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'KCR demonized us': Revenue employees protest after Telangana MRO's murder

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Protest
The agitated employees demand that Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar issue a public apology for allegedly calling the entire Revenue Department corrupt.
Picture courtesy: Nitin B
Hundreds of employees belonging to Telangana’s Revenue Department thronged Kothapet in Hyderabad to pay homage to their colleague Vijaya Reddy, the Mandal Revenue Officer (MRO) who killed on Monday, after a man identified as Suresh set her on fire. Wearing black ribbons to mark their protest, the agitated employees chanted slogans against Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar during the funeral procession of Vijaya blaming him for the tragedy. The MROs accused KCR of instigation. They alleged that the Chief Minister’s blanket accusation that the entire Revenue Department is corrupt led to the ghastly murder. “At several public forums, the Chief Minister has openly instigated the crowd against us. He has demonised us as a corrupt department, which is a baseless allegation; totally uncalled for. Emboldened by these grave charges, the farmers have turned against us,” alleged an MRO, who sought anonymity.  On Monday, Vijaya, the MRO of Abdullahpurmet, who was hearing public grievances, was killed by a man called K Suresh, reportedly over a long-pending land dispute. Suresh, who was allegedly carrying a bottle of petrol doused Vijaya and then set her ablaze. In the incident, he along with two others suffered injuries. While the MRO died on the same day, her driver, Gurunatham, who tried rescuing her succumbed to his burns on Tuesday. Venting out his anger, another MRO from Mahabubnagar district alleged, “The Dharani (land records website) website is full of errors. Due to these errors, there are several litigations in the land records. When we apprise the District Collectors of the situation, instead of notifying these problems to the Chief Minister, they are asking us to handle the situation. And these farmers continue to make rounds to our office assuming that we are deliberately delaying their land issues, and we face their angst.” “How can we patiently tell the farmers who are mostly illiterate about these legalities. And especially when hundreds of farmers come with the same problem. It is a structural problem. Without the intervention of Chief Secretary or any higher official, the Chief Minister has to meet us and learn about the problems in the land records. It is high time,” said the MRO. He said that only if the CM issues a public apology for the revenue officials, Vijaya will get justice.  Ramulu, Tahsildar Association State President alleged, “We don’t have enough security now. This incident has clearly displayed how the farmers feel about us. Since it was the Chief Minister who instigated the public against us. He should make a statement in favour of the statement and redeem our credibility.”  Meanwhile, the MROs have declared that their offices in the state would be shut for the next three days, mourning the death of Vijaya Reddy. “We will also be doing relay hunger strikes,” said, Ramulu.   
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Hyderabad police is collecting citizen data to ‘curb crime’, but is it legal?

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Law, order and justice
Many have accused the Hyderabad police of detaining them and taking their fingerprints and photographs in the name of Operation Chabutra.
Rohit*, a resident of Mehdipatnam in Hyderabad was heading to a bus stop at 5.30 am on October 11, when two policemen, armed with a fingerprint scanner and a tablet stopped him. The 21-year-old college student had never been stopped by the Hyderabad police before and was nervous as the police collected his Aadhaar, driver’s licence and other details along with his fingerprints and photograph. "Is this something I should be worried about? I even said that I am a student," the student posted on a Reddit forum, seeking answers as to why he was targeted by the Telangana police. The youth did ask the police why they were taking his details, "They said it's just for safety and for catching offenders. I go every morning at that time but this is the first time I've encountered something like this," Rohit said. He has not told his parents yet about the incident. Later speaking to TNM, the 21-year-old wondered, "Will it be a problem if am applying for a passport? How do I get them to delete my information?" In recent months, the Hyderabad police have been stopping citizens passing-by at any time during the day and collecting their fingerprints, photographs and personal details. This practice of detaining persons and collecting their personal details is a procedure followed by the Hyderabad police under 'Operation Chabutra'. What is Operation Chabutra? At 10 pm on October 22, the Hyderabad West Zone police conducted Operation Chabutra, where 210 individuals were picked up from the streets under two police station limits. While the operation went on until 3 am the following day, these individuals were let off in less than 24 hours, to avoid them being produced before the court, as mandated by the law. Some of those apprehended had criminal records but a majority of those caught were bystanders. The brainchild of a former DCP, Operation Chabutra, which means dais in Urdu, first began sometime in 2015 under the West Zone police limits, with the aim of reigning in teenagers roaming the streets at night. Their phone numbers and personal details would be collected and their parents would be informed. They would be let off after the police 'counselled' them. Since 2015, the operation has been conducted three to four times annually, with no fixed pattern, said police officials, who added that it is carried out “when required”. While Operation Chabutra does take place across zones in Hyderabad, it is more routinely carried in the Old City that has a sizable Muslim population. However, the operation has since expanded in scope and scale. Since early 2018, aided by technology, the police have begun collecting fingerprints and photographing those detained during the operation. But do the police have legal backing to conduct the operation and collect the data that is used for profiling? Police officials said Operation Chabutra is a means to preemptively stop crimes. Officials told TNM that the police are allowed to collect details such as a fingerprint and photograph of a citizen under the Prisoners Act 1920. The Act allows for the collection of fingerprints and photographs of  convicted persons (those sentenced to upwards of one year’s rigorous imprisonment), non-convicted persons (those arrested in connection with an offence punishable with rigorous imprisonment for a term upwards of one year), and habitual offenders. However, the Act is only applicable if an arrest has been recorded. If done otherwise, experts say that it would be illegal. When the West Zone DCP, B Sumathi was asked about the legality of Operation Chabutra and the subsequent data collection, the officer said, "If they don't agree to their fingerprint being taken, we don't insist." But not everyone agrees with the police version. One Reddit user, who was picked up, said the constables were rude and did not explain to him why they wanted to profile him. "I went in hesitantly and was asked to give my fingerprints. I was adamant that I won't do so unless they tell me why. They told me that it is a routine checkup to catch offenders. If my fingerprints turn up in their database I would be taken into custody. It was very unnerving though. It felt like I did something wrong. Add to the fact that those constables were rude with their questions," wrote Reddit user ‘Baalaka’. When quizzed about these experiences, the West Zone DCP replied," The police have the right to question what the purpose of moving at that hour (late night) is. Once the police are satisfied they will be let off." However, Prashant Reddy, Senior Resident Fellow at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, pointed out that the police don't have the legal powers to collect your fingerprints, nor do they have the right to take people off the streets. "The basic rule is that if you are collecting any kind of data and processing it there has to be a law in place, right now there is no law in place that allows the police to randomly take people off the streets and do all of this. Once they are arrested they can process fingerprints under the Prisoner's Act 1920, but before recording arrest it is illegal," said the lawyer, who further added, "If the police are doing something that is not prescribed in the law then it is illegal.". Broken Windows The Hyderabad police is of the view that preemptively stopping smaller petty crimes will prevent bigger crimes, the logic is based on the Broken Windows, a criminology theory by social scientists George Kelling and James Q Wilson. The duo argued that if a building window is broken and left unrepaired, the other unbroken windows will also eventually be broken. The reasoning is that an unrepaired window is a sign of neglect, so no one will question the vandaliser for breaking the other windows, thus perpetuating a sense of breakdown in law and order. The theory was adopted and implemented in the 1980s and through the 1990s in New York. While some studies say it helped bring down the crime rate in the city, other studies suggest it was not the sole reason for drop in crime rate. Based on the theory, the NY police brought in community policing and also controversial methods such as the stop-question-and-frisk program that was eventually scrapped in 2017 by the US Supreme Court. Among the criticisms was that the Broken Windows theory gave rise to allegations that those from the marginalised African American and the Hispanic communities were being targeted more by the police. From January to June 2019, the Hyderabad police has booked as many as 40,000 petty cases, according to the City Police Commissioner Anjani Kumar. In an interview with Telangana Today, he stated, "Booking small petty cases and ensuring conviction is a globally accepted step towards reducing the commission of grave and bigger offences. It has been tested everywhere including by the New York police when they applied the ‘Broken Windows’ theory’ in the early part of the century." Using apps for profiling Under Habeeb Nagar and Mangalghat police station limits where Operation Chabutra was conducted, the police has booked 3800 petty cases. Of the 3800 petty cases that were registered from January this year, 42 people had gone to jail. In 2018, Hyderabad police launched an official app to track e-petty cases. While offences for petty cases only have fines attached to them, police officials said the e-petty case app helps officials build evidence against someone whom they consider a repeat offender. DCP Sumathi said those involved in drunken brawls, creating a public nuisance such as causing excessive noise, keeping establishments open beyond a prescribed time despite repeated warnings get petty cases booked against them. But that’s not all. The e-petty case app is integrated with the TSCOP app, which is the Telangana state police’s official real-time policing application. As a result, she explained, officials are now able to establish a person's link to someone with a criminal history. The TSCOP app, Sumathi said, gives the police “360 degree” profiling of a person with a criminal record through interconnected databases, even their social media presence is noted. On the night the West Zone police picked up 210 persons from Habeeb Nagar and Mangalghat police station limits, they also picked up 35 persons designated as history sheeters. Another 23  persons had cases of running scams, property offenders, robbery, dacoity and snatching. The police were not forthcoming about the 152 persons who had no previous criminal records but would now have their profiles stored in the TSCOP app. According to the Telangana DGP M Mahender Reddy, the TSCOP app provides critical information anytime, anywhere to police officers through their smartphones and tablets, especially if they are on the field. Launched in 2018, the app now supports facial recognition and geotagging of the residence of a person with a criminal record. Thus, as a consequence of Operation Chabutra, the police already knows where those with criminal records reside within the police station limits. Sumathi said another ‘feature’ of Operation Chabutra was that those with a criminal record are often picked up again to impart "life experience lessons" to those without criminal cases."The objective of doing Operation Chabutra is to rein in the rowdy sheeters or history sheeters of the particular police station who are very active,” explained Sumathi who added that those with a record picked up through Operation Chabutra are to explain to those without a criminal record as to how they got influenced into committing serious criminal offences. She added that speaking about their criminal past to the crowd would prevent the criminal from relapsing. All 210 persons who were caught that night were shown videos prepared by the Telangana Police to instil the fear of committing a crime, "We showed them videos of the Telangana police showing them how the policing has become smart where if they do a small illegal activity or even if they get associated with someone who is not appropriate, their database is built up," she stated. Privacy concerns Calling the actions of the Telangana police an invasion of a citizen’s privacy and a violation of established criminal procedures, Srinivas Kodali, an independent researcher on Open Data said, "During the Chabutra and Cordon and Search operations, the police are not just coming to your house to collect your biometric, they are barging into the house and doing it late in the night. This is what happens in Kashmir. If what is happening in Kashmir is considered a Human Rights Violation (HRV) how are these actions of the Hyderabad police not a violation?" Srinivas was referring to Hyderabad police’s Operation Cordon, where an area is cordoned off and searched for weapons and insurgents. This operation like Operation Chabutra is also now being conducted across Telangana with varying frequency. "These operations target low-income neighbourhoods, as these are the people who least resist. They are putting people under surveillance. Where is the law for it, how do we know they are not using this for political use?" argued Srinivas who pointed to the various instances where opposition leaders in Telangana have accused the TRS government of phone-tapping and using the state police to keep tabs on them."As there is no law, there are no safeguards. The police can do as they please. Worldwide, different city governments and authorities are banning the use of facial recognition and other controversial technologies and here in Telangana we are experimenting on marginalised communities illegally even after a grand progressive right to privacy judgement in India," he alleged. The Hyderabad City Police Commissioner was unavailable for comment on why the police are collecting data of those without a criminal record. * Name changed on request
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Dangerous journeys on footboard: How students are facing the brunt of TSRTC strike

