15 'bonded labourers' rescued

[email protected] (CD Network)
October 17, 2011
Mangalore, October 17: As many as 15 helpless construction workers including a woman hailing from remote villages of West Bengal, who were forced to work as bonded labourers for over one and a half month under a contract company affiliated to Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited at Porkodi near Bajpe on the outskirts of the city, were rescued in an early morning operation on Monday.

Acting on a credible information provided by Paschim Banga Khet Majoor Samiti, a trade union of agricultural workers from West Bengal, a team of officials led by Mangalore Tahsildar Ravichandra Naik and State assistant labour commissioner Venkatesh Sindihatti along with police personnel raided workers huts around 6:45 am, to witness a tragic scene.

Incapacitated by the widespread hunger, in Purulia and Bankura districts of West Bengal, the workers had been forced to migrate to Karnataka in search of work.

In the last week of August, Dibesh Das, a contractor in Purulia district had recruited a total of 15 workers from Layekdi and Lakhanpur villages in Purulia district and Katharia village in Bankura district.

However, Dibesh Das handed the workers over to Bholanath Singh, a labour contractor from Burdwan district, who in turn had sent them through his employee Sanjay Singh to work in Mangalore. The workers were engaged for construction work.

As contractor promised Rs 4,000 monthly wages apart from food, shelter and other necessary facilities for eight-hour work a day, the helpless 14 men and a woman thought they could return to their homes with a heavy purse after a few months of toil.

However after reaching their new work place, they were literally treated as bonded labourers and their family members too could not contact them for a long time.

It is said that when the family members asked the contractor for the whereabouts of the workers, they were instead threatened.

“Quite against to their promise, we were forced to work 14 - 16 hours a day with hardly any payment of wages so far. Since past one and a half month, we were taken out from our huts at 7 am in the morning for work and were only allowed back at 9 pm”, said Muchiram Kaibartha, one of the workers.

“When I protested against the ill treatment a few days ago, the contractor thrashed me”, he said showing the wound on his leg.

“We were not allowed to go out of the workplace as the contractor always kept an eye on us. And whenever we raised our problems before the employers they respond with physical violence and abusive language” said Biplav Gode, another labourer.

“When we pleaded the contractor for monthly wages, he replied that he had bought us all for Rs 4 lakh from another contractor, who is now absconding”, he said, adding that so far the workers were able to get a payment of Rs 70 for a week.

Bhim Goswamy, another worker alleged that the musclemen beat the workers, when they put up a protest against the continuous exploitation. “We just want to go out of this hell. We had come here with a dream earning. But, we became bonded labourers. My wife Urmila has fallen sick, but, I don't have money to take her to the doctor”, he lamented.

He said that the employers had failed to provide minimum treatment for Urmila, the only woman among the 15 workers, who has been suffering stomach pain and neck pain since several days.

“I cannot see things after 5 pm due to vision problem. However, I was forced to take cement mix to the upper floors by steps till night” complained an ailing Sanjay Kaibarta.

Not bonded labourers!

Speaking to media persons Tahsildar Ravichandra Naik said, although it was confirmed that 15 labourers were forced to work for no wages by one Sanjay Singh, they cannot be called as bonded labourers.

“There was no sign of human rights violation. Even during the medical examination, doctors could not found any mark of physical torture on the labourers”, he said.

However, Mr Sindihatti admitted that the 'violation of labour law' was apparent in this case. “If they want to return home after securing the pending wages, we will make proper arrangements for their travel” he said.

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News Network
January 2,2020

Mysuru, Jan 2: Mysuru-based Karnataka State Open University is gearing up to offer courses online from this year onwards and a proposal in this connection will be placed before the University Grants Commission (UGC) this month, after approval from the board of management.

As of now, the university offers 31 courses, including undergraduate, postgraduate, and diploma programmes.

Vice-chancellor Vidyashankar S Said that the university will submit its proposal to the UGC soon.

“This is being done to make learning convenient and help students study their courses of choices from the comfort of their homes.”

After launching online admissions for courses, this is another step to go paperless and towards an e-campus, the V-C explained.

The university has also proposed to launch 12 new courses for 2020-21.

A proposal in this regard will be placed before the board for approval on Thursday and the same will be submitted to the UGC for its nod.

Prof. Vidyashankar said the these courses will be in addition to the 31 already available.

The new courses include LLM, MA in Education, BBA, BSc, BCA, diploma in Information Technology, postgraduate diploma in Information Technology, BSc in Information Technology, MSc in Information Technology, MSc in Botany, PG diploma in Banking and Insurance, MSc in Zoology, MA in Telugu, Executive MBA, and MSc in Food Sciences and Nutrition.

The new courses had been proposed based on students’ feedback and the trend.

The V-C said the admissions for the January cycle have begun and over 380 students had so far taken admissions online.

