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Karnataka prepares to receive nearly 11,000 stranded Indians flying in from abroad

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Coronavirus
Officials said that all those who arrive will be quarantined and tested.
Man in PPE takes temperature of passenger at airport with a handheld device pointed at the forehead
File photo
The Karnataka government is preparing to receive 10,823 of the state's residents who are set to return from overseas amid the COVID-19 pandemic, an official said on Tuesday. This is more than a month after international flights were barred. Officials said that all those who come into the state will be quarantined, and that all passengers will be tested as well, on arrival and on different days of their quarantine."The state has planned to quarantine all 10,823 passengers coming back to Karnataka. The quarantine guidelines framed as below would be applicable," said Health Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey, in a statement. According to the Government of India, a total of 10,823 Karnataka natives have been stranded abroad till April 30. This comprises 4,408 tourists, 3,074 students, 2,784 migrants and professionals, and 557 ship crew. Out of the 10,823 people, the state government is expecting 6,100 to return early as the government has decided to allow Indians stuck abroad to return."All the passengers arriving at points of entry (airports and seaports) will be compulsorily screened for symptoms of COVID-19," said Pandey. Point of entry screening will include self-reporting verification form, thermal screening, pulse oximeter reading, briefing with instructions, categorisation, stamping for some and downloading of the health surveillance apps Aarogya Setu, Quarantine Watch and Apthamitra. Arriving passengers are also required to declare existing co-morbidities such as hypertension, diabetes, asthma or any lung disease, organ transplantations, cancer, immunosuppressants, tuberculosis, liver disease, heart disease, and other ailments. Passengers will be categorised into three groups: Category A (symptomatic on arrival), Category B (asymptomatic with co-morbidity or aged above 60 years) and Category C (rest of asymptomatic passengers). Depending on the category into which people fall, their quarantine place and time will be determined. Category A arrivals will be subjected to institutional quarantine for a fortnight, Category B one week quarantine at a hotel or hostel, followed by another week at home, and Category C home quarantine for a fortnight. Karnataka government is making elaborate arrangements and deploying healthcare, the police force, and several other departments to handle the huge influx of Kannadigas and state residents. Pandey has issued a 21-page elaborate standard operating procedure (SOP) on how to deal with the international returnees. The guidelines state that the above will also apply to international passengers who arrive to the state from different ways such as through ports, road and via rail and domestic flights. This means that even if an international passenger arrives in a different state and comes to Karnataka by road, they will be subject to quarantine and testing. Those who arrive in Karnataka from another home state, will be allowed to go to their home state provided they come under Category C. However, Category A and B will be quarantined by Karnataka officials. The Karnataka government has recently come under fire for stopping the trains of migrant workers and preventing them from leaving the state to go back to their home states, following easing of the lockdown. With inputs from agencies
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Karnataka reports Rs 231 cr worth sales of alcohol on third day of stores opening

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Liquor
This is just over Rs 10 crore shy of the combined sales made on Monday and Tuesday.
File photo
Karnataka continued to see brisk sales of alcohol on the third day after liquor stores opened following easing of lockdown. The Karnataka government on Wednesday reported that they had made a daily total sale of Rs 231.60 crore worth of alcohol. This includes 39 lakh litres of Indian made liquor (IML), which made sales of Rs 216 crore, and 7 lakh litres of beer, which made sales of Rs 15.6 crore. This is just over Rs 10 crore shy of the combined sales made on Monday and Tuesday. The total sales for the first two days came up to Rs 242 crore, which included Rs 45 crore on Monday and Rs 197 crore on Tuesday. The Karnataka government opened up sales of alcohol on Monday, May 4, after the lockdown was eased in orange and green zones. This, after the Excise department told the government that their funds were starting to run low. Certain outlets were allowed to sell alcohol, especially MSIL (Mysore Sales International Limited) liquor outlets, which are government sanctioned liquor outlets, which contributes to the state exchequer through excise duties. The Hindu reported that more MSIL outlets are set to be sanctioned by the government to respond to the overwhelming demand from consumers. Excise Minister H Nagesh was quoted as saying that the current limit of four MSIL outlets per assembly constituency is set to increase. Besides, the previous rule of seeking permission from the local MLA in whose constituency one wishes to set up an MSIL liquor outlet, has also been withdrawn by the government, to ease the process of setting up a new liquor outlet.
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Bengaluru’s poor, now out of cash, want pawn shops reopened