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TSRTC Strike
Videos have surfaced, which show students precariously standing on bumpers at the back of buses and holding on to the roof, to prevent themselves from falling.
The ongoing strike by nearly 48,000 employees of the Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) has affected citizens from all walks of life, but perhaps none more than students, who heavily depend on public transport. It has been a few weeks since educational institutes reopened after Dasara holidays and the state government, faced with such a massive strike, has been operating only skeletal services. Due to this, buses have only been plying on the main roads in Hyderabad, with barely a few buses or none at all, on the interior routes. The situation in Hyderabad This has resulted in videos surfacing on social media, which show students dangerously footboarding and hanging on for their lives, as overcrowded buses are unable to accommodate everyone. Videos also show students precariously standing on a bumper at the back of the bus and holding on to the roof, to prevent themselves from falling down. This video reportedly shot in #Hyderabad shows the precarious conditions that students are commuting to attend colleges. @thenewsminute @dhanyarajendran pic.twitter.com/ekTcU9jO6k — CharanTeja (@CharanT16) November 5, 2019 Sir ,chif minister ,ministers, MLA పైసలు ఉన్నవాళ్లు కార్లు ఉన్నవాళ్లు ఆందరు బాగున్నారు .. కానీ పేద పిల్లల బాధలు ఎవరికీ కనిపించడం లేదు .. సామాన్యుల ఓపికని పరిస్కిస్తున్నరు మీరు... ఇంకా ఎంత మందిని చంపుధం అనుకుంటున్నారు .. ఏదైనా ఒక్కటి చెయ్యండి @KTRTRS @TV9Telugu @abntelugut pic.twitter.com/CmqgyPgWUc — AMR (@MaheshRam9553) November 4, 2019 R Rajaram, a law student from Ibrahimpatnam said, "Going to college on time has become tough. There are very few buses. Hundreds of students have to travel on footboard or even on bumpers, if something goes wrong we can't even imagine." When asked about what he thinks about the RTC strike, he said, "The strike is clearly affecting students, and we don't know how long it will affect us." His classmate Vijay P said, "As there are only a few buses, autos have also increased their rates. We are paying as much as they're asking as we don't have another option." Though the TSRTC is claiming that they're running buses by hiring temporary drivers and conductors, it is visible that operation of buses is not happening at the level which the state government claims. Saif Rahman, engineering student from Hasthinapuram said, "Returning from college is also a challenge, as there are no buses at all and autos are charging high fares," while adding that this was causing havoc during peak hours. Saif, who travels about 50 km regularly, said, "The state government should sort out the issues of striking employees and the RTC should provide more number of buses to meet the needs of students." While more videos from the jurisdiction of the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) have surfaced, the problem is not isolated to the capital city alone. Many students from rural areas of the state also have their fair share of complaints.  Rural students worst-hit Madhusudan, an undergraduate student who travels from a village in Bhiknoor mandal to Kamareddy, said that they're often missing classes or choosing not to go at all."While there are very few buses on some routes, to some villages, there is no bus service at all due to the strike," he said. Like him, there are several students from interior villages in the state, who are finding it difficult to commute to their schools and colleges. The managements of several colleges in district headquarters are also concerned about the impact of the strike, and told TNM that the drop in attendance was visible on paper."The ongoing strike has led to the disturbance of academic schedules. I hope things get sorted soon as exams are nearing. Many students, mainly from interior villages are facing problems," he said, on condition of anonymity. This is not the only issue. Reports in local media suggest that bus pass-holding students along certain routes are being asked to get down by temporary staff as they need to meet a certain daily target of cash collection.  While the state government has stated that the student bus passes continue to be valid, many students allege that the temporary staff have been demanding cash for tickets, to meet their quota.  According to some estimates, RTC issues more than 60,000 free bus passes in Hyderabad city alone while there are thousands of students who avail concessional bus passes. The number for the entire state, would be several lakh.  Earlier this week, Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao announced privatisation of 5,100 routes in the state while stating that the remaining would also be given to private parties if the staff failed to report back to duty by midnight of November 5. Meanwhile, the deadlock between the RTC employees and the state government has continued, with striking workers refusing to adhere to an ultimatum issued by CM KCR. Read: Despite KCR's deadline, Telangana RTC employees continue strike
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TSRTC woes mount: Corporation asked to cough up Rs 652 crore dues by govt, HC

