees. In return, they get a royalty fee and a share of the profits. Even the billing is centralized and monitored through a software.

They have had enquiries for opening outlets in Malaysia, Jumeirah in Dubai, and Sharjah. “We will fly out all the supplies,” beams Dawood.

In spite of the dizzying success that he has had, he goes about with the same honesty and involvement in making sandwiches. “A lot of people come to me asking what is the secret to my success. I tell them there is no secret, it’s patience. You have to learn from failures. You have to take the initiative. Success is automatic,” says Dawood. 

 

All images: Nishanth Krish

 

Meet the people who are reviving the art of storytelling in Chennai

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Storytelling
She just wishes people could take some time out from their focus on electronics and graphics to experience storytelling.

If you miss your grandma’s story telling sessions, Chennai has an answer for you. A group of people are reviving the art of story-telling.

“When my grandmother used to tell me stories, there was a personal touch to it. That’s what gave wings to my imagination and that feeling, still grips you. If only people take some time to experience it,” says Asha Sampath, (53), founder of Chennai Storytellers.

She just wishes people could take some time out from their focus on electronics and graphics to experience storytelling. In 2015, Asha Sampath came up with the idea of bringing together storytellers from across the city, and also creating a platform for budding storytellers.

“When I started out as a storyteller, I had to find a creative platform to perform. I did not want anyone else to go through the same,” Asha says. Currently, about 30 storytellers are part of the group.

To catch a storytelling session, you can go to the Anna Centenary Library every Sunday or the Odyssey in Adyar every second Saturday. Each month, they choose a theme.

“We try to figure out an important day or date. This time, South East Asia celebrates moon festival, so I performed a story ‘Over the Moon’. We try to look what is going on in our own country or city, or sometimes we tell nature or season tales,” she said.

“If we have a mixed crowd, we do not talk about social issues. If it is there are 7-year-olds and adults, we occasionally talk about women issues or other issues,” said Asha.

There is a global revival in storytelling. “For close to six years, I have seen storytelling growing. That is why you see so many storytellers today. Stories engage us and are not merely for entertainment. It gives us the confidence to just stand up and speak up. Storytelling is also a good way of teaching,” she said.

All one needs to be a storyteller is a passion for storytelling, backed up by gestures, facial expressions, and voice modulation. One needs to become a character in the story. “When I read a story, the story tells me, ‘Please share me’. I then make it my own and think of making it interesting, sometimes include song and dance.”

Asha sometimes performs stories that she herself has written.

“People are happy to have free story telling sessions. But they are not very forthcoming when it comes to paying fees. There is a bigger crowd when it is a free performance. Secondly, not many, corporate organizations or schools have story-telling sessions,” she said.

Asha also runs another initiative called ‘Tale Spin: a platform for stories’.

 


‪Isha Yoga row: Parents complaining out of vested interests, says Jaggi Vasudev‬

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Isha Foundation
On August 1, the parents had approached the District Collector for help alleging that their two daughters were being held captive by Isha Yoga centre and had been made sanyasins.

The Isha Yoga Centre controversy over the alleged brainwashing of two girls at the campus in Coimbatore has seen many twists and turns.

In an interview to Thanthi TV on Saturday, Jaggu Vasudev said, "Latha and Geetha left their house eight years ago, parents are realizing it now and complaining out of vested interests.

He added that in the Tiruppur case, the girl’s parents were involved in hacking the girl and boy (Shankar and Kausalya). So why can’t you believe in this case also that the parents have vested interests in complaining.

On August 1, the parents had approached the District Collector for help alleging that their two daughters were being held captive by Isha Yoga centre and had been made sanyasins.

Just a day later, the two girls gave a statement that they were staying at Isha Yoga of their own will and even claimed that it was their parents who introduced them to Isha Yoga saying it is the path to understand oneself.