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Human rights
The cash crisis among the poor in Bengaluru is so severe that Indira Canteens – where meals are served at the subsidised rate of Rs 10 per plate – has few takers.
Woman migrant worker with child and two men
Photo by Senthil S and Maraa
By Pranshu Rathee/CitizenMatters.in Different people wanted different concessions during the total lockdown that lasted till May 3. While some wanted basic necessities like grain, some others wanted liquor shops to open. There was a unique request that went completely unheard. It was from the poor who did not even have money for basic needs: This section wanted pawn shops in the city to open so they could sell their little possessions and jewellery for some petty cash. The cash crisis among the poor in Bengaluru is so severe that Indira Canteens – where meals are served at the subsidised rate of Rs 10 per plate – has few takers. These canteens have lesser footfall after the government went back on its promise of providing free meals. “When we went to the slums, almost three weeks back, people were already running out of their savings. Some migrants from UP wanted to return to their native places, but first they had to earn some money to be able to afford the journey home. As there is no work anywhere and in many cases, wages have not been paid, the poor are really struggling. Under normal circumstances, the poor that reside in slums would find a way out of borrowing amongst themselves, but this is also not an option as everyone is under such severe distress,” said Vinay Sreenivasa, an activist working with Naavu Bharateeyaru, a city-based social welfare coalition.   Data released by the Stranded Action Workers Network (SWAN), a group of 100 volunteers who have been responding to distress calls from migrant workers across the country since March 27, says that only 259 of 16,863 stranded workers reported receiving any cash transfer from the government. The report, released on Labour Day, points out: ·  More than 97 % (out of 10,383) have not received any cash relief from the government ·  74 % of people have Rs 200 or less left with them ·  64 % of people have less than Rs 100 left with them. (This is out of 9,981 stranded workers) The second highest number of stranded workers (4,736) that SWAN reached out to are in Karnataka. While they continue to work for migrant workers – who have started to leave Bengaluru in the last couple of days – SWAN has “been receiving an increased number of calls from the non-migrant urban poor in Bengaluru,” pointed out Seema Mundoli, who is coordinating relief in the South. Besides from Bengaluru, SWAN is receiving calls from Gulbarga, Raichur, Mysuru, Yadgir and Chickamagalur from both inter-State and intra-State migrants. Apparently, the demand for cash and other SOS calls are increasing, Seema said. “Poor locals are in such a dire situation that they are demanding that the state government open up local pawn shops so they can earn some petty cash by selling their possessions and jewellery,” said Issac Amruthraj, convenor of Slum Janara Sanghatne. Issac also suggested regulation of informal lenders and microcredit financiers who, he said, are harassing poor workers employed in the informal sectors for recovery of loans. Another crisis was seen being played out this weekend as hundreds queued up around Central Bus Station in Majestic, the city’s transport hub, after the government opened some bus routes to ferry stranded migrant workers on Friday. The catch, however, was that the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) decided to charge exorbitant rates to people who had not earned for nearly 40 days. Many who had walked long distances while carrying all their belongings to board these buses for passage home had no choice but to turn back as they were unable to afford the bus tickets.  “We went to the bus stand to enquire about the situation. We met someone who wanted to go back to their native place in Anantapur in Andhra Pradesh but as there was no direct bus there, he planned to go to Ballari. He needed Rs 850 for the ticket but had only Rs 500 with him. Most were still unable to afford tickets,” explained Vinay. As public outcry grew, the government buckled and in a welcome announcement on Sunday (May 3), declared free bus services for ferrying migrants till May 5. The same was later extended till May 7. The Jan Dhan quagmire The Rs 1.70 lakh crore financial package announced under the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY) on March 27 appears to have brought little relief. One of the main schemes under this — depositing of Rs 500 to the Jan Dhan accounts of all women (20.6 crore accounts) for the next three months — has come in for much criticism.  According to recent data, one in every five Jan Dhan accounts or roughly over 7 crore accounts are ‘inoperative/dormant’, meaning there has been no transaction in the account for over two years.  Activists have pointed out that Rs 500 is not enough to help poor households meet their needs for a month. Additionally, a recent study from researchers from Yale University estimates that more than half of poor women in India are likely excluded from the cash transfer program. The study further points out:  ·   26% of poor women live more than 5 km away from their nearest banking point.  ·  Only 75% or 150 million of the 200 million PMJDY accounts belong to poor women. ·  Many women do not know their accounts are PMJDY accounts, which could complicate access and withdrawals. The findings of the study are also consistent with media and academic reports on the subject. For instance, the death of a 62-year-old woman was reported in Jharkhand on April 19 due to heat and exhaustion while waiting in the queue for about two hours at a bank to draw Rs 500 from her Jan-Dhan account.  Long queues outside banks, often in violation of social distancing guidelines, are a reality in rural areas in several states, including Karnataka and have raised concerns of further spread of the virus. Karnataka has 1.45 Crore Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana accounts as of 12/06/2019, according to Lok Sabha data.  According to SWAN data, only 20 (out of 16,863 workers across the country that they spoke to) reported receiving the Rs 500. “There can be many reasons associated with this. A significant chunk of the poor may not have Jan Dhan accounts and it may also be possible that many may not have received any money into their account,” said SWAN’s Rajendran Narayanan, a faculty member at the Azim Premji University, Bengaluru. An additional problem with Jan Dhan accounts is that some have been unused for a long time and hence some users are experiencing additional cess charges for maintaining minimum balance. The RBI needs to issue a strong directive to not have minimum balance restrictions. Second, the governments need to maintain records of migrants from various places and ensure that cash transfer can be done to any kind of account. Cash could also be given based on self-identification, Rajendran said. Meeting the Cash Emergency Despite easing of some lockdown restrictions, cash-generation will continue to be an issue as many occupations the poor are involved in are unlikely to resume immediately. While the idea of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) is floating around, the Congress party has recommended cash transfer of  Rs 7,500 to bank accounts of all those covered under the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana, PM-Kisan scheme and pension accounts, including those of elderly, persons with disability and widows.  Bihar and Jharkhand initiated schemes based on mobile application technology, but have had mixed levels of success due to a host of technical issues and difficult preconditions. Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have provided Rs 1000 to all PDS holders, according to Vinay.  SWAN has recommended emergency cash relief of Rs 7,000 per month for at least 3 months (without biometric authentication) to each poor household/migrant worker and minimum wages for 25 days per month into Jan Dhan accounts of all urban residents for the period of the lockdown and two months following the end of the lockdown. The researchers at Yale too believe “extending transfers to banked women who don’t own a PMJDY account would substantially increase inclusion”.  Activists on the ground in Bengaluru have also suggested some radical ideas. Advocate and labour rights activists, Clifton Rosario, suggested a COVID cess or a ‘super-rich tax’ to guarantee cash assistance and wages to the poor. Pranshu Rathee is a freelance journalist based in Bengaluru. This article was first published in Citizen Matters, a civic media website and is republished here with permission. (c) Oorvani Foundation/Open Media Initiative. 
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Karnataka schools may reopen for Classes 1 to 7 from June if lockdown not extended

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Education
The Department, however, says it will figure out guidelines and logistics of maintaining social distancing at schools in the coming days.
PTI/Representation Photo
The Karnataka government has decided to reopen primary and middle schools from June 1, after the summer vacation ends, if the Union government does not extend the lockdown.  Commissioner of the Department of Public Instruction, KG Jagadeesha, said that the schools will reopen as usual if the lockdown period ends on May 17.  “If the lockdown is extended, then obviously schools won’t open. So far, we have decided that schools will start as usual since the summer vacation ends on May 31,” he said.  Sources in the Primary and Secondary Education Department said that the department’s officials have been consulting with the Health Department to formulate guidelines for schools once they reopen. One primary concern, officials say, is maintaining social distancing.  “The Health Department has suggested that classes for students between standards 1 and 4 can be held in the mornings and the rest of them can have classes in the afternoon. To maintain social distancing, more classrooms are required,” the official said.  The SSLC exams, which were to be held from March 27 this year, were postponed until further notice due to the lockdown. Primary and Secondary Education Department officials are mulling over holding the exams in the first week of July.  “We have decided to start high school classes after the SSLC Exam. So far, we have decided to start classes only for those students from Class 1 to 7 starting June 1. After the SSLC Exams are over, the high school classes can begin again as the exams will need to be held in the high schools and holding classes at the same time is not possible,” KG Jagadeesha said.  “We have to formulate all the guidelines first in consultation with the Health Department and then communicate this with the schools. Some schools may not have a big building. So we have to see whether classes can be held in a staggered manner. We are yet to decide on the logistics,” a department official said.  
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Karnataka govt to restart trains for migrant workers after public outrage

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Coronavirus
The trains were stopped on May 5 with Chief Minister Yediyurappa appealing to workers to return to work.
The Karnataka government will restart train services to transport migrant workers back to their home states, confirmed top sources in the state administration. The move comes two days after Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa unilaterally stopped train services attracting widespread criticism for creating a ‘hostage’ situation for migrant labourers. Sources confirmed to TNM that train services will resume from Friday. An IAS officer said that at least three trains will run on Friday. Railway officials remained tight-lipped about the matter and said that only state government nodal officers are authorised to speak on the matter. The IAS officer also confirmed that only the Bihar government has accepted the proposal to ferry migrant workers and other states like West Bengal, Tripura, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh are yet to respond. The officer added that the government is trying to avoid hiccups unlike the last time and ensure that a more foolproof system is in place. Manjunath Prasad, Principal Secretary in the Revenue Department who is the nodal officer for making arrangements for interstate travel, could not be reached for comment. The train service is also likely to be free for migrant workers. However, a definite decision on this is awaited. Earlier, a controversy erupted after migrant workers were asked to pay higher than normal prices for the special trains. The Karnataka government had facilitated eight special trains on May 3 and 4 with around 1,200 migrant workers aboard each train. However, this was stopped from May 5. Yediyurappa had on May 5 appealed to migrant workers not to leave for their hometowns and instead assured them work. "I appeal to labourers with folded hands, don't pay heed to any rumours, it is the responsibility of the government to see to it that you get work at the place you were working... don't take hasty decisions of going to your native place. Stay here and work, as in the past," Yediyurappa had said. Following this, labour unions and activists lashed out at the government accusing it of not taking labourers into confidence and instead using them to kickstart the economy. Organisations like the All India Central Council of Trade Unions, IIM-Bangalore faculty and various other groups and individuals had written to the Chief Minister to run free trains. The matter was also mentioned before the High Court. TNM had earlier reported how many of the workers were registered in the government’s Seva Sindhu portal but only a few could get on the trains. Many of these workers were living in deplorable conditions during the lockdown and were forced to starve without government aid and lack of pay from their employers. In the last couple of days, there have been instances of minor violence as well including an incident of a police inspector getting injured.

