Category: National

  • Over 1.78 lakh train tickets booked within three hours: Railway

    Some trains are to start operations from June 1

    The Indian Railways on Thursday said that over 1.78 lakh train tickets were booked within three hours of opening of the online bookings for some trains that are to start operations June 1 onwards.

    “At 01:00 hours, 76 trains were available in the system for booking. 1,78,990 tickets were booked for 4,23,538 passengers,” a Railways spokesperson said.

    Earlier, the Railways said that till 12:00 hours, 1,49,025 tickets were booked for 2,90,510 passengers for 73 trains.

    The Railways will begin running 200 time-tabled trains June 1 onwards, for which the booking started at 10 a.m. on Thursday. The booking for these trains, which will have both AC and non-AC coaches, can be done only online.

    “These special services shall be in addition to the existing Shramik special trains being run since May 1, and Special AC trains (30 trains) being run since May 12, 2020,” the Railways had said, adding that other regular passenger services continue to remain cancelled.

    As per the Railway guidelines, the advance reservation period for these trains will be 30 days. In addition, no tatkal and premium tatkal booking will be permitted in these trains.

    ‘Counters will open soon’

    Meanwhile, Railways Minister Piyush Goyal on Thursday said that the bookings for passenger trains via ticket counters would resume in a few days, and the Railways was currently studying the possibility of developing a protocol. In addition, the ticket booking via over 1.7 lakh common service centres would also be started.

    Mr. Goyal added that on Wednesday, the Railways ran 279 Shramik trains, carrying about five lakh migrants. “Till now we have run 2,050 Shramik special trains, ferrying about 30 lakh migrants,” he said.

    All shops had been allowed to open at railway stations and, as of now, only takeaways would be allowed in restaurants, he said.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Loud noise heard across Bengaluru was sonic boom from routine IAF test flight, clarifies defence ministry; quashes rumours of earthquakes

    Late in the evening on Wednesday, the Ministry of Defence finally broke the mystery by releasing an official statement that the sound from the sky that took Bengaluru by surprise “was a routine IAF Test Flight involving a supersonic profile which took off from Bengaluru Airport and flew in the allotted airspace well outside City limits. The aircraft was of ASTE.”

    According to a Times of India report, Prior to that the Indian Air Force in a statement indicated towards sonic boom as the source of the sound but also admitting that none of its aircraft from its Training Command was airborne during that time. Although the IAF said that the ASTE (Aircraft and Systems Testing Establishment) and HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Limited) could be conducting routine test flying it stopped short of making it official.

    Interestingly, HAL was the first to respond with a statement after the loud noise was heard in Bengaluru but only with a denial that it was a sonic boom.

    A deafening noise was heard on Wednesday afternoon that created panic across Bengaluru.

    “The sonic boom was probably heard while the aircraft was decelerating from supersonic to subsonic speed between 36,000 and 40000 feet altitude,” the defence ministry added in a follow up tweet. “The aircraft was far away from the city limits when this occurred. The sound of a sonic boom can be heard and felt by an observer even when the aircraft is flying as far away as 65 to 80 kilometres away from the person,” the defence ministry further said on Twitter.   Sources told The Times of India the fighter plane was most likely one of the SU-30 fighters being tested by the IAF’s Aircraft and Systems Testing Establishment pilots. A retired pilot told the newspaper, “There are parameters of how to do a supersonic test. If it is indeed from a plane, then it’s a mistake. Pilots can go supersonic only after the aircraft has attained a height of more than 11 km. They are disallowed from doing so in populous areas even at those heights.” According to NASA, a sonic boom is a thunder-like noise one hears from the ground when an aircraft flies overhead “faster than the speed of sound, or supersonic.” The noise heard across Bengaluru around 1.30 pm on Wednesday was heard by residents of Cooke Town, Hosur Road, HAL, Vivek Nagar, Old Madras Road, Ramamurthy Nagar, Ulsoor, Kammanahalli, CV Raman Nagar, Kundanahalli, Whitefield and HSR Layout. It caused a number of people to share their experiences on social media and speculate about its cause. Some said the noise sounded like an aftershock from an earthquake. Others said their doors and windows rattled. 

    According to a report by The News Minute, Bengaluru Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao said that was no damage anywhere in the city. A report by The Indian Express quoted police personnel at the Bengaluru City Police Control Room saying that they started receiving calls around 1:20 pm.

