Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Zero Banking in Hills Kills Doles

Zero Banking in Hills Kills Doles

Published: 17th March 2015 06:00 AM
Last Updated: 17th March 2015
VELLORE: In what may be a case of the microcosm representing the macrocosm in the country, 25,000 villagers in 34 villages in Pudur Nadu, Pungampattu Nadu and Nellivasal Nadu panchayats in Jawadhu Hills (within Tirupattur Taluk) often find it impossible to avail of generous government welfare schemes in the absence of proximity of banks, the sorry state of infrastructure and transportation and a general apathy of officials responsible for ensuring that welfare schemes are reaching remote villages and tribals.  
Central and State Governments now require that funds available through welfare schemes are electronically transferred to beneficiaries’ bank accounts to expedite not only delivery but also to weed out corruption.
However, the absence of even a single nationalised bank in Jawadhu Hills has made it almost impossible for potential beneficiaries living in and around Jawadhu hills to avail of the schemes.
The nearest nationalised banks are located in Alangayam and Tirupattur, which are 35 to 60 kms from Pudur Nadu. With poor transportation facilities and bad roads compounding the total indifference of officials toward villagers living in the hinterland, villagers in these areas are being deprived of their opportunity to become part of a resurgent India.
 “The Indian Bank had a branch in Pudur Nadu for nearly four years from 1991 but it was shifted to Tirupattur in 1996. Now, the Central Government want all welfare schemes to be linked to individual bank accounts. But, we are not provided with facilities to open bank accounts here,” said A Thukkan of Pudurnadu.
The 34 villages in the three panchayats boasts of 31 schools including some run by the Forest Department and others by the Adi Dravidar and Tribal Welfare Department.
“We are finding it difficult to help students get Schedule Tribe(ST) scholarships. Unless the student has a bank account in his or her name, he or she will not receive the scholarship which now has to be directly deposited into the bank account,” said a teacher in a Forest Department school in Pudurnadu.
The teacher added that a number of parents have migrated to metro cities - Chennai, Bangalore, Tiruppur in search of employment leaving their children behind.
“In such situations, we try and help students open bank accounts.  We collect the forms and necessary documents, and go to the banks on behalf of the students to open accounts in their name. On several occasions banks have asked us to come back another time. After a few such trips, teachers get fed up even though they want to help the students and they just give up. Students are then deprived of their legitimate scholarships,” added the teacher.

Friday, 13 March 2015

Fury as Stone Quarries Put Lives at Risk


Fury as Stone Quarries Put Lives at Risk

Published: 13th March 2015 06:01 AM
Last Updated: 13th March 2015



ADSP Suspended for Threatening Jeweller in Tiruvannamalai


Published: 13th March 2015 06:01 AM
Last Updated: 13th March 201

TIRUVANNAMALAI: Additional Superintendent of Police (ADSP), Prohibition and Enforcement Wing (PEW), Tiruvannamalai, Doraisamy has been suspended following an order from the State Government for filing a false case on a theft case in 2004. The suspension order was issued at the time, but the ADSP had obtained a stay-order from the courts which was set aside on Wednesday.
“We have served the suspension order to the ADSP on Wednesday,” said Superintendent of Police of Tiruvannamalai J Mutharasi.
Sources in the department said that when Doraisamy was working as Inspector of Police attached to Tiruvannamalai Town Station in 2004, a robbery took place in VBC Jewellery. He reportedly threatened the shop owner V Sundara Rajan and obtained statement from him that “no robbery took place in his shop.”
The jewellery-shop owner, V Sundara Rajan, engaged the services of a carpenter, Thiyagu and his assistant, Dakshinamurthy, both residents of Arni, to renovate the shop during Pongal in 2004. The two carpenters intending to rob the jewellery shop hid in the shop after work on January 16. They stole 600 grams of jewels, worth around Rs 12 lakh at the time, and Rs 5 lakh cash from the shop and sneaked out using the keys of the rear door. The following day, the shop owner filed a complaint with the then Inspector Doraisamy, who along with the then Sub-Inspector Ramesh, conducted an inquiry.
The two inspectors allegedly threatened Sundara Rajan and obtained a written statement from him stating he had filed a false complaint.
Meanwhile, Chengam police arrested the two accused four months after the robbery and the stolen jewels and cash were recovered.
 Following a media report, State Human Rights Commission had taken suo moto cognizance of the case. Sundara Rajan told Express that the Tiruvannamalai Jewellers Association had filed a case against the police officers in Madras HC in 2005.