In a migrant settlement in Bengaluru, workers allege cops stop them from stepping out

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Labour
Workers, from various north Indian states, are unsure of their future in the city and want to leave.
many towers of an apartment complex in bangalore prestige falcon city konankunte
At the migrant settlement in Konanakunte cross in JP Nagar in South Bengaluru, the tension was palpable on Wednesday afternoon. The migrant workers were aware of Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa's decision that they cannot go back to their home state, as the lockdown was on. In the morning, as some of them tried to leave, the police tried to stop them, resulting in a skirmish. To reach the labour colony, one has to pass past a luxurious 41 acre apartment complex. Though the apartment complex was calm, with not too many people moving around, beyond a small corrugated metal gate was the migrant settlement. While the grass in the apartment was green, and freshly tended to, the mud path to the labour colony had burnt rubbish on either sides, covered partially by flowering creepers. Three police vehicles stood outside the gate, and policemen were on standby holding shields and lathis.  “Problems happened there, it’s better not to go there,” one policeman warned. As you keep walking, the stench from the waste dumped from the neighbourhood hits you. At the end of the path lies the labour colony consisting of around 200 small hutments, spread out like a slum. A lone Maruti omni ambulance waits under a tree. On stone slabs around the tree, men sat around, watching out for any stranger entering the area. One man took off his shirt to show his bruises. Two red welts on his back and his left bicep are visible. “The police did this,” Pratap says. “The police would not have entered the colony, without permission from the JMC construction company that hired us. How can they beat the workers when we didn’t do anything wrong? All we want to do is go home.” “We want to go home, please help us, we will pay you if you want!” was the continuous demand from all who were around there. The workers say that they are from various states: Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and West Bengal. The workers were agitated that they have not been paid. “Even when the lockdown was announced, we were made to keep on working, but they haven’t paid us for April,” they alleged. One man said that he was angry that he could not send back money to his wife and three children back in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. “What are they supposed to eat? I came here to earn for them, but I myself am struggling.” A representative of the company said that ration was provided for April and Rs 250 per person, but the salaries had not been given. The representative also added that once trains were functional the workers were free to leave. The company refuted allegations that it had asked police to stop the workers from stepping out. “There are around 400 workers here, and 100 want to leave. We handed over their list to the police and are waiting for the police to get back with train details. As soon as it's available, the workers can leave,” Girish Jalwadi who works with JMC Projects said. Police insisting on local address Having made a decision to go home, around 100 workers had gone to the police station with their documents: their Aadhar card photo copies, and the form which needed to be filled so that they could catch the trains back home. The local police told them that they couldn’t leave because their local address was the labour colony and that people from colonies cannot leave for now. “We went to the police station with our Aadhar card number, they took all our details, but they are saying that the local address of the labour camp is not accepted! What should we do? We are willing to pay!", another worker says. A complaint from many workers across Bengaluru is that there seems to be no uniformity in the documents and proof that a migrant worker has to provide, in order to secure a train ticket. “What if we get sick here of coronavirus? There is no one here to take care of us. Look at how crowded this place is. Can we maintain 1 metre distance here? This place is disgusting, and we want to leave.” Geeta Devi, the woman who runs the mess, alleged she had not been paid by the company. “Mr Ganesh from the management told me that I will be paid for last month and this month by May 3. But today is the 6th, and I still haven’t seen a rupee. Where should I go? How will I pay for groceries to cook for all these people?” Some of the workers pointed out that Geeta pawned off her chain because she had no money to pay for vegetables and meat to continue feeding the workers. The workers also complained of the deplorable conditions they lived in. The water being pumped up for baths was visibly filthy, the tank brown in colour and growing fungus on top. The doors to the toilets broken, the toilets filthy. The women’s toilets were worse, with the bottom half of many doors completely broken, allowing no privacy. But more than anything else, what was irking the workers was that the police posted outside the colony were not allowing them to move out, literally making them prisoners within their compound.
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Karnataka govt restarts trains after outrage, but migrant workers are already walking home