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TSRTC
The TSRTC has to pay Rs 200 crore within six weeks to the RTC employees’ society, and Rs 452.86 crore to the Transport Department as Motor Vehicle tax.
The debt-ridden Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) which is in further financial crisis due to the ongoing strike received a major jolt on Wednesday, as the Telangana High Court ordered the Corporation to pay Rs 200 crore to the RTC Workers Credit Cooperative Society. Besides, the state government also went on the offensive as the Telangana Transport Department served tax due notices of Rs 452.86 crore to be paid immediately by the Corporation.  On Wednesday, the Court was hearing a plea filed by RTC Workers Credit Cooperative Society Secretary B Mahesh and managing committee member BY Reddy. The complainants alleged that the TSRTC management had exhausted their funds of Rs 411 crore, and did not repay them. The TSRTC workers have the RTC Workers Credit Cooperative Society which gives loans to the workers to meet their expenses for marriage, education etc.  The Times of India reported that the petitioner’s counsel Jayaprakash Rao told the court that the TSRTC management deducted small amounts from the workers salaries which was transferred to the Society’s account. However, the TSRTC management stopped transferring the deducted amount to the Society for the past few years.  Jayaprakash Rao said that the management should pay Rs 411 crore along with interest, which would amount to more than Rs 530 crore. After hearing the matter, Justice A Rajasekhar Reddy passed the order asking the TSRTC managing director and chief financial officer to deposit Rs 200 crore into the Society’s account within six weeks.  Meanwhile, the Telangana Transport Department Joint Commissioner and secretary, G Mamata Prasad, on Wednesday issued tax due notices claiming that the TSRTC did not clear Motor Vehicle tax dues for the years 2017-2018 and 2018- 2019, which amounts to Rs 452.86 crore, reported Deccan Chronicle. The TSRTC now has to pay Rs 652.86 crore towards both these dues, while their coffers are literally empty. It must be recalled that the TSRTC management had earlier told the court that they cannot pay salaries to the workers for the month of September, as they don’t have any money left.   
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TSRTC JAC briefs Union Home Minister Amit Shah, BJP President Nadda about crisis

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TSRTC Strike
The TSRTC Joint Action Committee also sought the help of the BJP to make the ‘Million March’ scheduled on October 9, a success.
Accusing the state government of letting them down and taking the unilateral decision of privatising public transportation, the Telangana Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) Joint Action Committee (JAC) on Wednesday briefed the ongoing crisis to Union Home Minister Amit Shah and BJP President JP Nadda. The JAC also sought the help of the BJP to make the 'Million March' protest to be held on Tank Bund in Hyderabad, scheduled on October 9, a success. The JAC leaders also demanded that the state government should hold talks with them and resolve the crisis, reported Telangana Today.  Buoyed by the unity of the TSRTC workers who defied the ultimatum given by Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao and are continuing the strike, JAC convenor Ashwathama Reddy said that their unity cannot be broken. He alleged that the Chief Minister used all kinds of divisive tactics to weaken the workers' unity but failed.  The CM had set a deadline asking the workers to resume duty by November 5, threatening that if they fail to join duty, the entire TSRTC would be privatised. However, just around 500 workers out of the 48,000 odd workers had joined back. The TSRTC workers are on strike since October 5, demanding the merger of the TSRTC with the government, along with several other demands. After meeting the state BJP leaders, Aswathama Reddy said that Amit Shah and JP Nadda responded positively on their issue. Ashwatham Reddy reiterated that the CM should give up his false pride and hold talks with them. In the meeting, Telangana Jana Samithi President Kodandram Reddy and Madiga Reservation Porata Samithi leader Manda Krishna Madiga also participated.   Meanwhile, BJP state president K Laxman said that the Chief Minister should offer to resign because of his failure. He said that all attempts by KCR to stop the protest failed, and that it was a moral victory for the TSRTC workers, according to The New Indian Express. 
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Sabarimala Ayyappa deeksha: No uniform exception for Hyd cops, says Commissioner

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Controversy
The move has not gone down well with the BJP, which has accused Rachakonda Commissioner Mahesh Bhagwat of 'religious discrimination'.
A circular by Rachakonda Police Commissioner Mahesh Bhagwat, reiterating that police officers cannot shun their police uniform and footwear to observe 'Ayyappa Deeksha' while on duty, has kicked up a row. Ayyappa devotees who observe Deeksha wear a black dress, shun footwear and avoid cutting their hair during a 41-day austerity period before undertaking a pilgrimage to Sabarimala. The Commissioner on November 1, in an internal circular notified the policemen not to wear the black dress while on duty. Stating that he had received several requests from policemen on the issue over the past few days, he said that he could not grant permission to officers on duty, as the police uniform was mandatory.“Permission cannot be accorded to police personnel to perform duties without wearing prescribed uniform, shoes and other clothing. If any of the personnel desires to observe Deeksha of Swamy Ayyappa, they can apply for leave to do so and no permission can be accorded to any member of disciplined force like police,” the memo stated. It further said, “One can apply for leave up to two months to perform rituals, if any, subject to the condition that such permission shall be without detriment to the official duties.” However, the memo has not gone down well with the BJP, which has accused the Commissioner of 'religious discrimination'. Goshamahal BJP MLA T Raja Singh through a video on Wednesday slammed the decision and accused the Commissioner of being discriminatary against Hindus.“During Ramzan didn’t you think of releasing such a memo? They (Muslims) too perform Roza (fasting). Why there is separate law for them and separate law for Hindus? Why are you creating such divisions? During Ramzan give Muslims the freedom to observe Roza and similarly for the Hindu officials there should be freedom to observe their rituals. Why separate laws for them and us -- is this justice? Under whose direction did you issue such a memo? Did the Chief Minister give you such orders or the AIMIM party?” he asked.      
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Aurobindo Pharmaceuticals under US scanner for 'unhygienic' equipment in 2 Hyd units

