Bengaluru, May 29 : Karnataka Public Education Department has decided to postpone reopening of Schools for the Academic year 2019-2020 to June 14 due to severe drought condition prevailing in Hyderabad-Karnataka region.
The Schools should have started functioning from today but in the interests of School going children and to protect their health, it was decided to postpone the reopening to June 14 as recommended by various District authorities.
In other parts of the State the Schools started functioning from today.
The region is reeling under severe heat condition as mercury is hovering at more than 40 Degree Celsius. Yesterday, Kalaburagi registered 43.5 Degree Celsius, the State’s highest temperature.
The Department in its Notification issued here on Wednesday, however, stated that full time class may be held on Saturday instead of holding only morning class and during holidays also full time class may be held to cover the portions remaining.
Archives for May 2019
Karnataka CM Kumaraswamy to attend Narendra Modi’s swearing in ceremony
Bengaluru, May 29 : Karnataka Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy will attend the swearing-in ceremony of the Narendra Modi as the Prime minister of the country tomorrow at New Delhi.
According to official sources, Kumaraswamy will visit New Delhi tomorrow and attend the ceremony.
Modi is scheduled to take the oath of the office, for the second successive term following a spectacular victory in the just concluded Lok Sabha election in which the BJP led NDA had trounced the opposition parties including Congress by winning more than 350 seats in the 543 member Lok Sabha.
Party sources told UNI that State BJP President B S Yeddyurappa is also scheduled to attend the oath taking ceremony.
KL Rahul’s century settles India’s No 4 debate
Cardiff, May 29 : With a fluent knock of 108, which took India to a position of
strength after they had lost early wickets in their second warm-up match against
Bangladesh, KL Rahul seems to be in firm contention to hold India’s highly
contentious No.4 slot at the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019.
Successive failures by the opening pair of Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma
presented another opportunity for Rahul to put himself as the front-runner for the
position, and he made the most of it with a sublime century that led to skipper
Virat Kohli to call his knock the “biggest positive” to come out of India’s
warm-up gig.
“The biggest positive to come out of this game was the way KL batted at four,”
Kohli said after the outing in Cardiff.
“All the other people know their role pretty well, so it was important that KL gets
runs because he is such a sound player. He can get the scoreboard ticking and
you saw that – a great example of the skill-set that he has,” Kohli said.
Before Rahul, Tamil Nadu all-rounder Vijay Shankar was believed to be in contention
for the position, as indicated by MSK Prasad, the chairman of the selectors.
Vijay, who had missed the first warm-up match, against New Zealand, due to injury,
recovered quickly to feature in the game against Bangladesh. However, he could
manage just two runs and finished wicket-less in his six overs.
India had also tried out several other options at the position, including Ajinkya Rahane
and Ambati Rayudu. Rahul, who was earlier nominated as India’s reserve opener in the
tournament by Prasad, finished as the second-highest run-scorer in the Indian Premier
League last month, and sounded confident and ready to accept the new challenge.
“It is a team game, and you need to be flexible and be ready to bat wherever, or as a
player you need to be ready to take up whatever role is given to you,” he said. “Every
batsman who has played at this level knows how to handle pressure and knows how
to handle the roles and responsibilities given to him.”
The Karnataka batsman, who spent a chunk of time outside the team earlier this year,
due to a code of conduct breach, believed that the break gave him an opportunity to
reflect on his cricket. “I tried to make the best use of it [the time off]. I felt like there were
a few things with my batting and technique I needed to fix,” he said.
“I worked with my coach back home in Bangalore, and the India A games gave me a
little time with Rahul Dravid to just speak to him about mental preparation and how to
handle pressure and how to handle low confidence and low form. The best way to get
back to scoring runs is to find that form in the middle, and I got that opportunity. So from
there, I just carried on and I knew that my batting was fine and I was very hungry to
come back and score runs for whatever teams I played,” Rahul added.
Venugopal holds talks with party leaders on saving the Coalition Government in Karnataka
Bengaluru, May 29 : All India Congress Committee (AICC) General Secretary and incharge of party affairs in Karnataka K C Venugopal had several rounds of talks with the State party leaders and discussed about working out strategies to save the one-year-old Coalition government.
He held meeting with former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, Deputy Chief Minister Dr G Parameshwara, D K Shivakumar, M B Patil and others and took stock of the political situation after receiving a severe jolt in the just concluded Lok Sabha election.
The leaders, reportedly discussed about some of the party MLAs threatening to quit the party and pull down the coalition government and steps to be taken to prevent them.