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Lockdown
Hundreds of migrant workers from states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal decided to start walking home from Bengaluru on Thursday.
Migrant workers walking home stop at the side of a road in Bengaluru
The Karnataka government on Thursday decided to restart special trains for migrant workers stranded in the state to be taken back to their native places. However, hundreds of migrant workers in Bengaluru have already begun the long walk home. Shivam Yadav, 30, woke up on Thursday morning with one purpose - to pack his belongings and start walking from Bengaluru to Gorakhpur, a distance of over 2,000 kilometres."I heard on the news that trains for us (migrant workers ) were cancelled yesterday. Then we decided to start walking and see if we can get a lift at the Andhra Pradesh border,” says Shivam, who works as a painter in Marathahalli in Bengaluru.  He had walked 34 km in the afternoon heat before he decided to take rest just beyond Yelahanka. “We filled online forms and everything, when we went to the police station, we found that there was no arrangement. We have paid 100 rupees to buy this form,” Shivam says. Like Shivam, hundreds of migrant workers from states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal decided to start walking from Bengaluru on Thursday. "We don't know when we will reach or if we will find anyone who will give us a lift. But we know that there is no work or food here. So what does a person do then?" asks Upendra Moria, a carpenter from Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh. Along the national highway from Bengaluru to Hyderabad, the workers made slow progress through the day, often stopping to catch a break from the blistering heat or to try and hitch a ride from a truck headed their way. Just around the Yelahanka Air Force Station, some of the workers with Shivam hitched a ride on a truck headed towards Andhra Pradesh. The driver says he was taking an empty truck and was travelling in the same direction the workers were. More migrant workers managed to hitch a ride on this truck transporting sand headed towards the Andhra Pradesh border. Truck driver says, "I saw a lot of people walking along the highway. Out of humanity I want to take them around 70 km on the way I am going " pic.twitter.com/x1pbcxmz3S— Prajwal (@prajwalmanipal) May 7, 2020 Many like Shivam are walking towards Yelahanka in the hopes of hitching rides on goods carriers leaving the city. 28-year-old Amarnath, who works as a carpenter in Bengaluru, is walking with a small group of people towards Uttar Pradesh.  “What else can we do but walk? There are no other means for us from here. If there is no ration, nor any work. Yesterday news channels were showing that trains have been cancelled and no migrant has been allowed to leave, so we have decided to walk home. We are trying to hitch a ride from passing-by vehicles,” Amarnath says. “We don’t have any food and water. We are just walking with the clothes on our backs. If the government helps us, if they would have paid us for the past month, that would have been better. We want to go back to our families. We request the government help us go home,” he adds.  A carpenter from Bengaluru has set out to walk thousands of kilometres to reach his home in Uttar Pradesh. He is not alone. Hundreds of migrant workers have begun walking towards states like UP, Bihar and Jharkhand. They've heard the news that trains have been cancelled. pic.twitter.com/IHMWmugQbD— Prajwal (@prajwalmanipal) May 7, 2020 A police checkpost is located 200-500m ahead of the Yelahanka Air Force station. Constables of the Chikkajala police station, who have been posted there, tell TNM that they have been here all morning and around 100 migrant workers have walked up to the spot. Many workers walked from places like Ramamurthy Nagar, Yelahanka and even as far as Ramnagar. Many of them were escorted back to where they came from by the police in a special vehicle arranged for them. But officials at the checkpost say many of them managed to cross the post by climbing onto trucks and taking a different route. "We felt bad looking at so many people coming here walking. They were sent back in autos and police vehicles as they came. They told us stories of how their owners had left them without any help,” Rajesh, one of the constables, says. Ramesh and Rajesh, constables attached to Chikkajala Police Station say they are at a check post set up in Yelahanka. They've met around 100 migrant workers so far who have been sent back to their homes in police vehicles. "Some have gone past in trucks and tempos", they say. pic.twitter.com/PJYEicHNZk— Prajwal (@prajwalmanipal) May 7, 2020 But with owners asking them to vacate their home and the police asking them to go back to where they were, the workers find themselves in a difficult predicament.  There are still some workers asking police to allow them to walk past the check post. Listen to Kamlesh Kumar from UP. pic.twitter.com/98A26zgR6P — Prajwal (@prajwalmanipal) May 7, 2020 On Thursday, a video shared by Krishna Byre Gowda, the MLA of Byatarayanapura, showed a group of migrant workers walking home from Bengaluru to Uttar Pradesh in the rain. The video, followed by news that the state had cancelled trains for migrants, had triggered massive outrage. Adding to the outrage was a tweet by Bangalore South MP Tejasvi Surya, who defended the Karnataka government’s decision to halt the trains. State Govt cancels trains. Thousands of people,in groups of 10/20,are just WALKING TO UP.@CMofKarnataka this is inhuman.They are so disturbed as to walk home,pls don’t force. Some may die.Govt can not be the paid agent of real estate lobby.Send them well so they want to come back pic.twitter.com/pxnxh7ALBH — Krishna Byre Gowda (@krishnabgowda) May 6, 2020 Stoppage of inter-state trains by Sri @BSYBJP is a bold and necessary move. It will help migrant labourers who came here with hopes of a better life to restart their dreams. Also, it will kickstart economic activities full throttle. Karnataka will emerge out of this stronger! — Tejasvi Surya (@Tejasvi_Surya) May 6, 2020
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Arrival of stranded Karnataka residents from abroad delayed

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Coronavirus
Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department officials stated that the Centre has released a new schedule for arrival of residents from foreign countries.
PTI : Image for representation
The arrival of more than 10,000 residents of Karnataka stranded in foreign countries, which was set to begin on Friday, has been delayed by a few days, the Karnataka government said.  Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department officials stated that the Centre has released a new schedule for arrival of residents from foreign countries.  The department officials have a list of over 10,000 people looking to return to the state. Health Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey confirmed that all arrangements for the screening and quarantine of international passengers have been made in the state. The passengers will be arriving at Bengaluru and Mangaluru airports and the sea ports at Karwar and Mangaluru.  People arriving will be divided into two categories - symptomatic travellers and asymptomatic travellers - after a screening process. "Those who are symptomatic, will be sent to a designated government hospital where they will be isolated and tested three times over a period of 14 days. Those who are asymptomatic will be sent to hotels where they will be tested twice over a period of seven days," says Pankaj Kumar Pandey. If the test results of asymptomatic persons return negative, they will be sent to home quarantine. The passengers will bear the costs of their stay in the hotel, officials said. In Bengaluru, officials have identified KC General Hospital and CV Raman General Hospital for quarantining people.   Officials stated that details of all travellers landing at airports and seaports will be collected and they will be asked to download the Aarogya Setu application and the Quarantine Watch application on their phones. Flights will be arriving over a period of 8-10 days when the process is in place. 
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Karnataka Labour Dept withdraws decision to issue notice to employers on wages

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Employment
The decision to issue notices, which was communicated on Wednesday, was withdrawn in less than 24 hours after the department received more than 700 complaints from workers.
Image for representation
The Karnataka Labour Department, which had earlier decided to issue a notice to employers not paying full wages for April, has made a U-turn and will not be executing this order. The decision, which was communicated on Wednesday, was withdrawn in less than 24 hours after the department received more than 700 complaints from workers, The Hindu reported. P Manivannan, Secretary of the Labour Department had announced that the Labour Minister Shivaram Hebbar had directed officials to issue notice to employers who had not paid the salary or full wages to workers in April. He urged people who wished to make a complaint to report to the department helpline. However, on Thursday, the Minister directed officials not to issue notices. “As per the request from the Industries dept, the notices have been put ON-HOLD. There will be a joint meeting of Labour and Industries dept to sort out the issue of non-payment of wages to workers (sic)," P Manivannan said in a tweet.  The decision came on a day the Karnataka government made another U-turn to restart train services for the interstate travel of migrant workers. The state government had come under pressure from the public after cancellation of the trains earlier this week.  Eight trains had operated from May 3 to May 5, taking 1200 workers each back to their homes in Rajasthan, Odisha and Bihar before the service was stopped. Hundreds of migrant workers then began walking to far-off places in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar on Thursday, prompting the state government to revoke its earlier decision.  The state government has so far confirmed that one train will be leaving Bengaluru for Danapur in Bihar on Friday. 
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Karnataka govt mulls allowing bars, restaurants to sell liquor at MRP

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Alcohol
The state is mulling over this decision as bar and restaurant owners petitioned the government to help them clear existing stocks of liquor.
A picture of a bar shelf
The Karnataka government is mulling over allowing bars and restaurants in the state to sell alcohol at the maximum retail price after May 18. This comes in the wake of bar and restaurant owners requesting the government to help ease the economic burden of the lockdown. The story was first reported by The Hindu. Speaking to TNM, Karnataka Excise Minister H Nagesh said that the state government is mulling over this decision as there is a need to revive the economy. Minister Nagesh said that the permission will be granted to CL-7 and CL-9 license holders. This includes bars and restaurants and also boarding and lodging facilities that have licenses to sell liquor. "Bars and restaurants have different guidelines and rules. According to the excise rules, bars and restaurants are issued licences where they can serve alcohol within the premises of their establishments. If bars and restaurants have to be able to sell alcohol at MRP, we have to make certain amendments to existing rules and issue a government order for the same," the minister added.  He said that the excise officials are currently chalking out a plan where people can go to the respective restaurants and buy liquor just like MRP outlets until the situation eases.  Minister Nagesh said that the government has not discussed the issue of home delivery of alcohol yet. "A lot of changes need to be made for this. Like amending existing laws or bringing in a new one. For that, an Assembly session must be convened. We have not thought about home delivery at all," he said.  Excise Department officials said that microbreweries will not be allowed to sell beer as the licences issued to these establishments are different. He further stated that the decision would apply only to those selling packed bottles of liquor. "There are no plans to allow them to sell alcohol as their pricing modules are different from MRP alcohol and the licensing rules are different," he said. The Karnataka Hotel Owners' Association and the owners of various bars had requested the state government to allow them to sell the alcohol at MRP rates so they can clear the existing stocks. "This may be only a temporary solution. The government cannot take back the alcohol stock. So we are thinking about allowing them to sell whatever stock they have now," Minister Nagesh added.  
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Karnataka govt to reduce syllabus for Classes 1 to 10 if lockdown extended