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Health
At present there has been no official statement issued regarding the potency of the drugs produced in the unhygienic facilities.
PTI
The United States Food and Drug Administration’s (USFDA) recently inspected of two manufacturing units of Aurobindo Pharmaceutical Company in Hyderabad, and has raised concerns about contamination of equipment. While the manufacturing facility in Pashamylaram (which largely manufactures sterile injectable drugs and several pharmaceutical products required for eye surgeries) was inspected between October 21 and 28, the facility at Gaddapotharam was checked between October 21 and 25. The USFDA raised concerns over the lack of hygiene and cleanliness at these facilities. So far, there has been no official statement from the FDA or Aurobindo regarding the potency of the drugs produced in the unhygienic facilities. Drugs must be manufactured under very specific conditions to ensure their potency and sterility. If a facility is not following the protocols for cleanliness, this can lead to contamination of drugs which can cause health risks. “Contamination of drugs can cause reactions, allergies and side-effects that doctors cannot anticipate. While they can anticipate the adverse effects of correctly manufactured drugs, if the manufacturing equipment isn’t clean, we don’t know what kind of side-effects to expect,” explains public health expert Dr Syliva Karpagam. Also read: Cataract surgery goes wrong: Bengaluru hospital alleges eye gel was contaminated The drug company issued a statement after the investigations. “We believe that these observations are related to procedural improvements and none of the observations are related to data integrity. The Company will be responding to USFDA as per the prescribed timelines. With respect to Unit IV [of the] formulation manufacturing facility at Pashamylaram, Hyderabad, the inspection is in progress. We further inform you that USFDA audit is an activity under the normal course of business in the pharmaceutical industry. The Company regularly informs all material events and currently we do not have any information which is material to the Company's operations. We will continue to intimate stock exchanges if there is any material development,” it said. Aurobindo was earlier called out by the USFDA on October 7 after the company was issued a warning for managers of the facility had to take appropriate corrective measures to ensure that the plant was functioning as per regulations. This came after several of the company’s data records pertaining to quality control and checks were found to be incomplete or irregular, raising concerns over the effectiveness and potency of the drugs. “The responsibilities and procedures applicable to the quality control unit are not fully followed. Several lists of documents requested were either provided as incomplete, inaccurate and/or explained with potentially misleading statements throughout the inspection,” the USFDA had stated at the time. In addition to Aurobindo Pharmaceuticals, three other companies -- Cadila Healthcare Ltd., Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and Lupin Ltd. -- have come under the FDA scanner earlier. Aurobindo Pharmaceuticals was under scrutiny earlier in January too after stocks of the company’s drug Valsartan, to treat high blood pressure, had to be recalled due to suspected contamination by a cancer causing agent (carcinogen).
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Suresh, who set Telangana MRO Vijaya Reddy ablaze, succumbs to his injuries

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Crime
Suresh had suffered over 60 percent burns after he allegedly poured petrol on Vijaya Reddy before setting her ablaze.
Days after the murder of Mandal Revenue Officer (MRO) Vijaya Reddy at her office chambers at the outskirts of Hyderabad, the accused in the case, K Suresh, succumbed to his injuries at the Osmania General Hospital (OGH). Suresh had suffered over 60 percent burns after he poured petrol on Vijaya Reddy before setting her ablaze, allegedly over a piece of disputed land. Suresh was also grievously injured in the incident. Doctors said that he passed away at around 3.30 pm, after his condition started deteriorating on Wednesday night."His condition was critical when he was admitted. On Thursday, we put him on a ventilator but he succumbed to the burns," OGH Superintendent Dr B Nagender told TNM. The police meanwhile, said that they were yet to establish Suresh's motive, for carrying out the heinous attack."The investigation is ongoing. We are looking at the land under dispute and speaking to persons concerned with the case. A magistrate has taken down Suresh's statement before his death. We will reveal further details soon," Abdullapurmet Inspector S Devender told TNM. Suresh, in his dying declaration is reported to have said that he was upset at not being issued a pattadar passbook for the land he was claiming to be belonging to him. His family has expressed shock and alleged that someone may have instigated him to carry out the attack. The police said that his call data was also being analysed for further clues. Vijaya Reddy, who is survived by her husband and two children, was the first Tehsildar of Abdullahpurmpet after the office was opened around three years ago. During the ghastly incident earlier this week, her driver, Gurunatham, tried to rescue Vijaya and also sustained severe burns in the process. He succumbed to his injuries a day later. The death has also triggered protests from revenue employees, who blamed Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao for demonising them. They also boycotted duties for three days, demanding stringent punishment for the guilty. Read:'KCR demonized us': Revenue employees protest after Telangana MRO's murder Driver who tried to rescue Telangana Tehsildar who was set ablaze, also dies   Day after her murder, hundreds bid emotional farewell to Telangana MRO Vijaya Reddy
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Hyderabad police arrest 4 for smuggling red sanders logs worth Rs 1 crore

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Crime
The police said that the precious wood was being transported from the Lankamalla reserved forest in Andhra Pradesh's Kadapa district.
The Hyderabad city police on Thursday busted an inter-state red sanders smuggling racket with the arrest of four people. The Commissioner’s Task Force, South Zone Team, seized 2,500 kg (2.5 tonnes) of red sander logs, estimated to be worth Rs 1 crore in the market. The main accused have been identified as N Radha Krishna and K Chandra, both from Anantapur in Andhra Pradesh, who transported the precious wood from Lankamalla reserved forest in Kadapa. N Chennaiah, a mediator, and Ram Kumar, a watchman, were also arrested in relation to the crime. The police said that one Shiva, alias Chandra, who was the kingpin of the racket, is absconding. The police said that Radha Krishna had completed his education in Anantapur, following which he had ventured into various businesses like real estate and mining, without any success. Due to a financial crisis, he decided to smuggle red sanders, taking inspiration from notorious smuggler Gangi Reddy, who was arrested in 2015. "To execute his plan, he met one Shiva from Kadapa. Shiva arranged 2.5 tonnes of red sanders wood from Lankamalla reserved forest for a price of Rs 400 per kg. Immediately, Radha Krishna collected the wood from the forest with the help of his associate, Chandra," the police said in a press note. They later shifted the wood by hiding it under the cover of vegetables, and stored it in a room at Pedda Shapur village at the outskirts of Hyderabad, the police said. In the early hours of Thursday, based on a tip off, the police arrested the accused as they were transporting the logs. Investigating officials seized a Honda City car and five cell phones and said that the gang functions in both Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.  Pterocarpus santalinus, more commonly known as red sanders, grows mainly in the Palakonda and Seshachalam hills in Andhra Pradesh's Chittoor district, with some trees also found in isolated areas in the districts of Kurnool, Prakasam, Anantapur and Nellore. The rare wood is precious and has a huge demand in East Asia and countries like China and Myanmar, where it is used for woodcraft, and also in making traditional medicines. The Andhra government seizes several tonnes of logs each year during combing operations, which are undertaken by Special Forces. It later auctions the seized wood after getting permission from the union government. Read: The great forest robbery: How Andhra’s rare red sanders are smuggled around the world
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Ghazala Hashmi, first Muslim woman in Virginia Senate, has her roots in Hyderabad