The Sources said that the leaders, among other options have decided to convince the fence sitting MLAs, to remain in the party fold and offer them with Cabinet berths and other lucrative posts in the state government.
Speaking to newsmen, Deputy Chief Minister Dr G Parameshwara said that “We have discussed about the poor performance of the Congress and the JD(S) in the just concluded Lok Sabha elections and its impact on the state government”.
“We have also discussed about measures to be taken to strengthen the party,” he added.
The meeting of the senior leaders assume importance, in the backdrop of the Congress legislature Party (CLP) meeting convened by the CLP leader Siddaramaiah in the night, today.
CCB sleuths arrest 6 Pawn brokers on charges of charging huge interest.
Bengaluru, May 29 : CCB Police have nabbed six Pawn brokers who had indulged in collecting huge interest and threatening the loan takers of dire consequences even after they repay the loan amount by not returning their Cheques, Sale Deed, On Demand Notes collected as security at the time of lending them the loan amount.
Police said that following the complaints raids were conducted at seven places, including on their houses and Offices, seized Cash Rs 9 lakh, 566 Cheques, 197 On Demand Notes, 3 Sale Deeds, 28 Lease Agreements and Laptop used for the crime.
The arrested were identified as Ashish Jain, Lalit Kanuga, Sanjay Sachdev, Chandru Arjun Das, Om Prakash Sachdev and Mata Prasad Tiwari.
Police said that the arrested were charging 20 per cent to 25 per cent and were collecting Cheques, On Demand Notes, Sale Deeds as security but not returning them after receiving the money towards clearing the loan amount taken.
They also used to threaten the loan takers of dire consequences if they failed to paying interest.
Cases were registered at City Market, Puttenahalli and Konanakunte Police Stations.
Police open fire on a rowdysheeter before arresting him
Mangaluru, May 29 : Police opened fire at a notorious rowdysheeter Umer Farooq when he tried to escape after attacking them and arrested him.
Police said that the incident occurred when a police team had gone to Pachanadu located in the outskirts of the city and tried to arrest Farooq, who was on run from the police for long.
The culprit tried to attack the police personnel with lethal weapons and in self defence the police opened fire at him with service revolver and arrested him.
BJP leader urges Karnataka Govt to withdraw its decision to sell 3666 acres of land to Jindal Group at throw away price
Shivamogga, May 28 : Senior Bharatiya Janata party leader and former Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister K S Eshwarappa, strongly criticising the State Cabinet’s decision to sell over 3666 acres of land to Jindal group at a throw away price, urged the Government to revoke its decision.
Speaking to newsmen here on Tuesday, the BJP leader charged that the State government had decided to hand over huge tract of land to a Company, which had defaulted in making payment to the State government.
“The Congress-JDS coalition government, which is numbering its days is trying to make hay as much as it can before going” he said.
While urging the state government to reverse its decision on granting the land at cheap price, the BJP leader warned of launching statewide agitation on the issue.
On Monday the State Cabinet approved sale of land to Jindal company to expand its Steel Plant in Torangal in Bellari District.
Referring to the reports of the Congress making efforts to wean away some of the BJP MLAs, to avert the collapse of the state government he shot back that “No BJP MLAs are ready to become the prey of the ruling government”.
Congress to depute Central leaders to assist cabinet rejig in Karnataka
Bengaluru, May 28 : In its efforts to save the one-year-old JD(S)-Congress coalition government, which is facing severe crisis following setback it eceived in the Lok Sabha elections in Karnataka AICC president Rahul Gandhi has decided to depute a Central party team to assist the State Congress leaders to hammer out the solutions.
According to KPCC sources, the former Union minister and the leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, Gulam Nabi Azad and the Party in-charge for Karnataka K C Venugopal, are arriving on Tuesday and join the Congress leaders, in working out strategies to stave off any threat to the stability of the Coalition government.
The Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which had registered a stellar performance in the just concluded Lok Sabha elections bagging as many as 25 seats out of the total number of 28, is making all efforts to wean away the dissident Congress and the JD(S) MLAs to its side and topple the Alliance government.
Chief minister H D Kumaraswamy, Deputy Chief minister Dr G Parameshwara and former Chief minister Siddaramaiah held series of meetings earlier in their bid to save the coalition government, and are in constant touch with the dissident Congress MLAs, and pursuing them not to desert the party and save the government.
According to party sources, the state Congress leaders, have reportedly offered them to give them a berth in the state cabinet, by filling about three vacancies as well as accommodating more of them during the cabinet reshuffle.
