22 IAS, one IPS officer transferred in Karnataka

[email protected] (News Network)
August 10, 2014

Bangalore, Aug 10: In a major shake-up of the State bureaucracy, the State government on Saturday transferred 22 IAS officers and an IPS officer with immediate effect.

iasipsEkroop Caur has been appointed as Managing Director of Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) and Anjum Parwez, who was BMTC MD, has been transferred to the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board as Chairman.

Name of the officers and their new postings are as follows:

Rajeev Chawla, Principal Secretary, Horticulture and Sericulture department; Shalini Rajneesh, Principal Secretary, Backward Classes Welfare department; M V Jayanthi, Principal Secretary, DPAR (AR, Training and Political Pension);

M S Ravishankar, Secretary, Minorities Welfare, Haj and Wakf department; Rashmi V Mahesh, who is Director General of Administrative Training Institute, Mysore, is placed in concurrent charge of Regional Commissioner, Mysore Division; V Shankar, Deputy Commissioner, Bangalore Urban district; N M Panali, Chief Executive Officer, Yadgir Zilla Panchayat;

Neela Manjunath, Managing Director, Karnataka Silk Industries Corporation; S A Jeelani, Managing Director, Karnataka Silk Marketing Board; Salma K Fahim, Deputy Commissioner, Bangalore Rural district; G C Prakash, Managing Director, Mysore Sales International Limited; Pallavi Akurathi, Commissioner for Religious and Charitable Endowments and Deputy Secretary, Revenue department;

S Sasikanth Senthil, Deputy Commissioner, Raichur district; Krishna Bajpai, Director, Electronic Delivery of Citizen Services, DPAR (e-Governance); B B Cauvery, Chief Executive Officer, Chikkaballapura Zilla Panchayat; Sushma Godbole, Director of Pre-University Education and Executive Director, Karnataka Examination Authority; S B Shettannavar, Chief Executive Officer, Gadag Zilla Panchayat;

Shadakshari Swamy, Director of Horticulture department, S B Bommanahalli, Chief Executive Officer, Davanagere Zilla Panchayat; B Ramu, Chief Executive Officer, Shimoga Zilla Panchayat (all IAS).

The government has also cancelled its orders transferring Meer Anees Ahmed as Chief Executive Officer of Yadgir Zilla Panchayat and continued as Chief Executive Officer of Karnataka State Wakf Board. D Prakash, Superintendent of Police, Bijapur district.

The government has cancelled the order transferring C H Sudheer Kumar Reddy as Superintendent of Police, Bijapur district and he will now continue in the post of Superintendent of Police, Bidar district (both IPS).

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News Network
April 2,2020

The Ayodhya police booked a senior journalist on Wednesday for raising questions on Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath's visit to the Ram Janmabhoomi for a religious ceremony amid the lockdown over the novel coronavirus pandemic.

The FIR mentions a tweet by Siddharth Varadarajan, editor of news portal 'The Wire', where he said: "On the day the Tablighi Jamaat event was held, Adityanath insisted a large Ram Navami fair planned for Ayodhya from March 25 to April 2 would proceed as usual and that 'Lord Ram would protect devotees from the coronavirus."

Varadarajan had clarified in another tweet that it was "Acharya Paramhans, Hindutva stalwart and head of the official Ayodhya temple trust, who said Ram would protect devotees from coronavirus, and not Adityanath, though he allowed a public event on 25/3 in defiance of the lockdown and took part himself".

Taking the suo-motu cognizance, Faizabad Kotwali police station incharge Nitish Kumar Shrivastava registered an FIR under sections 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant) and 505(2) (statements conducing to public mischief) of the Indian Penal Code for doing "disreputable" comment against the chief minister.

Statement by the Founding Editors of The Wire: pic.twitter.com/frw5oRxw18

— The Wire (@thewire_in) April 1, 2020
Reacting to it, Varadarajan termed the FIR "politically motivated, saying that the offences invoked were not even remotely made out.

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News Network
April 14,2020

Bengaluru, Apr 14: The Karnataka government has decided to adopt “remote monitoring” of COVID-19 positive patients in order to ensure the safety of healthcare professionals - the frontline warriors against the pandemic.

Two doctors treating COVID-19 patients tested positive recently and in to check such instances in future, the Department of Medical Education is planning remote monitoring, which reduces doctors’ exposure to patients.

Medical Education Minister Dr K Sudhakar has consulted some of the doctors in the United States who are already using this technology to treat the COVID-19 positive cases. The minister is also having a meeting with representatives of some of the companies which provide such technology.

“I spoke to a team of epidemiologists and heads of certain departments at the United States to know about the remote monitoring technology they are using. I am also meeting the representatives of a few such companies which can provide us with the technology at our hospitals,”  Dr Sudhakar said.

Track state-wise coronavirus cases here

The minister added, “We have heard reports of many doctors and other health professionals succumbing to COVID-19. We don’t want to take risk.” Explaining the technology, Dr Sachidanand, Vice Chancellor of Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences said that remote monitoring uses a software with which specialist doctors can monitor health condition of patients and treat them by not getting exposed directly.

The presence of all the doctors in COVID-19 is not necessary when patients are monitored remotely. 

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News Network
May 9,2020

New Delhi, May 9: The Finance Ministry on Friday announced relief to those who have been facing difficulty with their residency status in India under section 6 of the Income-tax Act due to lockdown and suspension of international flights owing to COIVD-19 outbreak, as they have had to prolong their stay in India.

According to a Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) release, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman today allowed discounting of prolonged stay period in India for the purpose of determining residency status after considering various representations received from people who had to prolong their stay in India due to lockdown and suspension of international flights.

They expressed concern that they will be required to file tax returns as Indian residents and not as NRIs after 120 days of stay.

The Finance Ministry stated that the lockdown continues during the financial year 2020-21 and it is not yet clear when international flight operations would resume, a circular excluding the period of stay of these individuals up to the date of resumption of international flight operations shall be issued for determination of the residential status for the financial year 2020-21.

A circular also said that in order to avoid genuine hardship in such cases, the CBDT has decided that for the purposes of determining the residential status under section 6 of the Act during the previous year 2019-20 in respect of an individual who has come to India on a visit before March 22, 2020 and:

(a) has been unable to leave India on or before March 31, 2020, his period of stay in India from March 22, 2020 to March 31, 2020 shall not be taken into account; or

(b) has been quarantined in India on account of novel coronavirus (Covid-19) on or after March 1, 2020 and has departed on an evacuation flight on or before March 31, 2020 or has been unable to leave India on or before March 31, 2020, his period of stay from the beginning of his quarantine to his date of departure or March 31, 2020, as the case may be, shall not be taken into account; or

(c) has departed on an evacuation flight on or before March 31, 2020, his period of stay in India from March 22, 2020 to his date of departure shall not be taken into account."

The release said there are number of individuals who had come on a visit to India during the previous year 2019-20 for a particular duration and intended to leave India before the end of the previous year for maintaining their status as non-resident or not ordinary resident in India.

"However, due to declaration of the lockdown and suspension of international flights owing to outbreak of COVID-19, they are required to prolong their stay in India. The status of an individual whether he is resident in India or a non-resident or not ordinarily resident, is dependent, inter-alia, on the period for which the person is in India during a year," it said.

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