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Politics
The 55-year-old Democrat, who was elected from Virginia's 10th Senate District, hails from a family of educationists in Hyderabad.
Ghazala Hashmi, who made history by becoming first Muslim woman to be elected to Virginia State Senate, hails from a family of educationists in Hyderabad. Migrating to the United States with her family when she was just four, the Indian-American scored a stunning victory over sitting Republican Senator Glen Sturtevant. The 55-year-old, a Democrat, was elected from Virginia's 10th Senate District to become the first Muslim-American woman to serve in the State Senate. A former literature professor and former director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching & Learning at Reynolds Community College, Richmond, she served as an educator for more than two decades. Hashmi dedicated her win to her supporters with a tweet saying it belonged to all those who believed in the need for "progressive change in Virginia"."This victory, is not mine alone. It belongs to all of you who believed that we needed to make progressive change here in Virginia, for all of you who felt that you haven't had a voice and believed in me to be yours in the General Assembly," she tweeted. In another tweet, she also admired the state's willingness to make the change. "Today we sent a message that the status quo is no longer accepted," wrote Hashmi, whose campaign focused on education, healthcare, gun violence prevention and environmental protection. Hashmi was born in 1964 in a highly-educated family. Her parents Zia Hashmi and Tanveer Hashmi obtained higher education degrees from reputed institutions. Zia Hashmi did MA and LLB from Aligarh Muslim University, where he was also the president of Student Union in early 1950s. Tanveer Hashmi is an alumnus of Osmania University's Kothi Women's College. She did BA and B.Ed. Zia Hashmi later did PhD in International Relations from University of South Carolina. He retired as the Director of Centre for International Studies at the same university. According to Ghazala Hashmi's relatives, she was a bright student right from her school days. She earned a bachelor's degree from Georgia Southern University and a PhD from Emory University in Atlanta. Her elder brother Dr Sohail Hashmi, who did PhD in International Relations from Harvard University is a Professor at Massachusetts while younger sister Dr. Saira Ali Khan is a physician based in Florida. Hashmi shifted to Virginia in early 1990s with her husband Azhar Rafeeq, who is Associate Professor in School of Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University. The couple has two daughters. Elder one, Yasmin, who has done Masters in Public Health Administration, is working in Washington while Noor is doing Engineering.
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'Telangana RTC has no legal sanctity', Centre tells HC amid workers strike

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TSRTC Strike
The Centre pointed out that it had not given its formal approval for the formation of the TSRTC, under the Transport Act.
In what comes as a major relief to the striking employees of the Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC), the Centre on Thursday informed the High Court that the corporation had no legal sanctity as an institution. Assistant Solicitor General N Rajeshwar Rao informed the court that the Centre had not officially approved the formation of the TSRTC, which was carved out of the Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC), after the state's bifurcation in 2014. A division bench comprising Chief Justice Raghvendra Singh Chauhan and Justice A Abhishek Reddy was hearing a petition, which challenged the Telangana government's move to privatise 5,100 bus routes in the state. While the Telangana government claimed that the TSRTC was created as per provisions in both the RTC Act and the AP Reorganisation Act, 2014, the Centre argued that the corporation would only have legal sanctity under the Union Government's Transport Act. With this, the ruling TRS government may not be able to go ahead with its plan to privatise bus routes. Nearly 48,000 employees of the TSRTC have been on strike for more than a month, demanding better wages, regulated working hours and a merger of the corporation into the state government. They also pointed out that they had not been paid their salaries since September. The TSRTC is presently a state-owned public utility which functions autonomously. The state government has been unwavering in its response with Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao even threatening employees, that all bus routes in the state would be privatised if they refused to call off the strike. The Joint Action Committee (JAC) is now planning to hold a 'Million March' protest on Tank Bund in Hyderabad on October 9.  Read:  TSRTC woes mount: Corporation asked to cough up Rs 652 crore dues by govt, HC Dangerous journeys on footboard: How students are facing the brunt of TSRTC strike
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Hyderabad FC claims their driver was assaulted by cops, authorities deny allegations

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Controversy
The players alleged that their driver was beaten up by a policeman in front of the entire team and "dragged into the police station".
Image: Facebook/Hyderabad FC
A major row is underway after the bus driver of the Hyderabad Football Club (FC), which is presently playing the Indian Super League (ISL), was allegedly assaulted by traffic police personnel from the Cyberabad commissionerate. The authorities have denied the allegations of manhandling and said that the driver of the bus was using an air horn, which was prohibited. The incident took place on Wednesday night as players of the Hyderabad FC team were returning to their hotel, after a match with North East United at Gachibowli stadium. The players alleged that their driver was beaten up by a policeman in front of the entire team and "dragged into the police station"."We are a professional football club comprising of players from the Indian national team as well as 10 foreign nationals. We strongly condemn this incident which has left players in a state of shock and stress especially after a tough game. Let alone distressed, they were absolutely horrified as seeing officials in uniform behave in a manner that was totally uncalled for," Hyderabad FC said in a statement. A disturbing incident took place right after the game. Look forward to your support in this matter. @AmitShah @kishanreddybjp @TelanganaCMO @DrTamilisaiGuv @TelanganaDGP @cpcybd pic.twitter.com/ldXgG3iAFi — Hyderabad F.C. (@HydFCOfficial) November 6, 2019 Requesting an immediate inquiry into the incident, they also asked for adequate security to the team. Hyderabad FC also posted a video of Indian defender Adil Khan narrating the sequence of events that took place. In the video, Adil said, "We were already disappointed that the match didn't go our way....suddenly the traffic police stopped the bus and started misbehaving with the driver. From what I understood, the driver said that there were players in the bus and he was dropping them to the hotel. But the policemen dragged him out and beat him up, which was not right." @adilahmedkhan08's reaction to last night's disturbing incident that took place right after the game. 1/2#HyderbadFC #HydFC #Hyderabad #Hyd #Justice #Telangana #HyderabadPolice #TelanganaPolice pic.twitter.com/bPYKxU43Q5— Hyderabad F.C. (@HydFCOfficial) November 7, 2019 However, the Cyberabad traffic police denied the allegations in a statement issued on Thursday. "The claims of manhandling and security issues of the football team are baseless and far from the truth. Hyderabad FC is advised to ask their transport agent to obey all traffic rules and also remove prohibited air horns from their vehicles," the Cyberabad traffic police said. The authorities said that the vehicle was stopped on November 6 at 10.28 pm for "violations of excessive honking and using prohibited air horn, as part of their routine enforcement against heavy vehicles during night time in the IT Corridor.""As part of the process, the driver was asked to provide driving license and other mandatory details. Instead of lawfully obeying the instructions of the traffic police on duty, he kept on arguing and was causing traffic issues on the main road," the police added. They said that there was no physical assault as claimed by the players and the club. https://t.co/bv2b10c7qT Rejoinder from @CYBTRAFFIC pic.twitter.com/Aqlcgu5qgb — CYBERABAD TRAFFIC (@CYBTRAFFIC) November 7, 2019 A case has been registered against the bus driver, for causing noise pollution.
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Scores of trees chopped in Hyderabad's Tellapur, citizens cry foul

