Panic in Chennai again after fresh rain; toll 350

December 5, 2015

Chennai, Dec 5: Occasional heavy rain on Friday evening threatened to revive the ghost of flooding in Chennai even as the battered city and its suburbs battled hard to pick up pieces of life.chennai copy

While lakhs of people in the coastal city’s worst-hit areas continued to face acute shortage of essentials, including water, power, milk and food items, a tragedy unfolded at the noted MIOT Hospital in Mannapakkam where at least 14 patients (PTI said 18) in the ICU, including five women, lost their lives because of electricity failure.

The hospital authorities were running the medical equipment through generators after the power supply was cut off but the flood water damaged many of them.

Top state officials, however, said not all deaths occurred because of lack of oxygen or failure of the ventilator.

While on one occasion, the officials said the hospital abandoned its patients, at another they said the government did its best to keep the services up even in private hospitals. State's Chief Secretary K Gnanadesikan said the deaths will be probed.

The death toll due to rain related incidents rose to 350 with around 50 people losing their lives in less then two days. As many as 43 bodies were also brought to the Government Royapettah Hospital.

Ministers heckled
The unending predicament also saw people venting anger at their Assembly representatives. Senior minister Natham Viswanathan, Sellur Raju and Gokul Indira were gheraoed and heckled by the people after they visited R K Nagar—the constituency of Chief Minister Jayalalitha—forcing them to make a hasty retreat.

Similar scenes were witnessed in several areas where people hit out at the officials complaining lack of any help from them in the crisis hour.

Viswanathan, the state’s power minister and the chief secretary later said in an official press conference at the Secretariat that relief and rescue operations were taking place in full swing and even termed them “extraordinary”.

The minister also described the Opposition’s criticism of the relief operations as politically motivated with an eye on the Assembly elections scheduled early next year. He claimed people in the worst-affected areas refused to leave their homes but accepted only food relief.

Heavy rain resumed in Chennai and its suburbs on Friday evening as the new low pressure over the Bay of Bengal still remaining stagnant. The weathermen though predicted light rain for Chennai in the next 24 hours, there was forecast of heavy to very heavy rain in Puducherry.

A senior official of Regional Meteorological Centre told Deccan Herald on Friday evening that apart from rain, strong squally wind blowing at 55 kilometres per hour would also prevail over North Tamil Nadu and Puducherry and South coastal Andhra Pradesh in the next 24 hours.

The public transport across several districts, including Chennai, was hit. The city airport was ready for partial resumption of flight operations from Saturday morning with the AAI finding the runway safe for landings and departures. Over 1.64 lakh people have been housed in 460 relief camps in four flood hit districts.

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Agencies
May 25,2020

Lucknow, May 25: Migrant workers who wish to return to their places of work after the lockdown is lifted, may no longer find the going easy now.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath has said that his government will lay down stringent conditions for ensuring social security of workers from the state who are hired by other states.

"Other states will also need to seek permission from his government before engaging workers from UP," he said while addressing a webinar on Sunday.

The Chief Minister stated, "If any state wants manpower, the state government will have to guarantee social security and insurance of the workers. Without our permission they will not be able to take our people," he said.

He said all migrant workers who have returned to the state were being registered and their skills were being mapped by the administration. Any state or entity interested in hiring them will need to take care of their social, legal and monetary rights.

Speaking about the challenges his administration had faced during this crisis, the Chief Minister said, "When I talk of Uttar Pradesh, then it is natural to say that it is the state with the highest population. We have faced several challenges during the lockdown. At the beginning, migrant workers and labourers started coming to the state. We deployed 16,000 buses and within 24 hours, they were brought back to their home districts and arrangements were made to screen them."

Yogi Adityanath took a dig at the opposition leaders for the migrant crisis. "During the lockdown, if those who now raise slogans for the poor had honestly cared about workers, then migration could have been stopped. This did not happen. No facilities were given. At several places, electricity connections were cut, so people had to migrate." he said.

Legal experts, meanwhile said that requiring government permission for employing people could face a legal challenge as the Constitution guarantees the freedom of movement and residence and employment of workers.

"Article 19 (1)(D) guarantees freedom to move freely, and 19(1)(e) the freedom to settled in any part of the countryso the need for permission can be legally challenged," said a senior lawyer.

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News Network
March 29,2020

New Delhi, Mar 29: The Centre on Sunday asked state governments and Union Territory administrations to effectively seal state and district borders to stop movements of migrant workers during lockdown, officials said.

During a video conference with Chief Secretaries and DGPs, Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba and Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla asked them to ensure that there is no movement of people across cities or on highways as the lockdown continues.

"There has been movement of migrant workers in some parts of the country. Directions were issued that district and state borders should be effectively sealed," a government official said.

States were directed to ensure there is no movement of people across cities or on highways.

Only movement of goods should be allowed.

District Magistrates and SPs should be made personally responsible for implementation of these directions, the official said.

Adequate arrangements for food and shelter of poor and needy people including migrant labourers be made at the place of their work, the official said.

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News Network
May 8,2020

New Delhi, May 8: The Supreme Court on Friday suggested that states should consider indirect sale and home delivery of liquor as per its statute and law to avoid crowding at liquor shops amid the ongoing coronavirus-induced lockdown.

A bench headed by Justice Ashok Bhushan refused to pass any orders on a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking clarity on the sale of liquor and to ensure social distancing while it is being sold in liquor shops during the lockdown.

"We will not pass any order but the states should consider indirect sale/home delivery of liquor to maintain social distancing norms and standards," Justice Ashok Bhushan said while disposing of the petition.

The PIL, filed by one Sai Deepak, sought directions for closure of liquor shops for failing to enforce social distancing, which is essential to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

The petitioner told the apex court that he only wants that the life of common people is not affected because of crowding at liquor shops during COVID-19.

Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul, another judge in the bench, said that discussion on home delivery is already going on.

The top court, after hearing the petition complaining about flouting of safety norms at liquor shops, observed that it cannot pass any orders to different states but they should consider online sale and home delivery of liquor.

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