    Karnataka State Natural Disaster Management Centre (KSNDMC) Director Srinivas Reddy said that there was no earthquake activity recorded on Wednesday in Bengaluru. “The seismometers did not capture any ground vibration as generally happens during a mild tremor,” he said.

    With inputs from FirstPost

  • Mistook You For Muslim As You Had Beard: MP Cops on Beating Lawyer

    The Quint

    “You had a long beard, that is why police officials beat you up. They thought you were a Muslim. The man who thrashed you is a kattar (staunch) Hindu.”

    This is how two policemen in Madhya Pradesh’s Betul apologised to lawyer Deepak Bandele and asked him to take back his case against police officials who thrashed him ruthlessly on 23 March, while he was going to a hospital.

    What Had Happened?

    On 23 March, two days before nationwide lockdown came into force, Bandele was going to a hospital for treatment when he was stopped by some policemen who were on patrolling duty.

    Bandele tried to explain that he has a history of high blood pressure and sugar and needed to go to the hospital for regular treatment, but one police official slapped him without listening to what he had to say.

    “I told them to act within constitutional limits but the police officer started abusing not just me, but also the Indian Constitution. Within minutes, other police officers also started beating me up brutally.” – Deepak Bundele, Lawyer

    The thrashing stopped only after Bandele told them he is a lawyer and will complain against them to the senior in-charges. He called his friend and brother after the incident who took them to the hospital and got a medicolegal (MLC) report done.

    ‘Police Is Pressurising Me to Take Back Complaint; Threatening of Persecution in False Cases’

    The next morning, Bandele complained to the district Superintendent of Police, D.S. Bhadoria, and the state Director General of Police, Vivek Johri. He subsequently also wrote to the chief minister, state’s human rights commission, the bar council and other top government officials. He also filed an RTI to retrieve the CCTV footage of the day. Two months after the incident, neither was he given access to the CCTV footage nor has his FIR been lodged. Instead, Bandele says he is being constantly pressurised to take back the complaint.

    ““One police official told me that since I am a lawyer, it will bode me well to cooperate with police officials instead of messing with them. He said, if I irk the policemen, they can entrap me in a false case as well.”” – Deepak Bundele‘Police Said Man Who Beat Me up Was a Kattar Hindu and Mistook Me for a Muslim’

    In his complaint to the SP on 24 March, Bandele had asked for an FIR to be registered. In connection with that, two police officials reached his residence on 17 May, almost two months after the incident. The officials had come to record his version, instead they revealed the “real reason” behind beating him up.

    This is when the police officials, in their defence, told Bandele that he was beaten up because he was wrongly identified as a Muslim. Bandele had recorded the audio of the conversation which he shared with The Quint.

    According to the recording, voices allegedly belonging to the police officials, initially try to convince Bandele to not lodge an FIR.

    One of the officers can be heard saying, “You are like my son, I am making a heartfelt request to you to write, “the police officials did not behave indecently with me.” You must adhere to our request….We are all living in Gandhi’s country, we are Gandhi’s children.”

    When Bandele refuses to budge, the officer further says, “I have at least 50 friends from your caste.”

    Bandele still refuses to go back on his word. That is when one of the officers say, “Whenever there a Hindu-Muslim riot, police always take the side of Hindus. Even Muslims know that.”

    Bandele retorts, “That day there were no Hindu-Muslim riots.”

    The officer explains, “There were some incidents before you that day, that is why the police was a little hassled. And they mistook you for a Muslim because of your long beard.”

    The second officer adds, “The man who beat you up is a kattar (staunch) Hindu. Whenever there is a Hindu-Muslim riots and the Muslims are arrested, he always beats them up brutally. I am not boasting. You can test him yourself someday.”

    Bandele still refused to withdraw his complaint and said he has been a professional journalist before becoming a lawyer. He told them he has decided to pursue the complaint since he has already notified top government officials.

    What is Police Saying About the Matter?

    The Quint spoke to Additional SP Shraddha Joshi who said there are two aspects being explored in relation to the case.

    1. Deepak Bandele had himself misbehaved with the police on 23 March. However, there is no CCTV footage of the incident since the recordings are stored only for 30 days. Additional SP Joshi said, “Had we been able to recover the footage, the truth from both the sides would have come to light.”
    2. The second aspect being investigated is that the sub-inspector had not given information of the incident to the top officials and instead had just mentioned it in the diary, according to Additional SP Joshi.