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Environment
Officials said they had been granted permission to axe 134 trees on the stretch from Nallaganda to Tellapur, as part of road expansion plans.
Image: Nitin B
Several trees on the stretch between Nallagandla and Tellapur, close to Hyderabad's IT Corridor, were chopped down on Thursday night, much to the displeasure of citizens and activists.  Citizens who learnt of the ongoing work rushed to the spot on Friday morning and stalled the work. A complaint was also filed with the Chandanagar police. Some also took to social media to raise an alarm. #ThankyouGHMC Terribly disappointed to see 30-40 yrs old trees cut down at midnight at Nallagandla - Tellapur Road, they surly have no right permissions to do so. @KTRoffice @KTRTRS Anna need your immediate help. @NallagandlaHyd @thenewsminute @GHMCOnline @CommissionrGHMC pic.twitter.com/tKUGllhrL4 — Sunil Sathyavolu (@ImSunilChakri) November 8, 2019 According to documents shared by officials, the Roads and Buildings (R&B) Department applied for permission to fell 134 trees in total -- 83 on left side and 51 on the right, while travelling from Nallaganda to Tellapur, as part of road expansion plans. The documents show that permission was granted to the R&B Department, by the Forest Divisional Officer (FDO) of Shamshabad. When TNM visited the spot on Thursday morning, work was halted and workers who had been hired for the purpose, were seen sitting idly by the road.   "They started cutting it on Thursday. It was sad to see it happen. Many of these trees have been growing here for decades," a shopkeeper at the spot, who was witness to the incident, said. Speaking to TNM, Suresh Matta, a resident of Serilingampally, said, "I rushed in the morning and I went to the spot and called the police. They came and stopped the work, following which I filed a complaint with them. Some trees are as old as 50 to 70 years. It is criminal to cut them in this manner." In a letter granting the permission, the FDO noted, "Two species are Babul and Tamarind, while remaining were peltophorum species. It is noticed that all the 134 trees are either crooked and malformed, forked or bent, which is not suitable for translocation and felling may be permitted." Authorities also said that the work was taken up for public purpose, "to ease traffic congestion and no alternatives are possible." The letter which granted permission, also said that the applicant, in this case, the R&B Department, "shall plant three-year-old plants in proximity of the felling site with suitable native species as compensatory plantation, which should be supervised, protected and monitored regularly. However, Suresh claimed that the documents did not seem to be in order."There is definitely a different procedure to be followed. Even the documents they are showing, does not have a stamp. It is mandatory for the documents to have a stamp from the competent authority, before they can go ahead," he said. In a video he shared with reporters, Suresh also points out, "I can go online and print something like this." Speaking to TNM, an official from the R&B Department said that they had taken all due permission before going ahead with their plans.  The official said that a 100-feet road had been planned and as traffic congestion was getting worse by the day, they decided to go ahead with adding one lane on either side of the road, and had applied for permission to cut the trees. Asked about the 'stamp' claim, the official said, "That is absurd. The letterhead is there and so is the signature. There is no need for a stamp." As many also tagged the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC), West Zone, Zonal Commissioner, Hari Chandana also responded."Concern for saving these trees is well appreciated. The road is under development for the convenience of nearly 5 lakh commuters by R&B department. On permission from Forest department, the trees are removed. Five times the number of trees cut, will be replanted on the edge of the road," she tweeted.  Concern for saving these trees is well appreciated. the road is under development for the convenience of nearly 5 lakhs commuters by R n B dept. On permission from forest dept,the trees are removed.5 times the trees cut will be replanted on the edge of the road. @KTRTRS — Hari Chandana IAS, Zonal Commr, West Zone GHMC (@zcwz_ghmc) November 8, 2019  
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'Court taken for a ride': Telangana HC flays govt over claims on RTC strike

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Judiciary
The Chief Justice asked whether the officials were placing fudged financial figures and hiding the truth from the bench.
Image: Picxy.com/Prasad and Facebook/CMO
The Telangana High Court on Thursday lashed out at Chief Secretary SK Joshi and other senior officials of the government, pointing out that they had filed contradictory affidavits under oath, over the issue of dues payable to the Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC).  The HC also pulled up Principal Secretary (Finance) K Ramakrishna Rao, TSRTC in-charge Managing Director Sunil Sharma, and Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) Commissioner Lokesh Kumar. A division bench led by Chief Justice Raghvendra Singh Chauhan, which was hearing the case, felt that the affidavits filed by the Finance Department were contradictory, and pointed out that making erroneous claims deliberately would attract contempt of court.  The court also dubbed the affidavits as 'vague and contradictory' about dues payable to the TSRTC. The court took explanations from the top bureaucrats, while going through the affidavits. The Principal Secretary (Finance) informed the court that they had not properly 'examined' a first report which was submitted earlier. Criticising the official for this, the court noted that seeking an apology would not be enough for such an error. Noting that he had not seen the 'court being taken for a ride' in 15 years of his service, the Chief Justice asked whether the officials were placing fudged financial figures and hiding the truth from the bench.  The bench also said that such actions would raise doubts on the credibility of officials.  Last week, while hearing the case, the court pointed to a committee report by the government which said that most of the main demands of the striking RTC employees, could be solved if the state government sanctioned 47 crore. The court said that while the state was taking up projects worth thousands of crores of rupees, it could not spare Rs 47 crore for the lives of around 50,000 RTC employees. Only 360 out of the over 48,000 striking employees of the TSRTC returned to work on Wednesday after the final deadline set by the Telangana government came to an end on Tuesday midnight. This came after the state Cabinet, on November 2, decided to privatise 5,100 bus routes, further angering the employees. The employees have been on strike since October 5 to press for their demands, including that of the merger of the TSRTC with the government so that they are treated at par with other state government employees. (With IANS inputs) Read: 'Telangana RTC has no legal sanctity', Centre tells HC amid workers strike 
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'Thippara Meesam' review: Where's the story in this jungle of cliches?