Sunday, 8 March 2015

Prison Department Ignores Probation Wing, Offenders’ Rehab Hit

Prison Department Ignores Probation Wing, Offenders’ Rehab Hit

Published: 06th March 2015 06:00 AM
Last Updated: 06th March 2015 VELLORE/TIRUVANNAMALAI:  The prison department’s Probation Wing has been in a state of neglect with over 50 per cent of the posts lying vacant for the past several years.
 Sources in the prison department said that the present strength of the Probation Officers (PO) and Regional Probation Officer (RPO) is 28 as against the sanctioned strength of 64 in the state. Three Regional Probation Officer (RPO) postings out of a total of 12 remains unfilled for the last few years now. The three RPO postings are: Chennai, Chennai Research Cell and Kumbakonam leaving the current strength of RPOs at 9.
“The department sought the permission of the government to create a prison vigilance unit, dog squad and psychologists’ posts in Central Prisons in 2010. After the government turned down the proposal, the department surrendered 32 PO posts in 2011 and 2012 and obtained permission to recruit psychologists and establish vigilance and dog squads. Earlier there were 96 posts of PO,” said a reliable source.
The existing 28 POs are saddled with work with the responsibilities of several POs. The department has also brought down Office Assistant(OA) to PO ratio from 1:1 a couple of years ago to 1:14 now. “A decade ago, each PO had an OA. Now, most of the PO offices remain locked as there is no one to receive the letters from court, if the PO is on the field duty,” said an official.
By surrendering the PO posts, the prison department has demeaned the Probation of Offenders Act 1958 and Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of children) Act. These Acts emphasise “the reformation and rehabilitation of the offenders as useful and self-reliant members of society without subjecting them to deleterious effects of jail life,” the official added.
Under the provision of Section 3 (Power of Court to release certain offenders after admonition) and Section 4 (Power of Court to release certain offenders on probation after good conduct) of the Probation Offenders Act, the court can release offenders found guilty of an offence punishable with imprisonment of not more than two years, or with fine, or both.
The court can also alternatively sentence criminals after looking at the circumstances of the case, including nature of the offence and character of the offenders.
“The role of probation officer is critical and he has to regularly monitor the ex-convicts and first-time offenders, who are under probation. They will also help the offenders to get assistance and employment in private sectors in a bid to reinstate them in society and overcome the social stigma,” said an official.
The official  added that the post of RPO is equivalent to the Superintendent of Prison, but RPOs are not provided with vehicles to review the rehabilitation of released prisoners.
“When the judiciary and correctional administrations are emphasising the importance of probation instead of incarcerating minor offenders, the prison department is not ignoring it. The alternative sentence (probation or admonition) will negate the adverse impact of imprisonment on an individual and his or her family,” Director of Administration of Prisons and Correctional Administration, Ahmed told Express.
“It will also bring down the population of prisoners and reduce the expenditure of the government. To achieve this, the probation wing should be equipped with sufficient manpower,” he suggested.

TNPCB Begins Drive on ETPs Across State


Published: 07th March 2015 06:00 AM
Last Updated: 07th March 2015

VELLORE: The Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) has launched a drive to inspect all the Common Effluent Treatment Plants (CETPs) of tanneries, its member units and Individual Effluent Treatment Plants (IETPs) across the State to ensure that they comply with all rules and regulations.
The move comes in the wake of the accident at the CETP of SIDCO Finished Leather Effluent Treatment Company in Ranipet on January 31 in which ten workers were killed after toxic slurry swarmed the factories after the wall of an unauthorised Secure Land Fill of the CETP collapsed.
Chairman of the board, K Skandan, has constituted special teams comprising Environmental Engineers and Assistant Engineers to conduct field inspections in tanneries and CETPs.
There are a total of 696 member units, affiliated to 38 CETPs and 80 IETPs, in the State. This includes four CETPs with 223 member units and six IETPs in Vellore division, four CETPs with 222 member units and 20 IETPs in Vaniyambadi division, a CETP with seven member units and three IETPs in Tiruchy and a CETP with 61 member units and an IETP in Dindugal division.
Similarly, there are 13 CETPs and 37 IETPs in Pallavaram (Chennai) and Erode divisions respectively. “We started the special drive a week back. We will check each and every unit during the drive and submit a detailed report to the Chairman of the board by end of this month. So far, we have covered around 25 per cent of the total tanneries,” said a senior official.
The special teams would look into all aspects of the CETPS and IETPS to ensure that the tanneries were complying with the rules and regulations. “We are also checking whether all the facilities, including the pre-treatment facility, in each member units of the CETPs are fully functional,” said a source in the department.
The teams will also check for discharge of effluent in the open, the official said, adding, “If we find any units violating rules and polluting the environment or endangering the lives of workers, the department will take appropriate action.” The officials will also inspect whether the tanneries, CETPs and IETPs have proper certification from Directorate of Industrial Safety and Health.

