390 Ahsraya houses built in Ullal in 2002 may soon give way to a park

June 14, 2012

ashrayahomes

Mangalore, June 14: It may be a case of entitlement delayed and denied for beneficiaries of low income group houses in Ullal near here as their 10-year wait for houses may not ever yield a positive outcome.

A total of 390 houses constructed over a nine-acre plot in 2002 under the Ashraya Scheme at Ombathukere in Ullal didn't see any occupation due to a decade-old court case over sanitary facilities in the area.

With hardly any takers for the project that seems to be jinxed by a cocktail of bad planning, superstition and snakes, officials in the Ullal Town Municipal Council (TMC) are now mulling over a proposal to convert the area into a lodge and a park.

“When we went to see the area, there were huge snakes. I shudder to think what will happen if people actually move into the colony,” said Kumari Bhavani, vice-president of the council. Moreover, she added that the area, which houses nine “sacred” lakes and the Rajarajeshwari temple, was also surrounded by local superstition which deterred many, including the landless, from applying for houses here.

“Instead, we thought we could build a lodge to house pilgrims of the temple, who come from across the State. Tourists would not have to deal with snakes on a daily basis, and the area that locals considered haunted can be turned into a park,” Ms. Bhavani said.

In the 10 years, through seasons of monsoon and summer, the walls have crumbled, roofs have caved in, and the mud floors are overrun by shrubs.

There are no sanitary lines, no doors, windows, power lines or roads, making the houses “unliveable”.

Even though, the court-ordered project of setting up an underground drainage network in the area, which also provides sanitary facilities to the houses, saw some progress recently, the fate of the project hangs in the balance.

Sheena Naik, Chief Officer of Ullal TMC, said the issue of what to do with the houses would be taken up only after completion of the Rs. 65.71-crore drainage project. “After the drainage work is completed, we will review details of the project. If we decide to continue, we may have to ask for additional funds and update the beneficiary list, which is 10 years old,” he said. Updating involved crosschecking whether beneficiaries were still in Ullal and were still living below poverty line, Mr. Naik added.

However, the authorities will face the problem of retrieving the list. With no official from 2002 still with the TMC, its president Basil D'Souza stated that the list was with the zilla panchayat, while panchayat officials claim to have nothing to do with the project. Officials at the Deputy Commissioner's office remained non-committal on the whereabouts of the decade-old list.

Stuck in the bureaucratic wrangle were the beneficiaries, most of whom, had given up, said Ms. Bhavani.

Sixty-year-old U.K. Hussain is an example of this. Having applied for a house a decade ago, the endless wait forced him out of Ullal and into Kumbala in Kasargod district in Kerala where he lives in a rented house.

“He has given up on the house, and moved out five years ago. Having had his leg amputated, he could not find work. Eventually, he had to move out as he could not afford the rent at Ullal,” said his brother U.K. Abdulla, who still represents his case here.

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News Network
February 18,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 18: Deputy chief minister Laxman Savadi was elected to the legislative council on Monday and although it was a done deal that he would win, a vote from across the aisle spiced up the election.

Counting was conducted soon after ballots were cast and Savadi polled 113 of the 120 votes cast, including the vote of disgruntled JD(S) legislator GT Devegowda. Seven votes were declared invalid. Members of the two opposition parties — Congress and JD(S) — abstained from voting.

The election was necessitated following the resignation of Rizwan Arshad of the Congress. Rizwan resigned after he was elected to the legislative assembly from the Shivajinagar constituency in the assembly bypolls held for 15 seats in December last year.

BR Anil Kumar, who was initially promised the support of both Congress and JD(S) was supposed to contest as an independent candidate. However, as both parties refused to support him at the last minute, he withdrew, paving the way for Savadi’s victory.

The BJP has 117 members in the 225-member assembly, but N Mahesh of the BSP and two independents, H Nagesh and Sharath Bachchegowda, besides GT Devegowda also voted, taking the total electorate to 120 (including the speaker). BJP’s SA Ramadas did not turn up because of health reasons.

“I would like to thank all those who were responsible for my victory. Special thanks to leaders of my party and chief minister BS Yediyurappa, who gave me the opportunity to be the BJP candidate,” said Savadi.

Winning this council election was crucial for Savadi to retain his ministry as he was not an elected member of either of the houses. Rules mandate that a non-member must get elected either to the assembly or council within six months after taking over as minister. February 20 was the deadline for Savadi, who had lost 2018 assembly polls from Athani, to get elected.

Officials in the assembly secretariat said seven votes were invalid because voters had wrongly marked their choices on ballot paper. According to norms, a voter has to mark numerical one, two and three against the names of the candidates in order of preference. Marking only numerical one is allowed. However, six ballots had a tick mark, while a voter had registered a cross mark. Since it was a secret ballot, it was not known who the MLAs were whose votes were invalid.

“The ballot papers bear serial numbers and they are randomly distributed. It is virtually impossible to say who a voter cast his or her vote for,” said assembly secretary MK Vishalakashi, the retuning officer for the bypoll.

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coastaldigest.com web desk
January 26,2020

Mangaluru, Jan 26: The Azizuddin Road of Mangaluru’s Bunder area, which had witnessed the brutal killing of two innocent passersby over a month ago, today witnessed the unfurling of Indian national flag by the kin of the police firing victim. 

49-year-old Abdul Jaleel Kandak, a father of two, and 23-year-old Nausheen Kudroli, were killed in an arbitrary and unwarranted police firing during a disturbance occurred due to police baton charge in the city on December 2019. 

A mixed feeling of patriotism and pain prevailed when a group of people gathered on the police firing spot to celebrate the 71st Republic Day of India. Family members of the victims were part of it.

It was Shifani, the daughter of Abdul Jaleel, who unfurled the flag and read out the preamble of the Indian constitution. 

“This is the spot where the constitution of the country was murdered,” said social activist Vidya Dinker, recalling the police firing. “The constitution is being murdered everyday in many states of India. We must regain the constitution and implement it everyday,” she added. 

Journalist Shahnaz M, DYFI leader Imtiyaz BK, SIO leader Talha, NWF leader Shahida Aslam and social activist Shabbir Ahmed were present among others.

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coastaldigest.com news network
May 18,2020

Mangaluru, May 18: The coastal district of Dakshina Kannada today reported two more covid-19 positive cases. One is a 30-year-old man and the other is a 55-year-old woman.

The man, a resident of Karopady in Bantwal, had returned from Raigad in Maharashtra and is under quarantine.

The woman, a resident of Yeyyadi, had fever and hence visited Wenlock hospital for test. She was diagnosed to have Severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) symptoms and later tested positive. She has been shifted to ICU. 

With this the total number of covid-19 positive cases in the district rose to 54. Among them 48 are from Dakshina Kannada and six patients are from other districts.

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