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Review
There's no story, just a random screenplay where scenes appear to have been added because well, the audience has two and a half hours to kill.
It is probably true that no one sets out to make a bad movie. There is money involved. There are actors like Sri Vishnu involved, displaying all the honesty and sincerity that an aspiring star has before he loses it all after making it big. And then, there is the need to squeeze the resources to the best use they can be put to. All of that reflects in Krishna Vijay's Thippara Meesam, the effort that a bunch of not so well-known members of the film fraternity have put in their cinema. But, what's missing is the soul. You can jump up a hundred times to reach a fruit hanging high from a tree, but if you don't have the necessary skills or tools, your hard work doesn't yield much. Same goes here. There's no story, just a random screenplay where scenes appear to have been added because well, the audience has two and a half hours to kill. Thippara Meesam is an inane collage of cliches stitched together, each new cliche added as an afterthought. There is the dark child with abandonment issues that distance him from his mom. And does anyone do romance worse than Telugu movies, I wonder at times. There is a wannabe cool game. A bunch of junkies bet big on a task that'll not even make the cut in a dilapidated episode of Roadies - there is a cash bag in a random car parked in a random street. Go find it! Most genius junkie task ever. Sri Vishnu plays a DJ who gets on the wrong side of a bookie and in order to arrange for the massive sum of money, he forges a cheque and then fights a case against his mom for giving him a cheque that bounced. It's funny, this context, because you don't just use an eraser to change Rs 5 lakhs to 40 lakhs on a cheque and then send a legal notice against the person who gave you the cheque. To make it better, the bank guys actually call his mom to tell her that her cheque has bounced (would they have handed over the cash to the forger if there was that much money in the account - a question that tormented me all through. Is the banking system really functioning like that?) Anyway, there is also the justification of the totally spoilt son with enough morality to make sacrifices for the same family, because one truth changes everything for the most depraved of human beings. There is the dirty cop, there are goons, and a flashback-style narrative that is not really required. Every sub-plot in the movie feels like squeezing out a few blobs of toothpaste from a tube that has nothing. And the female protagonist in the movie (Nikki Tambola) is as relevant as the model on the toothpaste tube. There's no purpose. None. Naveen Neni is the protagonist's friend, and once again, has nothing to do. But, he is probably just thankful that they didn't use him for the usual crass, homophobic jokes. Thippara Meesam's story has got nothing to do with the title either. I don't know what symbolism is still conveyed through the moustache because that old sense of macho wrongly attributed to facial hair really doesn't evoke much in the urban audiences anymore. And surely, this movie was not made for those parts of the country where the moustache is a symbol of male pride. It tries so hard to be a transformation story, but the problem with a lot of Telugu transformation stories (Valmiki comes to mind) is that we glamorize the bad boy image so much, the transformation doesn't really hold any meaning. Thippara Meesam's protagonist is stuck midway - he is neither the deplorable Arjun Reddy - he tries hard mind you - nor is he the dark frustrated son beyond redemption who changes one fine day. And Rohini as the mother just looks sad, all the way. Even I would, if I had to play a mother whose biggest argument against her son cannot be revealed because the climax suspense relies on it - and that's a cliche too. The cinematography, while decent, is cliched too, the typical low-budget wacky look - bulbs, randomly painted old car, bylanes, flickers, drug-deluded shots, intoxication effects. The OST is fine too, but wasted in a movie where things just happen randomly. Same goes for the music, because what exactly is it supposed to convey anyway when the scenes are so absurd? All in all, Krishna Vijay's movie is mostly balderdash, where not enough happens for us to even allege that it doesn't make sense. It is just one cliche after another. Disclaimer: This review was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the series/film. TNM Editorial is independent of any business relationship the organisation may have with producers or any other members of its cast or crew.
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Swedish company makes ‘pill’ out of pharma residue in Hyd’s polluted waters

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Health
The pill isn’t for consumption but a commentary on just what people who have to use these water sources are exposed to on a daily basis.
Hyderabad is a hub for pharmaceutical manufacturing. That pollutants from these factories enter water bodies, poisoning them and posing a danger to people and the environment is also known. It is indeed ironical that the process of making life-saving drugs results in exposing thousands of people to deadly diseases and health issues. And a recent campaign by a Swedish pharmaceutical giant drives this point home. Apotek Hjartat a Swedish pharmaceutical company, came up with an ingenious campaign – they made a ‘pill’ out of the pharmaceutical pollutants found in Hyderabad’s waters. They took 100 litres of water samples from water bodies in the vicinity of many pharmaceutical factories, and analysed it for six months along with the Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE). To prove just how many active ingredients make their way into water bodies from drug-manufacturing companies, Apotek extracted these pollutants from the contaminated water samples, and made a pill called ‘Sordidum Pharmacum’. This pill isn’t for consumption of course, it is a commentary on just what people who have to use these water sources are exposed to on a daily basis. “The water outside the medical factories in Hyderabad contained active substances found in a wide spectra of drugs, ranging from HIV medicine to heavy painkillers,” Apotek revealed. “The substances included, but was not limited to: O-Desmethyl-cis-tramadol (Opioids), Fluconazole (Medicine for treating fungal infections), Levetiracetam (Medicine for treating epilepsy), Nevirapine (HIV medicine), Losartan (Medicine for treating high blood pressure) and Anastrozole (Used for treating breast cancer).” When pharmaceutical companies let out such untreated waste into water bodies, it leads to a host of problems - diseases in the flora and fauna, health issues including skin diseases and cancer in people who use this water, and also antibiotic resistance.  From each litre of the water analysed, Apotek was able to extract 5.9 grams of the powder that ultimately went into Sordidum Pharmacum. Apotek also made a short video based on its research and findings. The video introduces Sordidum Pharmacum as a medicine “made from water polluted by pharmaceutical factories”, which is a “cocktail made from drugs found in the water.” It then cuts to Hyderabad, one of the biggest hubs for manufacturing drugs, and how they went on to collect water samples and made the pill. Apotek’s resultant campaign to make pharmaceutical manufacturing companies more responsible is called ‘a hard pill to swallow’. The company has also introduced a label called “Välj med hjärtat” which translates to “follow your heart”. It described the label as a “stamp of approval and labeling of prescription-free drugs” which comply with their environmental and sustainability standards. Compliant manufacturers will be able to carry this label. This gives Swedish customers the chance to choose consciously to use drugs that are produced responsibly and sustainably.  (Photos courtesy: https://hardpilltoswallow.se/en/)
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253 Adivasi villages in Telangana’s Asifabad prohibit liquor

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Liquor ban
With the villages passing resolutions to ban liquor sales, the district Excise and Prohibition authorities will stop giving permits to sell liquor in at least three mandals.
Adivasi women celebration rally in Jainoor of Asifabad
Over the last few days Adivasis in Telangana’s Asifabad are in a celebratory mode as the district Excise and Prohibition authorities have decided not to give licenses/permits to sell liquor in at least three mandals. The decision came following resolutions taken by several villagers as per the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA) 1996 and months-long anti-liquor campaigns. In three mandals – Jainoor, Sirpur (U) and Lingapur – as many as 253 Adivasi villages in 45 Gram Panchayats have passed resolutions stating that there should be no liquor sale in their areas. The Provisions of the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 or PESA is a law enacted by the Government of India for ensuring self-governance through traditional Gram Sabhas for people living in the Scheduled Areas of India. PESA seeks to enable Panchayats and Gram Sabhas implement self-governance with respect to a number of issues such as customary resources, minor forest produce, minor minerals, minor water bodies, selection of beneficiaries, sanction of projects, and control over local institutions. This is perhaps the first time that PESA is being used in Telangana for an anti-liquor movement. The anti-liquor movement was led by a coordination committee of Adivasi associations. The combined district is home to a sizeable population of tribals since times immemorial. The rich heritage and unique cultural practices of tribes like Gonds, Mannevars, Pardhans and Kolams is the part of the landscape. Asifabad district Excise and Prohibition Superintendent Rajyalakshmi confirmed that the district authorities have approved the resolution on the complete ban of liquor sales in three mandals. She told TNM, “As people from Agency villages in three mandals have passed resolutions appealing for a ban on liquor sale, authorities have approved it. Action will be taken against those who try to sell liquor in those villages.” The Adivasis do not view excessive alcohol consumption as something that only exploits the tribals in terms of health and finance, but something that also impacts them culturally. “With excessive liquor consumption causing untimely deaths in Adivasis in many villages, families are losing their main breadwinners. We want the families to have a better life, so we came together and passed unanimous resolutions across the villages,” said Kumra Dunderao, who is president of the coordination committee for Adivasi associations. Adivasi Mahila Sangam president Godam Jangu Bhai said, “We have decided to completely abolish alcohol in three mandals. There should be no sale of liquor at belt shops or wine shops.” Kanaka Yadav, another member of the Adivasi association, said, “Since the last few years, alcohol consumption has exploited Adivasis, several people have died and as a result their families have been badly affected. We conducted a three-month long campaign and passed resolutions for the complete ban on liquor in Agency villages.” In Telanganas' Asifabad 100's of #Adivasi women performed traditional dances in the success rally after they prohibited #liquor sales in their villages by passing unanmaous resolutions as #PESAAct.#komarambheemAsifabad @thenewsminute @NitinBGoode @dhanyarajendran pic.twitter.com/7BVCIxU9nF— CharanTeja (@CharanT16) November 8, 2019 The association gave representations to revenue and excise officials following the resolutions as per PESA. With officials accepting the liquor ban demand backed by the resolutions, hundreds of Adivasi women and men celebrated by performing traditional dances and songs on the streets in Jainoor. Adivasi community leaders now aim to take the movement to other villages in the ITDA region.
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How a photograph helped a Telangana girl enrol in school