 

Also Read: Women refute father's claim that they were held hostage at Isha Foundation

One more dies of fever in Thiruvallur district, count reaches seven

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Fever
Thiruvallur police are in search of the quack who treated Hemalatha first.

Following the death of six people in Thiruvallur district, one more child died of fever on Friday night at the Thiruvallur government hospital.

The deceased, Hemalatha, an 8-year-old child died on Friday night at 1:30 am. She hailed from Ponneri in Thiruvallur district.

Reportedly, she had fever from August 23 and was treated by a quack. As her fever did not subside, on August 29, she was taken to the government hospital in Egmore, where she was admitted for two days. She was brought back to Thiruvallur government hospital and died there.

Thiruvallur police are in search of the quack who treated Hemalatha first.

Doctors suspect it to be a case of dengue as cases of fever have been rising in Thiruvallur district.

As reported by The News Minute, till Monday afternoon, 88 persons were undergoing treatment for fever, 24 had reported fever, two were critical and 26 patients had been discharged. A total of 120 persons had been seen as outpatients.

 

Read: A village in TN has lost four children to fever: Tiruvallur on alert to contain the spread

 

Meet the doll-maker who has made kids smile for over four decades

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Doll-making
Suguna Rangaswami has been making a variety of dolls since 1970s and plans to do so for as long as she can.

If Barbie isn’t your idea of a doll to gift, then Suguna Rangaswami’s creations are not just a visual delight but they’re also quite cheeky and ingenious.

Sample this. When Suguna’s youngest daughter asked her to make superhero dolls for the children she teaches in the US, the Chennai-based homemaker decided to have some fun of her own: the superhero figures are a mix and match. “The trick is to let the children observe and name them as they please,” Suguna says.

Image: Superhero dolls

There’s more. Her fairy tale-inspired reversible dolls.

“On one side is Cinderella in housemaid clothes, and on the other side, she wears a gown,” she explains. She has also made a Little Red Riding Hood reversible doll with the grandmother on side and the wolf on the other. Goldilocks is next on the cards, but is challenging. “It’s difficult to stitch three bears. I don’t want to do just one, it won’t look good,” she insists.

Image: Reversible Cinderella doll

Besides these, Suguna makes stuffed animals, finger puppets, reversible dolls, rugs, rag dolls, and animal cushions. It’s the latter two which are sought after by customers, most of whom are from Chennai. She also gets orders from Bengaluru and Mumbai.

Image: Puppet dolls

“Making dolls is my meditation,” Suguna says fondly. At 77, Suguna is self-assured and laughs easily. But her easy manner only masks the effort she has put into creating her art over 40 years.  

Suguna stitches each doll herself, and has only slowed down a little with age. “It’s the rag dolls which take the most amount of time. I stitch each strand of their hair, their dresses and the like. It takes a minimum of 10 days,” Suguna says.

Image: Rag dolls

Suguna learnt doll-making from Women’s Weekly, a magazine she used to get when they lived in Kolkata. Jayapriya, her second oldest child, recalls that Suguna had been stitching dolls since the 1970s.

“They were everywhere! And of course we ignored them till we moved to Chennai in 1980. That’s when she started making them as giveaway presents for family birthday parties,” Jayapriya recounts.

“She’d make all these little stuffed animals before. Most of the children in the family have gotten her dolls. Even today, none of them have come apart because she makes them with so much love and meticulousness. She chooses each fabric, each little element herself,” says Jayapriya.

Collage: Animal cushions, snakes and ladders rug, Suguna (bottom right)

It was always important that the dolls have “sweet” faces. “Many dolls and teddy bears I see are cute and cuddly, but they have mean eyes. My mother would always use soft blush patches for the cheeks. She’s so calm and happy when she sits with a doll every night, after her nightly game of online scrabble that is,” she adds.

In 1980, Suguna began to pursue doll-making more commercially with her friend Sarada. She held her first exhibition at CP Arts Center, Mylapore, the following year. But she didn’t turn it into a full-fledged business. “I am more of a housewife. Family has always come first for me and I have no regrets about it,” asserts Suguna. “But now that my kids are all settled, I’m more recognizable,” she jokes and chuckles.