Former Chief minister Siddaramaiah had confirmed that there will be all possibilities of filling of vacancies as well as reshuffling of the cabinet, paving way to include more number of disgruntled MLAs, to the Council of ministers.
The much needed cabinet reshuffle is expected to take place in the first week of June in which several ministers would opt out from the cabinet to make way to others, the sources said.
It may be recalled that in the 224-member Karnataka Assembly the Opposition BJP has a strength of 105 members, is making all efforts to reach the number that makes the majority, and topple the JD(S)-Congress coalition government, which is enjoying the strength of 119 members including two Independents and a BSP member.
What does Modi’s return to power mean for India’s Muslims?
After landslide victory India’s PM reaches out to Muslims, who fear they will continue to be target of Hindu hardliners.
New Delhi, India – Days after returning to power with a resounding mandate, Prime Minister Narendra Modi struck a conciliatory tone by saying his party needed to win the trust of Muslims – the country’s largest minority.
Modi led his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to a landslide win on the back of a divisive campaign that ostensibly targeted Muslims.
The Indian prime minister said that the opposition parties “deceived minorities” by not addressing their basic needs such as healthcare and education.
“Due to vote bank politics, minorities were crushed, boxed into a corner, subjected to imaginary fears, and exploited during the elections,” he said addressing the newly elected parliamentarians.
But Asaduddin Owaisi, one of India’s most prominent Muslim leaders, was not impressed by Modi’s apparent minority outreach.
“Just hours after the results were declared, Muslims were publicly attacked in many places by those celebrating Modi’s victory,” Owasi, the president of the All India Majlis-e-ittadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) party, told Al Jazeera.
Since the BJP won the election last week, at least five incidences of hates crimes have been recorded.
In Madhya Pradesh state, three Muslims, including a woman, were badly beaten by a mob on the suspicion of carrying beef.
On Sunday, a Muslim man was attacked in Gurugram, a suburb of Delhi. He was stripped of his prayer cap and made to shout slogans in praise of Hindu gods.
Stop lynchings
Owaisi told local media that if Modi cared about Muslims, then he should stop cow vigilantes from lynching Muslims.
In the past five years of Modi’s rule, 44 people have been lynched, most of them Muslims, by cow vigilantes, according to a report by Human Rights Watch.
The BJP stoked fear among Hindus of potential Muslim threat, with campaigning raising divisive issues such as construction of a temple in place of a demolished mosque, and change in citizenship law to bar Muslims.
Author and senior journalist Saeed Naqvi said that religious polarisation was the main key to the BJP’s success.
“Such polarisation was last seen during the partition of India and Pakistan,” Naqvi told Al Jazeera, referring to the 1947 division of the Indian subcontinent to form the Muslim-majority Pakistan and Hindu majority India.
Naqvi, the author of “Being the Other: The Muslim in India”, said the partition marked the beginning of the “Hindu project, which has now come of age”.READ MORE
Q&A: ‘India is heading towards a full ethnic democracy’
“With the election verdict, the majority Hindus have given vent to their unfulfilled aspiration for a Hindu India. This process is only going to intensify in the coming decades.”
More than a million people were killed during the partition and 17 million people were displaced in one of the worst tragedies of modern times.
Kashmir and Assam
Parvez Imroz from India-administered Kashmir and Aman Wadud from Assam, both human rights lawyers, fear that Muslims in their states will be the first to bear the brunt of the BJP’s Hindu supremacist agenda.
The BJP adopted national security as one of their main poll planks after a suicide attack in Kashmir that killed 40 Indian security forces in February.
In Assam, the BJP based its campaign on the promise that it will rid the state of undocumented Muslim immigrants from Bangladesh, while promising to keep the Hindu immigrants in contravention of India’s secular constitution.
BJP president Amit Shah had referred to Bangladeshi immigrants as “termites” and “infiltrators” during the poll campaign, a statement that a BJP spokesperson defended in an Al Jazeera programme.
Muslims form one-third of Assam population but their citizenship has always been suspected. A Supreme Court monitored body published a draft list of citizens last year, leaving out nearly four million people.
Wadud feels the election mandate will further embolden the BJP to execute its vision of an Assam free of Bengali Muslims.
“Of the four million people left out of NRC, we can expect Muslims to be arbitrarily left out of the final list and stripped of all basic entitlements such as healthcare, education and voting rights,” he said.
“Now, there’s nothing stopping the BJP.
Narendra Modi: The making of a majoritarian leader
For Imroz, Modi’s victory has raised fears among Kashmiris that the BJP will abolish articles 370 and 35A of the Indian Constitution, which provide special safeguards to the disputed region administered by India.
