Karnataka government bans mobile towers within 50 metres of schools, hospitals

TNN
June 4, 2019

Bengaluru, Jun 4: In a first-of-its-kind move, Karnataka has brought the Telecommunication Infrastructure Towers Regulations 2019 into effect to prevent mushrooming of mobile towers.

Announcing this, urban development minister UT Khader said the government had been considering the move for long. “The regulations came into effect as of May 29,” he said.

Under the new rules, all mobile towers besides schools, religious buildings, hospitalsand some other buildings will have to be moved by at least 50 metres. Those near rivers will have to be shifted 6 metres from the boundary, near lakes/tanks which are more than 10 hectares in size by 5 metres, near lakes/tanks less than 10 hectares by 3 metres and by 5 metres from the defined boundaries of canals and storm water drains over 10 metres in width.

Mobile towers in residential areas will now require a minimum buffer zone of 3 metre all around and can come up only on vacant land. If there is no empty land, towers will have to be shifted on rooftops of buildings and must be positioned only at a distance of 3 metres from the edges.

The regulations also seek a protective wall around towers erected on the ground, at a distance of 1 metre from the tower and 1.2 metres tall.

“All new mobile towers will have to follow these regulations while existing ones will have to be shifted if any violation is found. Telecom companies will get three months to move towers, failing which action will be initiated against them,” said the minister.

The regulations also prescribe a fee and stringent licensing procedures which need to be followed while erecting towers. While new towers will require telecom companies to pay a one-time fee of Rs one lakh to the BBMP (for each tower), for corporations other than BBMP the fee is Rs 50,000.

Online building approvals in ULBs

Henceforth, the government will issue building approvals online in all urban local bodies (ULBs). Khader said the government will launch automated building plan approvals for all ULBs, including 10 municipal corporations, apart from the BBMP.

For Bengaluru, the municipal corporation had launched an automated building plan approval system (ABPS) but it’s under scrutiny due to technical problems.

Khader said automatic approval will be provided for all buildings, including layouts in ULBs, from June 11 when chief minister HD Kumaraswamy will launch the system.

“For 30x40 and 30x50 sites, people can self-certify their building plans and submit documents online. This will help them get instant approval,” said Khader.

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News Network
August 1,2020

Mandya, Aug 1: In a terrific incident, a college student has stabbed his own mother to death in Karnataka’s Mandya town over a trivial issue. The police have managed to nab the accused. 

According to police, the boy was irked by his mother rebuking him for staying out with his friends late in the night.

On Wednesday (July 29), she scolded him for not listening to her advice, following which he stabbed her to death, the official said. 

The student was arrested on July 30. He reportedly confessed to the crime. 

A police officer said that the woman was upset over her son frequently spending time with his friends till late in the night.

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News Network
February 17,2020

Kasaragod, Feb 17: A Kerala Muslim couple conducted the wedding of their Hindu foster daughter at a Bhagavathi temple in Kerala, scripting another tale of communal harmony at Kasaragod.

The wedding ceremony was held on Sunday.

The woman Rajeshwari tied the knot with Vishnu Prasad in the presence of family and friends belonging to both Hindu and Muslim communities.

Abdulla and Khadeeja adopted Rajeshwari after her father who worked at Abdulla's farm died. Rajeshwari's mother also passed away when she was a child.

Rajeshwari grew up alongside Abdulla and Khadeeja's three sons- Shameem, Najeeb and Shereef.

Earlier in January this year, cutting across the lines of religion, a mosque in Kerala's Kayamkulam hosted a Hindu marriage ceremony.

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News Network
May 25,2020

Kasaragod, May 25: An autorickshaw driver from Belur in Kasaragod was admitted for surgery to a hospital after being hit on the head by a falling jackfruit. He was tested positive for the coronavirus. It is not clear how he contracted the viral infection.

“While he was trying to pluck a jackfruit off a tree, one of them fell on him, injuring his spine. His hands and legs were weakened too. His condition required surgery. Our protocol dictates that we subject everyone who require immediate surgery to the covid test, just to be sure. That’s when he tested positive,” said Dr K Sudeep, superintendent of the Pariyaram Medical College in Kannur.

“He had symptoms of Covid-19. But he has no recent travel history or contact with any infected person. We’re not sure if he got it through one of his passengers in the rickshaw. He had visited the district hospital once so he could have got it from there. Anyway, we are examining it and preparing the route maps,” he added.

His family will be quarantined and health workers have begun to trace his immediate primary contacts.

Though there have been a number of cases in Kerala where a person’s source of infection could not be correctly ascertained, such people have gone on to recover without spreading the infection to others.

The Kerala government is conducting testing of high-risk persons on the frontlines, such as police officials, grocery vendors and health workers, as part of its sentinel surveillance programme, but maintains that there’s little evidence of a community spread in the state.

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