Assistant masters stage demonstration demanding hike in salaries

[email protected] (CD Network)
February 19, 2011

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Mangalore, February 10: The Dakshina Kannada district unit of Karnataka State High School Assistant Masters' Association on Saturday staged a peaceful demonstration to exert pressure on State Government to fulfil the various demands of assistant masters including a hike in their salaries.

Around 300 protesters took out a march from Jyothi Circle and assembled in front of the office of Deputy Commissioner here in the afternoon before submitting a memorandum consisting of their 15 demands to DC Subodh Yadav.

Addressing the protesters on the occasion, Manjunath Kumar KK, Organising Secretary of the Association urged the State Government to stop discrimination towards assistant masters.

He lamented that despite repeated appeals to the government over the years, no effort has been done to do justice to the assistant masters. He noted that the pay scale was lower for teachers in the state than in other states.

One of the main demands of the protesters was to increase the salaries of assistant masters from the present Rs 8,825-16,000 scale to the Rs 10,800-20,025 scale.

The Association urges the government to set the pay scale anomalies by complying with the recommendations of the Commissioner of Education Department based on Fifth Pay Commission.

It demands that the government should honour the Karnataka Administrative Tribunal's order and promote 75 per cent of high school teachers as headmasters and 50 per cent of headmasters as college lecturers.

It also demands medical allowance, special increment for teachers who have passed Kannada examinations, time-bound and recurring promotions for teachers from their respective dates of appointment and the removal of any discrepancies between the pay scales of junior and senior teachers.

The Association seeks that the Government should consider the suspended period of SSLC evaluators as special leave, recruitment of teachers in aided high schools by withdrawing the economic measures imposed on these schools.

Teachers recruited under rural grace marks basis in 1998 and 1999 should be reinstated and all facilities given to them should be continued and their seniority should be taken into account, says the Association.

It also underlined the need for the creation of a new post for Hindi inspectors.

The district unit President of the Association Ramakrishna Shirur, Stanley Tauro, Mangalore Urban Circle president, NS Madamaiah, city unit president, presidents of other units of the district were among those present during the protest.


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News Network
March 28,2020

Kasaragod, Mar 28: A pregnant Bihari migrant woman in labour gave birth in an ambulance after the Karnataka police allegedly refused to allow the ambulance carrying her to cross the border road to Mangaluru to reach her hospital.

The border road was shut due to the lockdown. The woman used to consult a doctor in Mangaluru across the border.

As Karnataka police stopped the vehicle at the border in Talapady, saying no vehicle, including ambulances from Kerala, could be permitted to their state, the drivers decided to take the woman was taken to the general hospital here, but she went into labour and delivered a baby girl in the vehicle

Both the mother and baby are doing fine, authorities said.

Hailing from Patna in Bihar, 25-year-old Gowri Devi and her husband were working in a local plywood factory in this north Kerala district, from where the maximum number of coronavirus cases have been reported so far in the state.

Those living in the border towns and villages of Kasaragod are dependent on the hospitals in Mangaluru as it is nearer, local people said.

The ambulance drivers- Aslam and Musthafa- said they stopped the vehicle by the wayside, making it safe for the woman. The baby girl and the mother were soon shifted to the government general hospital here and both of them are safe and healthy, they said.

Local people complained that not only pregnant women, but even patients requiring daily dialysis and emergency cardiac and cancer treatment were being sent back by Karnataka.

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News Network
August 4,2020

Bengaluru, Aug 4: Police barricades, yellow banners, walls with a fresh coat of paint and the sounds of bhajan mark parts of Ayodhya as the city awaits its big day Wednesday, when the first brick will be laid for the Ram temple.

Ayodhya is decked up for the bhoomi pujan that will be attended at the Ram Janmabhoomi by 175 people, who figure in a select guest list of seers and politicians topped by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Concerned over the spread of coronavirus, the authorities are encouraging others not to come to the temple town, asking them to mark the occasion by celebrating at their homes. The groundbreaking ceremony will be telecast live.

Roads leading to Ayodhya display hoardings with the picture of the proposed Ram temple and of Ram Lalla, the infant Ram, the deity now housed in a makeshift temple.

Around the town’s Hanumangarhi area – named after a well-known temple which Modi will visit on Wednesday – both police sirens and ‘bhajans’ in praise of Ram are heard.

Most of the shops in the locality wear a new look, with their fronts painted in bright yellow. A large number of policemen were deployed there on Tuesday. Some sat in the sweet shops, waiting for their next instructions.

Roads leading into the area are barricaded. Yards of yellow cloth and marigold garlands were being hung on poles.

Even on the day before the event, security checks on vehicles heading to Ayodhya begin from adjoining Barabanki district itself on the Lucknow-Ayodhya road. Policemen take down details, including mobile numbers of the travellers.

Senior Superintendent of Police Deepak Kumar said the focus of the force is on maintaining the Covid-19 protocol.

“So we are not going to allow any outsider to enter Ayodhya city,” he said. Prohibitory orders are also in force and not more than four people will be allowed to gather.

“The markets and shops will remain open but with strict adherence to the Covid protocol,” he said. Outsiders will be stopped from entering the city, but Ayodhya residents will be allowed in if they produce any identification document.

“We are also carrying out random checks on people living in Ayodhya to ensure that no outsiders are staying here,” he said.

The city’s temples and mosques will remain open, but no other religious event – except for the bhoomi pujan – will take place on Wednesday.

Pickets have been set up at sensitive points in the city.

Sub-inspector Ram Chandra Yadav and constables Avnish Kumar and Ankit Chaudhary man the Terhi Bazar Chauraha picket near the Ram Janmabhoomi site.

"We are here for the past some days, and were on duty on the Rakshabandhan day. Duty comes first and only after that come other things in life, like festivals," Yadav said.

Mayank Gupta, who runs a restaurant, was handing out food packets to policemen, his customers.

"For the last two months, I have been providing tiffin to them twice a day. There are around 100 policemen to whom I supply tiffin," Gupta said.

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News Network
July 13,2020

Bengaluru, Jul 13:  Karnataka Deputy chief minister Dr CN Ashwath Narayan on Monday urged chief minister BS Yediyurappa to cancel the license of private hospitals and private medical colleges which did not hand over their 50 per cent beds, to the government, Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister's Office said.

On June 26, the Karnataka government reserved about 50 per cent for COVID-19 patients in some private hospitals in Bengaluru.

Earlier in the day, former Karnataka Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy said that the state government should provide vitamin C drug, Ayush Ministry-certified immunity boosters and sanitisers to every household in the wake of the coronavirus spread.

According to the Union Health Ministry, Karnataka has recorded 38,843 cases of COVID-19 to date.

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