    SP Joshi further said that Bandele could not identify the faces of the policemen who thrashed him. But, what stops them from finding out which police officer was deployed at the location as mentioned by Bundele?

    When further asked about the FIR not being registered and the police officials presenting a defence on the lines of communal bias, Additional SP Joshi said, “Because of COVID-19, all police officials are on ground duty. Our first priority is to enforce the lockdown properly. We are occupied with too many COVID-19 cases.”

    On the communal remarks, Additional SP Joshi further said:

    “I have been informed about the incident where two policemen have talked about religious divisions. The officials who submitted the report to us have not informed us anything, I got to know from journalists. If something like this has indeed been said, an investigation will be launched.”

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Is India undercounting its COVID-19 deaths?

    In 2020, deaths due to COVID-19 increased exponentially from the 12th week due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 24 countries in Europe

    India’s COVID-19 case fatality rate (CFR, deaths/cases) has always remained low. But data from some European and Asian countries show that since the 10th week of 2020, “excess deaths” have surged. In countries with relatively poorer income levels such as Indonesia and Ecuador, a very small % of those excess deaths have been attributed to COVID-19. With historically poor registration of deaths and medically-certified death rate, is India too undercounting its dead?

    Fatality rate

    India’s CFR of 3.1% (in red) as of May 18 is among the lowest in countries with more than 1 lakh cases and much below the world average of 6.6%. The chart plots cumulative cases against the CFR as of May 18.

    Case fatality rate of India and other countries

    Among nations with over 1 lakh cases, only Turkey and Russia have a lower case fatality rate than India.

    Excess deaths

    The chart shows the weekly excess deaths (deviation in mortality from the expected level) in 24 countries in Europe from January 1, 2016 to May 15, 2020. In 2020, deaths increased exponentially from the 12th week due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The spike recorded in the first 10-12 weeks of 2017, 2018 and 2019 can be attributed to the flu season which was unusually lethal. In 2020 the flu season was relatively less deadly.

    COVID-19 deaths among excess

    The graph plots the % share of COVID-19-related deaths among the excess deaths for nations which had such data. In high-income countries (represented in blue), the share of COVID-19 deaths are higher among the excess deaths. In upper middle income countries (represented in red) such as Russia, Turkey and Ecuador and lower middle income countries such as Indonesia (represented in orange) the share of COVID-19 deaths among the excess deaths was much lower. This suggests that the relatively poorer countries may not be testing the dead for COVID-19 or they maybe undercounting them due to comorbidities.

    As it can be seen from the chart most countries which have shared data on excess deaths are from the high income groups while many countries in the lower income group don’t maintain this data.

    India is one among such countries which do not maintain real time data on all deaths.

    Last word

    On April 30, West Bengal announced that 105 COVID-19 positive patients had died, but did not count 72 of them as they died due to comorbidities. On May 18, the Delhi government asked its hospitals not to take samples of dead people to test for COVID-19. Also, while the Delhi government’s official COVID-19 death toll was 68 until May 8, the number of such deaths in just two hospitals in the city that The Hindu accessed was 107. These COVID-19-specific stories along with the fact that India medically certifies only 22% of deaths (as of 2017) suggest that India may be undercounting its dead.

    Source: The Economist, EuroMOMO, Johns Hopkins University’s coronavirus tracker

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Domestic flight services to resume from 25th May

    PTI

    Domestic civil aviation operations will recommence in a calibrated manner from Monday 25th May 2020. All airports & air carriers are being informed to be ready for operations from 25th May, tweets Aviation Minister Hardeep Puri.

  • Residents hear ‘loud noise’ in many parts of Bengaluru

    The noise was not due to an earthquake, officials say

    A loud noise heard by residents of several parts of Bengaluru on Wednesday has turned out be a mystery.

    People in Whitefield, Electronics City, HAL, HSR Layout and other areas posted on social media that they heard the noise at around 1.30 p.m. They termed it ‘loud boom’ and ‘thunderous noise’. Some also complained about windows rattling.

    An official of the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC) said, “The activity reported in Bengaluru is not due to an earthquake. Seismometers did not capture any ground vibration as generally happens during a mild tremor. The activity is purely a loud unknown noise. More importantly, no ground vibration was observed and hence no record by the seismometers installed by KSNDMC,” he said.