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Human interest
The photo shows a girl holding an empty aluminium container in her hand, wistfully looking at students wearing school uniforms.
Dressed in a blue printed kurta and shorts, she stood outside, peeping into the classroom. Careful to not disturb the class, holding an empty aluminium container in her hand, she wistfully looks at the students, probably her own age, in school uniforms, waiting for the classes to conclude. This photo of a girl, identified as Mothi Divya, was captured by a photographer from Telugu newspaper Eenadu and published in the newspaper on Thursday. Mothi Divya, was not a student in the school. However, at noon, during the lunch hour, she would regularly visit the Deval Jham Singh Government High School in her neighborhood in Gudimalkapur, Hyderabad, so that she could satiate her hunger by eating the leftover food from the midday meals provided by the government, which serves nutritious food including eggs. Divya belongs to the marginalised community of Budaga Jangam, categorised as a Scheduled Caste in Telangana. Her family lives in a shanty erected on a poramboku land (government land), just 300 meters away from the school. The photo with the title ‘Aakali Choopu’ (which translates to ‘hungry look’) published in Eenadu caught the attention of the NGO, Mamidipudi Venkatarangaiya Foundation, which works for child rights.  After seeing the photo, MVF’s convenor, R Venkat Reddy sent their coordinator to the locality who traced the girl and their family. MVF learnt that Divya’s parents were garbage collectors. They enquired why Divya wasn’t enrolled in school, and subsequently admitted her in the same school after speaking with the school authorities. She was given a school uniform and admitted in the school on Thursday.  “Since yesterday, my girl is going to school,” says her father, Laxman to TNM. Both Laxman and his wife Yashoda work as garbage collectors, and leave their daughter at home. “The couple would work from 6 am to 2 pm, and leave their daughter at home. And during lunch time Divya would go to school,” says Nagalaxmi, MVF coordinator. Divya is the youngest daughter of Laxman and Yashoda. Though they tried to enrol her in school earlier this year, they were told that she hasn’t completed the eligible age of five years to be admitted in the school.  “My elder daughter is already studying in a hostel, I wanted Divya to be enrolled in the school this year, but we were told that children less than the age of five years wouldn’t be admitted; else I would have joined her in school,” claims Laxman. Laxman expresses happiness that his youngest daughter, too, is pursuing education.  
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Hyderabad's Tank Bund to be closed, security beefed up ahead of Ayodhya verdict

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Ayodha Dispute
Forces were deployed in all sensitive areas of the city, especially around major monuments and large mosques in the city.
File photo: PTI
The Telangana police have made elaborate security arrangements across the state, particularly in Hyderabad and its old city area, to ensure that no untoward incident takes place, as the Supreme Court is set to pronounce its judgment in the Ayodhya case on Saturday. A five-judge Constitution bench, headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, will deliver its verdict in the 20-year-old Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid case, which involves a dispute over the ownership of 2.77 acres of land in Ayodhya. Police personnel from the Hyderabad and Cyberabad Commissionerates have been asked to be on alert throughout the day. Forces were deployed in all sensitive areas of the city, especially around major monuments and large mosques in the city. With employees of the Road Transport Corporation (RTC) also on strike, and calling for a 'Chalo Tank Bund' march, police said that traffic on the Upper Tank Bund would be closed from 8 am to 5 pm on November 9. Additional forces have been deployed around the area.     The police, which was already making arrangements for the Milad Un Nabi procession on November 10, said that no permission would be granted for any protests, processions and any other large gatherings.  Hyderabad Police Commissioner Anjani Kumar has held a series of meetings with 'peacekeeping committees' over the last few days, which involves elders of the Hindu and Muslim communities.  The religious heads have been asked to appeal for peace, calm and restraint, irrespective of how the final judgment turns out. In line with this, community elders spoke to youth in their mosques during namaz on Friday. Besides Hyderabad, security forces were also rushed to other places in Telangana where violence may break out, including Karimnagar, Nizamabad, Bhainsa, Bodhan and Kamareddy. On December 6, 1992, 'kar sevaks' from Hindu right-wing groups demolished the 16th century mosque, which led to widespread violence. More than 2,000 people died in riots that ensued across the country. For almost 27 years after the Babri Masjid demolition, the case of the title suit -- ownership of land -- has been keenly contested in various courts and the issue has been driving the politics of the country in one way or the other. Read: Ayodhya verdict on November 9: Five developments ahead of the verdict
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Striking Telangana RTC employees denied permission for protest march in Hyderabad

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TSRTC Strike
The employees had planned to recreate the Telangana movement's 'million march', when a large number of people had gathered on Tunk Bund in protest.
Image for representation
The Hyderabad police has denied permission to striking employees of Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) for their proposed march in the city on Saturday. Tank Bund would also be closed for traffic from 8 am to 5 pm on November 9. Leaders of Joint Action Committee (JAC) of TSRTC employees on Friday called on Police Commissioner Anjani Kumar to seek permission for 'chalo Tank Bund' programme as part of their ongoing strike over various demands. Police, however, denied the permission on the ground that the protest march in the heart of the city could create law and order problems. Following this decision, police started preventive arrests of employees' leaders in various parts of the state. JAC leader Raji Reddy was taken into custody in Hyderabad. JAC convenor Ashwathama Reddy, however, told reporters that they would go ahead with the protest. He discussed the latest situation with other leaders of JAC. He asked the employees not to get scared by the threats from the government and reach Hyderabad to participate in the protest. The indefinite strike by over 48,000 employees entered the 35th day on Friday. They continued protests in Hyderabad and 32 other districts to press for their demands. Almost all the employees ignored the government's final deadline to return to work, which ended November 5 midnight. Less than 500 employees resumed their duties. Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao had warned the employees that if they failed to return, there would be no entity called RTC in the state. He had also threatened to privatise the remaining 5,000 bus routes. The state cabinet on November 2 had decided to issue permits to private operators to run buses on 5,100 routes. The Telangana High Court on Thursday had asked the state government to look into the employees' demands and take steps to resolve the issue by November 11, when the next hearing on Public Interest Litigations (PILs) is scheduled. The court appealed to the government to reconsider its hard stand on the strike. The court observed that both the government and the TSRTC are not coming forward to resolve the issue. It also found fault with the officials for submitting contradictory reports with regard to the money the government owes to the TSRTC towards reimbursement of the travel concession given to different categories of commuters. Talks held by the TSRTC with JAC leaders last month on the court's direction had failed to end the deadlock as both sides stuck to their stands. Adding a new twist to the stalemate, the Centre conveyed to the court that bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) into two entities was not recognised by it and hence the TSRTC has no existence as a separate legal entity.
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