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Education
The department, however, has not decided on when admissions for Pre-University Colleges will begin.
PTI/Representation Photo
The Karnataka government on Thursday issued guidelines for a possible change in the syllabus for Classes 1 to 10 for the upcoming academic year 2020-21. In the wake of the lockdown, uncertainty about the reopening of schools prevails. The department has said that schools will reopen in June if the lockdown is not extended. However, the Department has formulated a plan to reduce the syllabus in case the lockdown is extended.  The Minister for Primary and Secondary Education B Suresh Kumar on Thursday held a meeting with the department officials to chalk out a plan. According to the notification issued on Thursday after the meeting, the department is planning to omit certain chapters that it deems relatively unimportant for the upcoming year if the lockdown continues.  “I have asked the department officials to identify those chapters in all subjects that we can term as additional ones. Those which are not extremely important. I have asked them to list how many such chapters can be exempted from the syllabus for different time periods including 15 days, one month, one-and-a-half month and two months,” Suresh Kumar said.  The department has also decided to include sessions on the coronavirus pandemic in state-run schools for Class 6 to 10.  “All state government-run schools will have a teaching on COVID-19 scenario for our children from Class 6 to 10. They will have first-hand knowledge of these kinds of diseases from this year onwards. I have asked officers to publish a learning module for circulation to all the schools and examinations on the subject will be conducted at the end of the year. Teacher training will also have content on COVID-19,” Suresh Kumar added. The department also said that it is going to come up with a YouTube channel titled ‘Makkalavani’ in the next few days. This channel will have videos by teachers on all subjects of all classes.  “I have instructed the officials to use this YouTube channel as an alternative learning tool. And also to make such tools available on all mediums on a permanent basis for reference and learning for our students and teachers,” Suresh Kumar added.  Education department officials said that no decision has been made regarding the admissions for Pre-University College students.  “PUC admission can start only after the Class 10 results come out. If the lockdown is not extended, then the admissions may start in late August. But if the lockdown is extended, it may take longer. We are yet to decide how to go about it,” the official said.  
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45 new COVID-19 cases in Karnataka, seven from Bengaluru

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Coronavirus
This takes the total number of cases in the state to 750.
Representational image/PTI
As many as 45 new cases of COVID-19 were reported from Karnataka on Friday, according to the morning health department bulletin. Seven of these cases have been reported from Bengaluru, while the other new cases are from Belagavi (11), Uttara Kannada (12), Davangere (14) and Ballari (1).  With this, the total number of cases in the state jumps to 750, including 30 deaths and 371 persons who have been recovered. The trend of discharged patients being less than active cases is still maintained (353). Incidentally, this is the highest daily increase of cases in the state since the onset of the pandemic. Among these 45 new cases reported on Friday, except for three patients, two from Bengaluru and one from Ballari, all of the patients are contacts of an already infected patient. ALSO READ| Karnataka govt restarts trains after outrage, but migrant workers are already walking home Seven new cases were reported from Bengaluru city and they are from Shivajinagar and Padarayanapura wards. While the contacts of three cases have not been traced yet, the rest of the four cases have been traced to patient number 653. P-653 is a contact of patient 208, who in turn is a contact of Patient-196, a 42-year-old SARI patient (Severe Acute Respiratory Illness) who got COVID-19. 14 of the patients are from Davanagere, which saw the biggest spike. While some new cases in Davanagere are contacts of patient 556, a SARI patient who died of COVID-19, others are contacts of patient 533, who is a 35-year-old woman with Influenza-Like Illness (ILI). 12 of the new cases are from Uttara Kannada’s Bhatkal town. All of these patients are contacts of Patient  659, who is an 18-year-old woman with Influenza-Like Illness (ILI). 11 of the new cases are from Belagavi district of which 10 patients are from Hirebagewadi. All of them are contacts of various previously detected cases.
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Union govt asks Twitter to remove BJP MP Tejasvi Surya’s tweet on Islam

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The move comes after one of Tejasvi Surya’s tweets resulted in backlash from several leaders in Western Asia.
BJP MP from Bengaluru South, Tejasvi Surya has been called out multiple times in the past for the contents of his tweets. But it seems it’s not just people on social media who have objections, but even the Union government. In a list of more than hundred tweets by various users that the Union Ministry of Electronic and Information Technology asked Twitter to take down, it has also included the tweet by the ‘young face’ of the party, According to The Wire which first published the article, Twitter’s filings with a third party database, which publishes requests to remove content from the social media platform, shows that the MoEIT had requested Twitter to take down Tejasvi Surya’s tweet.  The tweet, stated that in most cases terrorists are from the Muslim community. “In short: true, terror has no religion. But the terrorist definitely has a religion, and in most cases it’s Islam”. Tejasvi Surya’s tweet is the 65th among 121 tweets that the ministry wanted Twitter to remove. The request, which was filed on April 28, 2020, has cited section 69A of the Information Technology Act as the reason for the request. This provision allows the government powers to issue directions for the interception, monitoring and decrypting of any information online.  The notice sent by the government to the Lumen database, shows that several tweets by right wing handles and pro-Pakistani handles were requested to be deleted. The Lumen database run by Harvard University’s Berkman Klein Centre compiles requests to remove content from Twitter. Lumen gathers this data from Google and Twitter.  Speaking to TNM, BJP sources in Karnataka say that BJP National President JP Nadda was unhappy ever since Tejasvi Surya’s tweet from 2015 about Arab women had sparked a row. Surya claimed in a tweet in 2015, which he later deleted, that 95% of Arab women have never had an orgasm in a hundred years and that Arab women produced babies as an act of sex and not love.  The United Arab Emirates, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the Kuwait government, and a few prominent names from the Arab community called for “an India without Islamophobia”. The Union government went into damage-control mode on April 28, after the issue escalated. Reports stated that External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had to make numerous phone calls to ensure the India-UAE relations remained intact.  UAE law applies on nationals and non-nationals in terms of hate speech. pic.twitter.com/bWN3StUkRN — Princess Hend Al Qassimi (@LadyVelvet_HFQ) April 20, 2020 This is also not the only time Tejasvi Surya has made Islamophobic statements. In December 2019, when protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Indian Citizens erupted across the country, Tejasvi Surya and right wing groups had held a pro-CAA, pro-NRC event in Bengaluru.  “People of Bengaluru’s IT sector, BT sector, those contributing to the nation’s economy like lawyers, bank employees, ordinary citizens including auto-rickshaw drivers have gathered here today. Only the uneducated, illiterate puncture shop wallahs are against it. If you split open their chests, you cannot find even four words. These are the people protesting against CAA,” he had said.  Read: BJP MP Tejasvi Surya says opposers of CAA are 'puncturewallas', faces backlash  Just two days ago, Tejasvi Surya landed in yet another controversy after tweeting a statement supporting the Karnataka government's decision to stop trains to transport migrant workers.   “Stoppage of inter-state trains by BS Yediyurappa is a bold and necessary move. It will help migrant labourers who came here with hopes of a better life to restart their dreams. Also, it will kickstart economic activities full throttle. Karnataka will emerge out of this stronger!” he had tweeted.  Stoppage of inter-state trains by Sri @BSYBJP is a bold and necessary move. It will help migrant labourers who came here with hopes of a better life to restart their dreams. Also, it will kickstart economic activities full throttle. Karnataka will emerge out of this stronger! — Tejasvi Surya (@Tejasvi_Surya) May 6, 2020 His tweet resulted in huge backlash against the government, with many calling for the government to reverse its decision. BS Yediyurappa and Tejasvi Surya were criticised for forcing people into labour and for disregarding the migrant workers’ fundamental right to movement.  
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Coronavirus spread from four patients to at least 149 others in Karnataka