    The PRO of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) maintained that the incident has nothing do with HAL tests.

    The City Police Commissioner said that 100 received no calls on the incident.

    Police have approached the Air Force Control Room to verify whether any aircraft testing was being done.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Nepal’s new map claims territories of India in west, asserts control over Susta in east

    Its publication comes less than a fortnight after India announced building a road to Lipulekh pass

    Nepal has officially unveiled a new political map of the country showing the regions of Kalapani, Limpiyadhura and Lipulekh of Uttarakhand, as part of its sovereign territory.

    Launching the map at a press conference, Minister of Land Management Padma Kumari Aryal said the government of Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli was committed to protecting territorial sovereignty and integrity of the country.

    “It is a historic moment of happiness for the people of Nepal. The government will not allow erosion of self-esteem of our people. Nepal will publish the new map and make it part of the school textbooks,” said Ms Aryal.

    The area of Susta near Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh also appears to be part of Nepal in the new map. Kathmandu claims that India has encroached upon this area claiming large tracts of land and wants Delhi to evacuate the population from the region.

    Road issue

    The publication of the new map came less than a fortnight after India announced building a road to the Lipulekh pass, which will cut travelling time to Tibet’s Manasarovar pilgrimage centre. Nepal had reacted angrily, asserting that the area belongs to Kathmandu and Mr. Oli said his government was willing to give a road to Tibet on lease to India without surrendering the region.

    “We look forward to begin diplomatic negotiations with friendly nation of India regarding the territorial claims”, Ms Aryal said on Wednesday.

    Following the Indian action, there were reports of anti-India protests in parts of Nepal and Mr. Oli targeted India for alleged regional domination. “India’s Ashokan pillar has the lions with “Truth shall prevail” inscribed in the bottom. They actually mean “Lion [might] shall prevail. But Nepal is certain that truth shall prevail”, he said before Parliament on Tuesday. He also alleged that India was responsible for the spread of Coronavirus into the Himalayan country.

    India’s map

    The current phase of tension can be traced to the announcement of a new political map by India last year, which showed the newly created Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh. It also showed the region of Kalapani as part of the Indian territory.

    Nepal maintains that not just the Kalapani region, but the Limpiyadhura and Lipulekh are parts of its sovereign territory as demarcated in the 1816 Treaty of Sugauli. It says Lipulekh was deleted from the country’s map by its kings to get favours from India in exchange.

    Analysts in Kathmandu have said the new map in fact is a document that was in circulation in the country till the 1950s. They claim that the territory of Kalapani was given to India by King Mahendra after the 1962 India-China war.

    Nepal had also expressed displeasure over the 2015 agreement between India and China for using the Lipulekh pass for trade without consulting it.

    China, Mr. Oli claimed before Parliament this week, however, had conveyed to Kathmandu that the pact with India was about trade and pilgrimage and did not grant Chinese seal of approval to the Indian territory.

    In a speech delivered before Parliament, President Bidhya Devi Bhandari had declared the new map. The decision was cleared at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday and unveiled on Wednesday.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Millions of People Face Evacuations as Super Cyclone Heads for India

    New Delhi: A powerful cyclone was moving toward India and Bangladesh on Tuesday as authorities tried to evacuate millions of people while maintaining social distancing.

    Cyclone Amphan is expected to make landfall on Wednesday afternoon, and forecasters warned of extensive damage from high winds, heavy rainfall, tidal waves and some flooding in crowded cities like Kolkata.

    The cyclone had winds of 220-230 kilometers per hour (136-142 miles per hour) and is forecast to weaken before it makes landfall around India’s West Bengal state and Bangladesh.

    It is the second super cyclone on record that has formed over the Bay of Bengal, said Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, India’s meteorological chief. The first was a devastating 1999 cyclone in Odisha state that left nearly 10,000 people dead.

    “This type of cyclone can be disastrous,” Mohapatra said.

    Videos and photos from India and Bangladesh showed families near the coast or in other flood-prone areas being evacuated to cyclone shelters. Some carried bags with their belongings, and all had their faces covered. Officials went from village to village with loudspeakers warning people of the storm.