Kashmir has witnessed an armed rebellion since late 1980s during which more than 60,000 civilians have been killed. India has stationed nearly half a million forces to fight the rebels, who either want independence or merger of Muslim-majority region with Pakistan.
‘Working class hero’
He warned that repealing those safeguards will trigger a massive uprising in Kashmir and “radicalise” even those sections of Kashmiris, who have so far stayed clear of politics.
“Going by past record, we can expect the resistance to be met with more brutal military repression,” said Imroz.
“India under Modi has been adopting methods used by Israel in Palestine. There’s also growing proximity between the two nations. The question in Kashmir is: will India follow Israel’s footsteps in ignoring international opinion?”
Professor Sumeet Mhaskar of Jindal School of Government and Public Policy sought to downplay the influence of Hindutva (Hindu supremacy) on people’s minds.
Don’t back politics that divides: Indian scientists urge voters
“It is incorrect to say people have suddenly turned right and sanctioned the purge of Muslims. There is an element of that, but this is not a purely ideological mandate,” he said.
Mhaskar, an expert on unorganised labour and anti-caste politics, said the lower castes, who form the bulk of the unorganised workforce, voted overwhelmingly in favour of the BJP. The party, he said, has been extremely successful in projecting Modi as a working class hero.
The BJP campaign played up Modi’s identity as a leader from the backward castes (OBC), an ordinary tea-seller and watchman. This, Mhaskar said, was a powerful tug on the emotions of the lower caste voters, who form the biggest chunk of the Indian electorate.
Mhaskar said that the BJP captured the imagination of lowered castes, who were traditionally on the fringes of Hindu society, by promoting the vision of a new Hindu nation, united against Muslims, in which even an OBC and former tea seller can become the prime minister.
“This vision of political Hindusim, which is known as Hindutva, is very different from ritual or religious Hinduism in which one’s profession is decided at birth by divine decree,” he said.
Aljazeera
Pakistan: India’s oath-taking snub result of ‘domestic politics’
Relations between Indian and Pakistan yet to thaw after military standoff in February over the disputed Kashmir region.
Islamabad, Pakistan – Pakistan has attributed the snub of India not inviting its Prime Minister Imran Khan for Narendra Modi’s oath-taking ceremony to the Indian leader’s election campaign that “focus[ed] on Pakistan-bashing”.
Speaking to a Pakistani television news channel on Monday evening, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi reiterated his country’s invitation to India to engage in dialogue on all outstanding issues.
Relations between the two countries have yet to thaw after a military standoff following a suicide attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed at least 40 people in mid-February.
The nuclear-armed neighbours have fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over the disputed territory of Kashmir.
India accused Pakistan of “controlling” the attack and the Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) armed group that carried it out. Pakistan denied any connection to the attack or JeM.
The standoff saw both sides conduct air attacks on each other’s territory, and an Indian fighter jet shot down during an aerial dogfight.
India suspended all dialogue following the standoff, and Modi made frequent references to the military action against Pakistan during an election campaign that saw him sweep back to power, winning 303 of the 542 seats in India’s parliament.
His National Democratic Alliance won 352 seats in all, according to official results.
“The issue on which Narendra Modi fought the election, the whole focus was on Pakistan bashing [and] on fanning nationalism,” Pakistani Foreign Minister Qureshi told Geo News on Monday.
“Now, to expect that he will be able to rid himself of that narrative within a moment, and open himself up to the entire opposition’s criticism, that is unlikely.”
‘Hold dialogue on real issues’
Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) led the right-wing alliance to sweep back to power on the back of a platform promising economic prosperity, and frequently referred to hardline action against Pakistan as a form of nationalism that India was in need of.READ MORE
‘Breaking the silence’: Report documents torture in Kashmir
On Monday, Raveesh Kumar, the Indian foreign ministry spokesperson, said that India’s invitations to the oath-taking were “in line with government’s focus on its ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy”.
India is inviting the leaders of Bangladesh, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Nepal, Bhutan, Mauritius and Kyrgyzstan to the oath-taking on May 30, according to a government statement.
Qureshi reiterated that Pakistan desired a resumption of bilateral dialogue with India, not an invitation to a ceremony.
“Even if [Pakistani PM] Imran Khan did go, then what would we have gained from attending this oath-taking? We can only attain something when we hold dialogue on the real issues.”
Qureshi briefly met Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj on the sidelines of a Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) meeting in Kyrgyzstan last week, the highest-level contact between the two countries since the military standoff in February and March.
Aljazeera
- « Previous Page
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- …
- 28
- Next Page »