6 SIDCO Panel Members Held

Published: 06th March 2015 06:00 AM
Last Updated: 06th March 2015VELLORE: Six more persons were arrested by the CB-CID in connection with the tragic accident that claimed the lives of 10 tannery workers a month ago.
Those arrested late on Wednesday were R Ramesh (45), P Pugazhenthi (45), M Srinivasa Reddy (50), Saravana Karthick (35), G Rajendran (45) and Chava Srinivasa Rao(48), all members of the monitoring committee of Ranipet SIDCO Finished Leather Effluent Treatment Company 

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Revoke Closure Order, Urge Ranipet Workers


Published: 03rd March 2015 06:02 AM
Last Updated: 03rd March 2015

VELLORE: One month, to the day, after the TNPCB issued closure orders and suspended the power connections to 86 member units of the Ranipet SIDCO Finished Leather Effluent Treatment Company following the tragic accident on January 31 that killed 10 workers, several hundred workers from six leather companies sought the intervention of the district administration to lift the closure orders so that they may resume work.
The workers pleaded that punishing them for the wrong doings of others was not right. Closure orders and the suspension of power supply (both High Tension and Low Tension) lines to all 86 member units of the CETP were issued by the TNPCB immediately after the tragic accident on January 31.
“The closure orders are not justifiable. Instead of taking action against the persons responsible for the accident, they cannot simply issue closure orders and suspend power connection. We (workers of the tannery companies) are ultimately suffering because of the greed of others,” said 40-year-old G Ramesh, a technician of a leather company.
Ramesh was one of around 400 workers from six companies who had come to the Collectorate on Monday seeking the intervention of the district administration.
“How will we feed our children, support their studies and pay rent?” questioned Padma Priya, a worker at a leather company, and a group of women workers. They added they were suffering because of the failure of TNPCB to enforce safety standards and the mismanagement of the board of directors of the CETP.
They claimed that around 50,000 families directly and indirectly depended on work in the tanneries and with the closure, their lives have been thrown into uncertainty.
“We have been working in these tannery companies for years and we don’t know any other work. If the companies are not opened immediately, we will starve,” said K Nataraj, another worker.
The representatives of the workers submitted a petition to Collector R Nanthagopal, pleading for necessary steps to restore the power connection. They also requested the management to pay half the amount of salaries they were earning as workers during the layoff period. “We have not received a paisa as salary for the month of February from the company,” said one of the workers

Mauled Body Sparks Cat Scare in Village

Mauled Body Sparks Cat Scare in Village

Published: 04th March 2015 06:02 AM
Last Updated: 04th March 2015
VELLORE: A torso and detached head of a 85 year-old woman found on Monday in a dry pond in Uriyur Kuppam near Arakkonam has triggered a leopard scare in and around the village.
The forest department, after conducting a thorough inquiry, denied rumours that the elderly woman was mauled by a leopard.
However, they are awaiting the post-mortem report to confirm that a leopard is not on the prowl. The dead woman was identified as Mariamma. She went to attend nature’s call at 11 am on Tuesday last week, and did not return home.
A few villagers found a pack of stray dogs gnawing at the detached head of the decomposed body of Mariamma. The death fuelled a rumour that the octogenarian was mauled by a wild animal. The pug marks with claws spotted by the villagers of Thottam in Pudu Kesavaram  panchayat, on the outskirts of the village added fuel to the fire.
On information, District Forest Officer (DFO) K Selvaraj and Ranger of Arcot Forest Range, M Vijay along with their subordinates inspected the village and conducted an inquiry. “We found no evidence (pug mark or scar) of the predator in and around the pond where the elderly woman’s body was found. The elderly woman would have died after she slipped from the bund of the pond. The dogs have gnawed the face of the elderly woman’s body,” said the DFO.
He said that the nearest reserve forest area from the village is 30 kms away.
“Villagers have also stated that they have not spotted any leopard or any wild animal. They have also told us that they only saw stray dogs swarming over the woman’s body,” he continued.