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coronavirus
The Karnataka Health Department is yet to trace how these for patients contracted the virus.
doctors treating coronavirus  patients
Image for representation
On Friday morning, 45 new COVID-19 cases were detected in Karnataka. The source of infection of all of these patients barring three have been traced to a person who tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Karnataka has a total of 750 confirmed cases, including 30 deaths with 371 recoveries. So just how has the disease COVID-19 been spreading across the state?  Every individual who is thought to have been the carrier of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and has no known source of the infection is being termed as a ‘root patient’. As of May 5, 62 persons have been identified by the Karnataka Health Department as the root of infection for a total of 426 patients. Among the 62 root patients, health officials in Karnataka have identified four individuals who transmitted the virus to at least 149 others. However, how these four individuals contracted the virus is still unclear, having no known travel history to other countries or states. The patient who was first to test positive in the Nanjangud pharmaceutical cluster has been classified as the person from whom most others contracted the infection. However till date, there is no concrete information how he got infected. Government data shows that he is the primary source of infection for 76 patients. In that cluster, 48 patients are thought to be infected through the root patient himself and the level 2 spread had infected 24 persons and the lever 3 spread had infected 4 persons. READ| ‘I have no passport, didn’t go to China’: Mysuru pharma’s patient zero speaks to TNM The second person in Karnataka's 'super spreader' category is a 60-year-old woman in a north Karnataka district whose source of infection is also unknown. She is thought to be the source for 37 cases in total. Officials said that the level 1 spread was to 29 contacts and the level 2 spread was to 8 patients. The third such person from whom the infection spread to 36 patients is a 45-year-old man from another north Karnataka district. A 54-year-old man in a city suffering from (Severe Acute Respiratory Illness) SARI is the fourth highest spreader with 29 infections. The source of infection is still a mystery for all these cases. How the categories work Root patients have been categorised based on their travel history into three classes a) international travellers b) domestic travellers c) SARI (Severe Acute Respiratory Illness) or ILI (Influenza Like Illness) [with no known viral contact]. The spread analysis report prepared by the Karnataka government COVID-19 War Room said that 72% were infected due to contact history, 11% got the virus from international travel, 9% was from domestic travel and 8% were SARI/ILI patients. Data showed that on average an international traveller spread the infection to 2.26 persons while a domestic traveller passed the infection to 6.16 persons on average. The SARI/ILI patients transmitted the virus to 10 patients on average. On average, every root patient infects 6.87 persons, states the spread analysis report. Based on the degree of the spread, these root patients have been designated into three categories: a) super spreaders—10 cases or more b) spreaders— 5 cases or more and c) light spreaders— less than 5 cases. The transmission pattern has been further categorised as primary or ‘Level 1 spread’ if a person comes in direct contact with the root patient and tests positive. These are typically immediate family members or those who have been in close contact with the root patient. These level 1 contacts in turn become carriers and transmit the virus to others. ‘Level 2 spread’ is when persons who have not come in direct contact with the root patient get infected through level 1 contacts. They are likely to catch the infection from public places. ‘Level 3 spread’ is when persons were infected by level 2 contacts, but were not in contact with the root patient or with level 1 contacts. ‘Wake up administration than shame the patient’ A senior officer said there may be unfounded animosity towards these ‘super spreader’ patients and their families. “More spread by a patient can happen simply as he or she was asymptomatic. Or the person they contracted the disease from was asymptomatic, but a medically fragile person shows symptoms first and gets recognized as a spreader.” He added, “Every patient and contact is equally critical to be traced and tracked. One never knows who will end up spreading the virus to a large number of persons. Higher numbers in a district or area indicates local authorities need to work harder to identify contacts and control the spread. So it's more for the administration to wake up rather than shaming the patients.”
Body 2: 

MyGate, Metalstreet partner to install disinfection tunnel at high footfall locations

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Coronavirus
The Hygiene Walkway is a low-cost disinfection tunnel that sanitises people at entry points of premises and has already been installed at key locations across Bengaluru.
To promote hygiene at locations that witness significant footfall, such as hospitals, gated communities, offices, malls and industries, MyGate has collaborated with Metalstreet to introduce the Hygiene Walkway, a low-cost disinfection tunnel that sanitises people at entry points of these premises. The product has already been installed at key locations across Bengaluru, including the entrance to a large hospital, a police station and is currently being installed at a large gated community. Some of the benefits of Hygiene Walkway are: Complements all other hygiene practices being employed at the premises; uses an organic and anti-microbial solution to eliminate germs and viruses at the gate itself; around 240 people can pass through the Walkway in an hour, thereby eliminating congestion at the gate; fully automated, requiring no additional manpower to manage or operate; and it is integrated with infrared thermometers for automatic detection of body temperature. Vijay Arisetty, CEO & Co-Founder, MyGate says that as restrictions ease, all spaces with high footfall will have a new task - ensuring hygiene of all those who enter. “Products such as the Hygiene Walkway will, therefore, be essential to maintaining high hygiene standards at all times without hampering movement at the gate. We are very happy to collaborate with Metalstreet on this initiative and believe it will go a long way toward ensuring public safety in the coming months,” he adds.  myGate is a mobile-based security management solution for gated residential premises. It was launched in the market in late 2016 in Bengaluru and aims to make security solutions in gated communities seamless.  With hygiene and sanitisation being the need of the hour, the Hygiene Walkway was conceptualised to provide quick and efficient sanitisation while being easy and cost-effective to deploy, says Shashank Ananth, Co-Founder, Metalstreet. “The walkway can also be customised to meet specific requirements of smaller facilities. And by collaborating with MyGate, we are looking to up the hygiene quotient significantly and contribute to India’s fight against COVID-19,” he adds.  Metalstreet is a Bengaluru-based B2B marketplace for metals trading in India. 
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Wipro GE Healthcare, PPHF partner with K’taka govt to support COVID-19 referral hospital