Until three months ago, Suguna was making dolls for two shops (one in Chennai and one on Bengaluru) but both closed down. She now takes only private orders and showcases her work in exhibitions. But she’s had to reduce the work orders due to her jam-packed schedule.

Suguna lives with a full-time house-help in Chennai, and when she’s not visiting her five children, she has other things to keep her occupied. “I play scrabble with my daughter and sister-in-law here, visit my friends, go to religious meetings and hold chanting sessions at my place. I’m fully occupied, there’s no time at all!” she laughs.

Suguna’s doll-making schedule is booked solid until November. “And I plan to do this for as long as I can,” Suguna says.

TV's kangaroo courts? Solvadhellam Unmai’s Lakshmy on participant's suicide and ethics

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TV
Nagappan was outed as a paedophile on Sollvathaellam Unmai, and then he killed himself
YouTube

On August 23, 45-year-old Nagappan was found dead in his home in Perumbakkam. His suicide came after the airing of a show on a Tamil channel, where he was outed as a paedophile.

In the episode, he confessed to having sexually abused his sister-in-law’s two minor children, one 14 and the other 10 years old. It was his ex-wife and sister-in-law who had called in to the show.

While the show was taped three weeks ago, police suspect that the telecast of the confrontation on the show might have caused the suicide. The episode was immediately taken down from the channel’s website.

While Nagappan’s case ideally required an FIR to be lodged against him, the show leaves it to the family to take action by filing a complaint.

For 5 years, Zee Tamil has been broadcasting “Sollvadhellam Unmai”, an arbitration show with actor and director Lakshmy Ramakrishnan playing the mediator. Cases of dowry, sexual abuse, rape, harassment, infidelity and domestic violence are regularly dealt with on the show.

Many kangaroo court shows like “Solvadhellam Unmai” are aired in other languages – like “Kathayalla Jeevitham” on Amrita TV and “Jeevitham Sakhi” on Kairali TV. 

Lakshmy’s style is openly confrontational, spontaneous and chock-full of emotional reactions bordering on brash. The show plays lawyer and judge rolled into one, and many viewers look up to it with reverence.

In a free-wheeling chat with The News Minute, Lakshmy Ramakrishnan opens up about the show’s process, Nagappan’s suicide and her ‘expertise’ as a mediator.

Accountability and follow-ups pose a huge question when it comes to such shows, and are mostly never present. In Nagappan’s suicide, Polimer TV, a local channel, had called out Lakshmy and alleged that she was the cause of his suicide.

A flood of calls, threats and abuse followed. Lakshmy, however, keeps reiterating that Nagappan’s death is not important despite the connections that people have drawn to the death and the telecast of the show.


 

“Nagappan committed suicide. That’s all. Why he died is not important. The death was unfortunate, but what is the situation of the child? We should not worry about Nagappan. And Polimer TV too harassed me about my show, I felt tortured. Does this mean Polimer TV pushed me to suicide?” she asks, justifying the events that followed the airing of the show.

“There is a contract that they sign which I don’t know the legalities of. But I sign a contract that I will not make false promises,” she says. "It is not the show that caused his suicide. His death is unfortunate but it is not important," she says.

Lakshmy repeatedly says “What happens outside the show is not our responsibility!” distancing herself and the show from the suicide. She adds, “There is a follow up process in a sense. We send our reporters there and encourage them to file the case. We can help children with education or shelter, but the rest has to come from them.”

The confessions on the show may not even stand in a court of law unless Lakshmy appears as a witness. A source who’d once worked on the show says that they get multiple calls after the show complaining that the problem hasn’t been solved or the harassment hasn’t ended, and that there is rarely any follow up.