“We are hoping for good admissions this cycle and are expecting around 12,000 admissions,” he replied.

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News Network
January 24,2020

Bengaluru, Jan 24: The JD(S) is looking to leverage anti-Citizen (Amendment) Act (CAA), National Register of Citizens (NRC) and National Population Register (NPR) sentiment sweeping the country to revive itself and will hold protests in Bengaluru and New Delhi.

The Bengaluru protest is scheduled for Friday. At a meeting of party workers in Bengaluru on Thursday, party patriarch HD Deve Gowda and former chief minister HD Kumaraswamy urged the rank and file to participate in the rally to send out a loud and clear message to the BJP.

"The BJP has set out to make Muslims second-grade citizens. India has 40 crore Muslims, can these communal forces eliminate them all?" Gowda said in his address. "We should have the guts to launch a massive protest at Jantar Mantar. We should be prepared to go to jail in the fight against [Prime Minister] Narendra Modi and [Union home minister] Amit Shah."

Gowda said he will lead the rally in Delhi and urged secular parties to unite to take on the BJP. "It is important that regional parties, which share a secular ideology, unite on a common agenda and fight the BJP. Bihar, Kerala and Odisha have said they will not implement CAA. The sentiment is likely to spread to other states," Gowda said.

Kumaraswamy said not only Muslims but many other communities will also bear the brunt of BJP’s "divisive politics". "This pair of Hakka-Bukka [Modi and Shah] is not targeting Muslims alone," he said. "For them, all communities other than upper caste Hindus are inferior Shudras. They will treat even Lingayats, Vokkaligas and Dalits with the same contempt."

The former CM made a special appeal to Lingayats, who generally back the BJP, to stop supporting the saffron party’s caste-oriented politics. "You had appreciated my farm loan waiver scheme and promised support in the elections. But, the results were contrary to that," he said.

The JD(S) passed three resolutions including one to condemn the Centre for enacting CAA. The others were to protest against the Centre’s indifference to the floods in the state and the failed economic policy of the Centre.

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Agencies
May 8,2020

Washington D.C., May 8: The prime time for brain development in a child's life is the first year, where the infant spends most of the time asleep. It is the time when neural connections form and sensory memories are encoded.

However, when sleep is disrupted, as occurs more often among children with autism, brain development may be affected, too.

New research led by the University of Washington finds that sleep problems in a baby's first 12 months may not only precede an autism diagnosis but also may be associated with altered growth trajectory in a key part of the brain, the hippocampus.

The study, which was published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, researchers report that in a sample of more than 400 taken of 6- to 12-month-old infants, those who were later diagnosed with autism were more likely to have had difficulty falling asleep.

It also states that this sleep difficulty was associated with altered growth trajectories in the hippocampus.

"The hippocampus is critical for learning and memory, and changes in the size of the hippocampus have been associated with poor sleep in adults and older children.

As many as 80 per cent of the children with autism spectrum disorder have sleep problems," said Annette Estes, director of the UW Autism Center and senior author of the study.

"In our clinical experience, parents have a lot of concerns about their children's sleep, and in our work on early autism intervention, we observed that sleep problems were holding children and families back," added Estes, who is also a UW professor of speech and hearing sciences.

"It could be that altered sleep is part-and-parcel of autism for some children. One clue is that behavioural interventions to improve sleep don't work for all children with autism, even when their parents are doing everything just right. This suggests that there may be a biological component to sleep problems for some children with autism," said Estes.

To consider links among sleep, brain development, and autism, researchers at the IBIS Network looked at MRI scans of 432 infants, surveyed parents about sleep patterns, and measured cognitive functioning using a standardized assessment.

At the outset of the study, infants were classified according to their risk for developing autism: Those who were at higher risk of developing autism -- about two-thirds of the study sample -- had an older sibling who had already been diagnosed.

Infant siblings of children with autism have a 20 per cent chance of developing autism spectrum disorder -- a much higher risk than children in the general population.

In the current study, 127 of the 432 infants were identified as "low risk" at the time the MRI scans were taken because they had no family history of autism.

They later evaluated all the participants at 24 months of age to determine whether they had developed autism. Of the roughly 300 children originally considered "high familial risk," 71 were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at that age.

Problems with sleep were more common among the infants later diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, as were larger hippocampi. No other subcortical brain structures were affected, including the amygdala, which is responsible for certain emotions and aspects of memory, or the thalamus, a signal transmitter from the spinal cord to the cerebral cortex.

The authors note that while parents reported more sleep difficulties among infants who developed autism compared to those who did not, the differences were very subtle and only observed when looking at group averages across hundreds of infants.

Sleep patterns in the first years of life change rapidly as infants transition from sleeping around the clock to a more adult-like sleep/wake cycle. Until further research is completed, Estes said, it is not possible to interpret challenges with sleep as an early sign of increased risk for autism.

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