Looking for space for Commissionerate in MSEZ: Singh

[email protected] (CD Network)
February 21, 2011

seemant

Mangalore, February 21: City Police Commissioner Seemanth Kumar Singh has said that talks are on to get a space in Mangalore Special Economic Zone (MSEZ) for the buildings of Mangalore Police Commissionerate.

He was speaking in an interaction programme organised by Kanara Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) here recently.

He said the space is needed to keep arms, vehicles and to set up quarters and parade grounds.

The specific location will be identified after the authorities of MSEZ look into the proposal. Only initial talks had begun and formal request was yet to be made in this regard, he said, adding that identifying land in an area like Konaje might be possible but that it would be in a “corner.”

The commissionerate and district police required 25 acres of land for logistical support as well as housing for the police.

Singh said he had been asked to identify land to set up a Rapid Action Force unit in Mangalore by the Central Reserve Police Force.

The cameras to be procured for the new traffic management system for the city would send real time visuals to the control room, keeping up with the wireless radio, thus enabling the police coordinate their actions accordingly.

Singh said the tenders to procure 32 cameras had been invited. The dome-shaped PTZ (pan tilt zoom) cameras would provide 360-degree visuals to the police, helping them keep an eye on traffic violation and maintain law and order.

These cameras would be placed at important junctions in the city, he said.

New handheld fine collecting machines with customised software have made the work of the police much easier and also ensured transparency, he said.

The machines record all data with regard to a traffic offence, which could be accessed by the Commissioner. Wheel-locking machines would be used soon, he said.

The new Police Control Room (PCR) vans are independent of police stations and coordinate directly with the control room. This would enable the officers in the van to reach a spot much faster than they would when they were under the control of a particular police station.

The Commissionerate had sent proposals for setting up two traffic police stations. A large number of fatal road accidents occurred outside the city on the highways, where traffic regulation was bad. At present, 30 officers on motorcycles are functioning as traffic police across the Commissionerate, he said.

Police assistance booths have been planned across the city, which would be open for a fixed number of hours, he said.

Another new concept to be introduced soon in the Commissionerate limits was a new interrogation room. Following complaints of human rights violations, the sound-proof interrogation room where video recording equipment was in place is necessary, Singh said.



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News Network
February 4,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 4: Taking the state government to task, the Karnataka High Court on Monday opined there was a need to rehabilitate or compensate migrant workers whose homes in Tubarahalli and Kundalahalli were demolished by a BBMP engineer last month.

On January 19, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) assistant executive engineer at Marathahalli had taken up a demolition drive stating that the migrant workers residing in the area were “illegal Bangladeshis”.

A division bench led by Chief Justice Abhay S Oka was hearing a petition by the People’s Union for Civil Liberties which contended that the evacuation of the workers was illegal. Stressing the need for relief, the court directed the state government to come clean on its stance and adjourned the hearing to February 10.

Advocate General Prabhuling K Navadgi submitted that the Union government had issued a circular last year to ascertain the presence of illegal Bangaladesh migrants. “On the basis of this circular, the BBMP officials had written a letter to Marathahalli police sub-inspector on January 18. Based on this letter, the residents in huts were evicted in a civilised manner,” he stated.

The bench, however, differed with the submission. “Who identified them as Bangladeshis before the eviction? Which is the competent authority to do so? Which police officer took up the inquiry?” the bench questioned.

The court also asked whether the government would take up similar eviction drives against illegal buildings of the rich. It also expressed displeasure over the action taken against the BBMP engineer.

“Instead of sending him home, you say you have transferred him. We can’t be mute spectators,” the bench said.

The court did not mince words as it castigated the authorities for failing to act judiciously. “The police and the BBMP are blaming each other. Your action appears to be dangerous. Going by the state of things, it seems that everything is not in order,” it said.

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News Network
February 2,2020

Mangaluru, Feb 2: A local court on Saturday remanded Aditya Rao,the suspect in the Mangaluru International Airport (MIA) bomb case, to two weeks judicial custody.

Rao was produced before the Sixth Judicial First Class Magistrate Court after the 10-day police custody expired.

Rao has been in police custody since January 22 after he surrendered before the police in Bengaluru on January 21 and was later brought here.

He had allegedly planted an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) at the airport on January 20 triggering panic and later made a hoax call to the airport terminal that a bomb had been planted in an IndiGo flight.

During the last ten days, police took the accused to several places in the city and Udupi where he had frequented in the recent past.

He was also taken to the room where he stayed while he was working at a hotel in the city.

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News Network
February 12,2020

Mangaluru, Feb 12: As many as 54 house surgeons from Kasturba Medical College (KMC) staged a protest near the casualty of the Wenlock Hospital on Wednesday over over non-payment of monthly stipend.

House surgeons, who have studied MBBS under the government quota, have not received their stipend from last 11 months. They have to get a monthly stipend of Rs 20,000 during their one-year internship at the government hospital.

The protesting house surgeons alleged that their stipends have not been released despite Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa’s written order dated December 24.

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