Lakshmy is infuriated when asked if her show is a form of ‘katta panchayat’ (an illegal arbitration). While it’s clear that she is a mediator, what role does she really play – a judge or a katta panchayat? “I am a woman and I have a family. If one of them does something wrong, I will say, “Don’t you have any sense?” You will want to scold them for their own good. The show is all about that,” she explains.

But isn’t there a power dynamic at play? “I never said throw Nagappan in jail, I didn’t play a court judge. I don’t have a superiority complex. I act as the member of a close knit family, not a katta panchayat. No one can lie when cameras are around,” Lakshmy says.

Such shows have also come under scrutiny as there is a significant level of shaming of one party to benefit the other. Is this a level playing ground? “I only do what is right for the society. I don’t care about why someone is doing what they are doing, whether they have a mental health problem or whatever,” is her response.

On the show, it’s clear that only a certain socio-economic class participates, usually of the lower strata.  Why is that? “Among the higher class, if they have psychological issues, they can cover it up, they have access to counselling. People who come here don’t have their primary requirements met,” Lakshmy says.

But isn't it erroneous to assume that the higher strata are better equipped to handle problems like domestic violence? Lakshmy disagrees. “The lower strata don’t have anyone to tell them that they are wrong. That class needs help. There is so much immaturity in the class that they mishandle things. I have to tell them that they are wrong,” she opines. 

But there’s another question of expertise. Mediation is best done by a person armed with a law or a psychology degree. How is Lakshmy qualified to mediate? “This is something any citizen who loves their country can do. Why do I need a law degree? I have a large family, I empathise with their problems. So what if I am an actor? Acting is all about drama and putting yourself in other people’s shoes,” she says, adding, “I react like a grandmother would. I will say what is best for that situation. I will say what they are doing is wrong,” she says.

But isn’t that the exact thing a katta panchayat does? How can she assume to be the supreme judge of right and wrong? “I go by my rule book. I cannot be unbiased. I am not a third party. I will get angry. I will be emotional. So? These people are very clever, but they will eventually blurt out the truth. I can get it out of them,” she says.

Lakshmy says that there are many success stories.  She quotes the case of Shanthi Roselin, the mother of a girl who died under mysterious circumstances, two years ago as an example. A parish priest was allegedly behind her death. The rapist came under the police scanner after the mother appeared on the show. In another instance, dead bodies were found in the backyard of a house after a man’s confession on her show.

But do these successes validate other possible failures? And are there no grey areas?

Lakshmy’s view: “I only see the intention. If someone comes with the intention of humiliation, we decline. If you are going to sit here and talk to me, let there be a positive outcome. Infidelity is wrong, it is a moral truth. It is an ethical truth. It is purely wrong. We have a set of societal ethics, and mostly there are no grey areas as far as I think. Why he does what he does is not important, how it affects his wife is important. The woman is weak, so the man should protect her.’

As deaths due to quacks rise, TN health dept plans crackdown in Thiruvallur district

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Quack
Two teams of the public health department are visiting clinics and enquiring about more quacks in the district.
Image for representation/Pixabay.com

Following the death of an eight-year-old in Thiruvallur, the public health department is all set to crack down on quacks in the district. Hemalatha had died on Saturday due to bacterial meningitis, after she had been treated initially by a quack.

In August, about seven children died of water and vector-borne infections, in which, about four of them were treated by quacks.

According to the public health officials, the quack who treated Hemalatha is absconding. But during the investigation, they found another quack, Padmini, a Siddha practitioner practicing allopathy, as reported by The Times of India.

Mohanan, Thiruvallur joint director of health told TOI that when they visited the quack, she was giving intravenous fluids to a patient with body ache. An FIR was registered against her on Saturday night.

About 16 quacks have been arrested in August. Senior public health officials said that the state government must implement the Supreme Court order which states that those indulging in cross prescription should also be considered quacks, as reported by The Times of India.

Two teams of the public health department are visiting clinics and enquiring about more quacks in the district.

 

 

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