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Coronavirus
WGE and its NGO partner, PPHF have supported the isolation centre in Ramanagara district with 50 isolation beds and an ICU comprising nine motorised beds.
Karnataka government’s administrative office at Kandhya Bhawan, Ramanagara district has been converted into a dedicated COVID-19 referral hospital. Wipro GE Healthcare (WGE) and its NGO partner, People to People Health Foundation (PPHF) have collaborated with the Department of Health and Family Welfare, Government of Karnataka, to support this Isolation Centre with 50 isolation beds and an ICU comprising nine motorised beds. WGE and PPHF have also provided 500 PPEs (personal protective equipments) and N95 masks to ensure safety of doctors and frontline healthcare workers in Bengaluru.  “India is courageously working in managing the corona impact. We are committed to take forward the vision of our government of a corona free nation. We appreciate the timely support from Wipro GE Healthcare and People to People Health Foundation (PPHF) for supporting the dedicated COVID-19 referral hospital and donating essential protective supplies for emergency responders. Let us come out together stronger than ever as a nation," said B Sriramulu, Health and Family Welfare Minister, Government of Karnataka. The manner in which the government, healthcare sector, companies and society have come together to solve the challenges arising out of COVID-19 is truly outstanding, said Nalinikanth Gollagunta, Managing Director, Wipro GE Healthcare. “Our CSR is focused around efforts that positively improve lives of people and communities we serve. We are thankful to the Government of Karnataka for this partnership and hope this helps them address the unprecedented demand arising out of this pandemic to meet patient needs and save lives.” Ram Manohar Lohia (RML) Hospital, New Delhi has also established a dedicated COVID-19 hospital (Block 1 and Block 2), with a 5-floor isolation centre to support the rising demand of COVID-19 patients. WGE and PPHF have supported this isolation centre with 90 isolation beds and a dedicated ICU comprising 30 motorised beds. Also, 500 PPE kits and N95 masks have been provided for doctors and healthcare workers at RML. “An unimaginable crisis has surrounded us, and our collective response will save lives. PPHF, being a public health organisation, is collaborating with private sectors and extending its support to the Government of India in strengthening the health system infrastructure by providing life supporting medical equipment and supplies  to COVID-19 hospitals, supporting healthcare workers on infection prevention and supporting hygiene promotion activities in the community,” said Dr Laxmikant Palo, CEO, PPHF. “I’m delighted that the Wipro GE Healthcare and PPHF partnership will help to contribute to the government’s efforts to save lives.”
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Over 500 migrant workers gather at Mangaluru station, demand to be sent home by train

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Coronavirus
The workers were from Bihar, Jharkhand, and Uttar Pradesh, district officials in Dakshina Kannada stated.
group of migrant workers standing with physical distancing at the mangaluru station to protest against lack of trains to go to their villages in north india
Hundreds of migrant workers gathered at the Mangaluru Central Railway Station on Friday morning demanding trains to take them to their homes. The workers were from Bihar, Jharkhand, and Uttar Pradesh, district officials in Dakshina Kannada stated. Over 500 workers gathered at the railway station early on Friday morning. They walked to the railway station from areas like Surathkal, Nanthoor, Kulur and Derebail nearby. According to police officials in Dakshina Kannada, the workers included construction labourers, barbers, helpers at hotels, malls and people who worked with small businesses. Dakshina Kannada Assistant Commissioner Madan Mohan arrived on the spot to pacify the workers, who informed officials that they were willing to walk long distances if trains were not arranged for them."We managed to convince them to return to their residence by the afternoon. They had gathered there to travel to Bengaluru by train hoping to board one of the trains arranged for interstate travel of migrant workers," Dakshina Kannada SP BM Laxmi Prasad told TNM. A majority of the workers who had gathered were from Jharkhand. Police officials showed the workers a tweet by Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren stating that train services to Karnataka will be arranged soon. The workers, after discussion with officials, agreed to return to their residences. On Thursday, the Karnataka government re-started train service to ferry migrant workers back to their homes from the state. Four trains - two of them leaving to Uttar Pradesh, one each to Bihar and Jharkhand, were announced on Friday with 1200 workers on board each train. The workers paid full ticket fares to travel back to their homes.
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Karnataka govt chalks out plan to reduce mortality rate of COVID-19 patients

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Coronavirus
The state government decided to apply to the ICMR to seek permission to conduct lung biopsies after the death of COVID-19 patients and for clinical autopsies.
A doctor administering care to a patient on a ventilator
RCP Bashir/Wikimedia commons
With the COVID-19 cases crossing 750 and the fatalities reaching 30,the Karnataka government on Friday decided to work out strategies to minimise the mortality rate in the fight against the coronavirus in the state. Karnataka recorded its biggest ever single-day spike of 48 new COVID-19 cases, including an infant, taking its total to 753 today. Chief Secretary T M Vijay Bhaskar chaired a high-level meeting with the top rank officials to chalk out a strategy to minimise the deaths due to the deadly virus, a government press release said. The state government is taking its fight against COVID-19 to the next level, and will additionally focus on measures to reduce the mortality rate in critical patients in the State by strengthening health systems to ensure that critical patients are treated earlys"This will help reduce the death rate of COVID-19 patients in Karnataka," Bhaskar was quoted as saying. He said instructions have been given to all the District Health Officers to nominate nodal and sub-nodal officers to monitor and capture details of ICU patients, patients with Severe Acute Respiratory Illness (SARI) and the critically ill on a day-to-day basis. Necessary arrangements have been made for the Critical Care Support Team to conduct training for COVID-19 teams in designated hospitals on current treatment protocols, the officials apprised the Chief Secretary. It was pointed out in the meeting that district committees to streamline their interactions with the Critical Care Support Team for better patient care have been set up. Additional Chief Secretary Jawaid Akhtar apprised the Chief Secretary that the team of expert doctors have recommended the use of pulse oximeters for all patients. It was also decided in the meeting that all the patients having lung related diseases should be tested for COVID-19, the press release stated."We have advised districts to procure two or three high flow nasal cannula systems for patients and suggested non-invasive ventilation for patients as well," Akhtar was quoted as saying. The government was open to involving private medical colleges and private institutions if there was surge in COVID-19 cases. The state government decided to apply to the ICMR to seek permission to conduct lung biopsies after the death of COVID-19 patients and for clinical autopsies."This (lung biopsy) will help in providing critical patients with more effective care and bring down mortality rates," Pankaj Kumar Pandey, Commissioner, Department of Health and Family Welfare,said. 
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Shops on Bengaluru’s Commercial Street shut over lack of physical distancing