    “Evacuations are necessary,” warned Mohapatra, pointing out that tidal waves could move 25 kilometers (15 miles) inland along the many rivers that crisscross the Bengal delta.

    Authorities in Bangladesh warned that the cyclone could flood vast swaths of southwestern and southern areas. Junior Minister for Disaster Management and Relief Enamur Rahman said evacuations had begun in the southwest, where residents of Satkhira district, which was devastated by a 2009 cyclone, will be moved to shelters.

    Rahman said he ordered local authorities to prepare thousands of shelters and makeshift structures to protect more than 5 million people before the cyclone crosses the region.

    “We will not have much time tomorrow as the cyclone is expected to make landfall Wednesday evening,” the minister said.

    Amphan’s winds were whirling as far as 700 kilometers (435 miles) from its eye as it approached land. It is forecast to pass between the seaside resort town of Digha in India’s West Bengal state and Hatiya Island in Bangladesh with a weaker wind speed of 165 to 175 kph (102-108 mph).

    Several districts in West Bengal will feel the brunt of the storm, Mohapatra said. Flooding is a risk in Kolkata due to crowding and poor drainage, and the storm surge could raise river levels in the Bengal delta, he said.

    Fishing trawlers and boats in the Bay of Bengal have been told to take shelter until further notice.

    After reaching land, the cyclone is expected to move away fast and weaken by Thursday.

    The eye of the storm is likely to pass through the Sunderban mangrove forests, one of the largest tracts of mangroves in the world. They are likely to absorb some of the impact, officials said.

    Debasis Shyamal, a fisherman in Digha, said evacuations had yet to start, but people were staying indoors.

    “We are mentally prepared for the cyclone, but there are some concerns about social distancing,” he said.

    – – –

    Alam reported from Dhaka, Bangladesh. Associated Press writer Sheikh Saaliq in New Delhi contributed to this report.

    With input from TIME

    (Except for the headlines, this story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Coronavirus lockdown | Flights to resume if States agree, says Civil Aviation Minister

    Commercial flight operations remain suspended at least until May 31, and only some flights have been allowed domestically to help citizens repatriated from different countries travel from major airports hubs in Delhi, Mumbai, etc.

    Domestic flights to different cities will resume once the State governments express their willingness to open airports, Minister for Civil Aviation Hardeep Puri said on Tuesday.

    “It is not upto @MoCA_GoI or centre alone to decide on resuming domestic flights. In the spirit of cooperative federalism, the govt of states where these flights will take off & land should be ready to allow civil aviation operations,” said the Minister in a message posted on Twitter on Tuesday.

    While the standard operating procedure for domestic flights was yet to be framed, the comment gives airlines a hint of what to expect in the days to come. Commercial flight operations remain suspended at least until May 31, and only some flights have been allowed domestically to help citizens repatriated from different countries travel from major airports hubs in Delhi, Mumbai, etc.

    This is also in line with guidelines prepared by the Airports Authority of India for reopening its aerodromes across the country, which said, “flight schedule may be cleared on City Pair basis, so the origin and destination airports are open fully from lockdown situation.” Railways too were operating to and from those cities that permitted train services, until the protocol was amended on Tuesday.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • New guidelines for expectant mothers

    Pamphlets prepared by DMO

    The Health Department has issued new guidelines for expectant mothers returning to the district from other countries and States.

    Since pregnant woman were reaching the district from all places including hotspots, they would be briefed through pamphlets, said Dr R. Sreelatha, District Medical Officer (DMO), on Tuesday.

    The department has instructed pregnant women not to step out without informing respective medical officers at PHCs/FHCs and skip normal check-ups and vaccinations while under monitoring. Apart from the nuchal translucency (NT) scan done between 12 and 13 weeks of pregnancy and the anomaly scan at 18-20 weeks of pregnancy, no other scan is required during this period.

    The department has placed the pregnant women who recently returned to the district in strict home/room quarantine. Maintaining one metre distance from all, including primary caretaker, and wearing masks are also part of the directions.

    “Regularly wash your hands with soap, drink a lot of water, and eat nutritious meals. Intake of folic acid, iron and calcium tablets is also important. If there are any symptoms including fever, cough, sore throat and diarrhoea, get in touch with the health workers. Those with any risk factors like high blood pressure and diabetes should consult the medical officer at the nearest PHC/CHC,” said the DMO.

    With inputs from The Hindu