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Coronavirus
The BBMP also shut down non-essential commercial establishments in shopping streets adjoining Commercial Street.
Representation photo
Shops on Bengaluru’s Commercial Street were forced to shutter on Friday after Bengaluru’s civic body, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike found that physical distancing norms were allegedly being violated. The BBMP also shut down commercial establishments in seven other areas adjoining Commercial Street citing lack of physical distancing, Deccan Herald reported. The Karnataka government had allowed standalone and neighbourhood stores to open in non-containment zones from May 4 in a bid to kick-start the economic activities in the state. Traders in Commercial Street and adjoining areas of the shopping district were allowed to open as well on condition that owners ensured physical distancing is maintained.  Customers began flouting physical distancing norms despite traders asking them repeatedly to maintain distance with each other on Commercial Street, TOI reported. However, on streets adjoining Commercial Street including Narayan Pillai Street, Jumma Masjid Road, Jain Temple Road, Evening Bazaar in Seppings Road, Dhamaraj Koli Street OPH Road and Mir Obedullah Road, the traders allegedly violated physical distancing norms blatantly, the DH report added.  The BBMP has stated that groceries, pharmacies and milk supply shops in these areas will be allowed to remain open, the TOI report stated.  On Friday, the BBMP’s Joint Commissioner for East Division issued a closure order for all non-essential commercial establishments in the area citing the lack of physical distancing and due to traders flouting norms.  “BBMP along with the health and police officials kept reminding the traders about the need for social-distancing rules and other procedures for the safe practice of trade. But none of them complied with the social-distancing rules and began to congregate in large groups. As we found that this might trigger a potential hazard and help in the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in the coming days, we have ordered closure of commercial establishments other than medical, grocery, vegetable and fruit shops,” the order states. The BBMP kept a strict vigil on the area after new COVID-19 cases were reported in Shivajinagar and parts of the area was already declared a containment zone. A month ago, the BBMP ordered the closure of the famous Russell Market in Shivajinagar, adjacent to Commercial Street, after traders refused to follow physical distancing.  “We ensured that social distancing norms were maintained. We had painted boxes to ensure that shoppers stay two metres apart. Nowhere were rules flouted. We’re suffering huge losses. With no sales, how are we supposed to pay rent for these stores? The government won’t pay the rent, will it?” TOI quoted a trader on Commercial Street as saying.  
Body 2: 

Bars in Bengaluru may look a little different the next time you see them

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Food and beverage
When a business is built on community and social interaction, how do you operate amidst a global pandemic?
A group of people raise their glasses of beer at a bar.
The next time you’re able to walk into a bar in Bengaluru, things might look a bit different. You may not be greeted by a host at the entrance, or be handed a paper menu once you sit down. The stools at the bar, where people often crowd together to order a drink, may disappear. There will be far fewer people, and no more groups clustered together. If you walk in at 10 pm, you’ll be seated at a different section from the person who arrived at 7 pm to prevent cross-contamination through tables and chairs. You will almost certainly have to make a reservation. And of course, there will be hand sanitiser on the table.  These are some of the changes that bar and pub owners are considering once they’re allowed to reopen after the lockdown is lifted. Bars across the country have been shuttered for over a month, following a national lockdown announced by the Centre on March 24. Though India’s third lockdown stage, which has seen some ease in restrictions, is scheduled to end on May 17, it remains to be seen whether bars and pubs will be allowed to open their doors.  Around the world, eateries and pubs have taken a massive hit as the coronavirus pandemic has killed businesses that rely on social interaction. The Karnataka government announced on Friday that it was considering allowing certain bars and restaurants to sell alcohol at the maximum retail price amidst a deep economic downturn worsened by the lockdown. Liquor remains one of the highest revenue generators for the government, and after shops were allowed to open on Monday, the state has reported hundreds of crores in sales this week alone.   “It’s going to be very uncertain for the next few months,” said Sibi Venkataraju, a director at pH4 Food & Beverages, which runs Bengaluru pubs, Toit and Permit Room. “The whole restaurant industry will have to collaborate.”   Just as restaurants are mulling over small and big changes to create a safe environment for customers amidst the pandemic, bars and pubs are also looking to implement shifts in their daily operation, such as frequent sanitisation, contactless dining, impeccable hygiene standards and a reliance on technology to reduce human-to-human interaction.  However, maintaining crowds at pubs poses its own set of challenges as customers don’t remain seated all the time and unlike a sit-down restaurant, there isn’t already a physical space demarcated for them.  Sibi notes they will have to reevaluate everything from the valet system and front desk to billing, menu distribution and service to eliminate as many touch points as possible. However, it remains to be seen under what circumstances these businesses will be allowed to open. “We’re not sure what the evolving rules are going to be,” he said. “There’s no template unfortunately.” How bars may change The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has issued guidelines regarding the sanitation of service and kitchen areas, personal hygiene and protective gear for food handlers (like masks and gloves), social distancing, temperature checks, and more. Once they’re allowed to open, there may be further specific instructions for restaurant and bar operations, which may include a reduction in seat capacity.  Amit Roy, a founding partner at Shilton Hospitality, which runs Watson’s, a pub chain with locations in Bengaluru and Chennai, says it will be entirely up to the eatery to ensure that those guidelines are strictly followed, even if customers oppose them.   “Control is going to be a very, very important measure here,” he said. “Because at the end of the day, that’s our responsibility. We can’t blame it on the customer for violating any rules.” Staff training to ensure hygiene and food safety will be critical as well, said Pravesh Pandey, director of operations at Byg Brewski, which has locations in Hennur and Sarjapur, as well as Bob’s Bar, which has multiple locations in the city. They are also considering investing in COVID-19 tests so staff members can be regularly tested and surfaces can be examined for traces of contamination.  Many eateries, including Byg Brewski, are working to develop Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) to ensure that every part of the customer’s experience is considered in a post-lockdown situation.  “Every particular touchpoint of the customer, right from entry to exit, will be part of the SOP,” he said.   According to Pravesh, others measures they are planning to implement include removing stools from the main bar, relying on larger, non-air conditioned spaces (such as the location in Hennur) to encourage physical distancing and creating sections and time slots, “so there is no chance that somebody can reuse the same table and chairs.”  Byg Brewski’s nightclub Gylt will also remain closed for about a year or so. “Forget the days where on Saturdays you would see a long queue of people,” he said. “The nightclub model will not sustain.” When will people feel safe enough to go out? Even if major restrictions of the lockdown are lifted entirely, it’s likely that cities around the world will be maintaining physical and social distancing norms for the foreseeable future. So when do bar owners expect people to start dining out again?   “There are two lines of thought here. One is that people are going to be scared and not step out, and business is going to take a huge hit. Or like what happened with wine stores, which opened on Monday, people will throng outside for the first couple of days, just to get out,” Amit said. Pub-hopping and walk-ins are also expected to take a backseat, as more and more people will rely on reservation systems so they aren’t waiting around. “People do want to have a good time. But they will be careful in choosing their restaurants. They will come out to places that are more spacious, to bring their families and friends. They will take extremely high precautionary measures while stepping out,” Pravesh said.   Pravesh also believes that it’s important for the customer to see that the eatery is taking all precautions possible to ensure health safety, and that will help placate them. “I think it’s important to amplify what you’re doing to build that trust.”  Balance of bar and safety If you’re having a hard time imagining a bar that isn’t packed on a Friday night, not having to jostle through crowds for a drink, or even avoiding plans with large groups, bar owners can understand the quandary.  “It’s actually a Catch-22. At a bar, you want to socialise, but how do I tell you not to socialise?” Amit says. “If you’re heading to a bar, you don’t want to sit in a corner all by yourself. You’d rather drink at home then.”  However, as many have had to adapt to a new way of life during the pandemic, rules around bars will eventually become habitual as well.  ”Initially you are going to oppose it or you are going to miss the feeling,” Amit said, “But it’s a paradigm shift. And over time people are just going to start accepting it. It’s a new way of stepping out.” 
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