What’s wrong in having own flag for state, asks Karnataka CM

News Network
July 19, 2017

Bengaluru, Jul 19: Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Tuesday defended the state government’s decision to constitute a panel to look into the demand to accord official status to the Kannada flag, saying that there is nothing wrong in having a separate state flag.siddu

Speaking to reporters in Bengaluru, Siddaramaiah said, “We have a Nadageethe (state song), what is wrong in having an official state flag? There has been a demand from various quarters that official status be accorded to the Kannada flag.

The panel will look into all aspects. The government will take a call on its next step of action only after the panel submits its report,” Siddaramaiah added.

He said the Constitution of India does not restrict states from having their own official flags.

To a query, he sought to know whether there is any specific provision in the Constitution that prohibits the state from having its own flag. “Has the BJP come across such a provision?” he asked.

He dared the BJP leaders to make a public statement that the party is not in favour of a flag for Karnataka.

On the BJP’s charge that the flag issue is being raised with an eye on the Assembly polls, Siddaramaiah said, “Elections are still a long way to go.... It will be held in April-May next year and not tomorrow. The BJP is indulging in a disinformation campaign,” he remarked.

Siddaramaiah said that having a state flag will not come in the way of national integrity and unity. “The national flag comes first. State flag is not an alternative to the national flag,” he added.

The state government recently set up a nine-member committee of officials to look into the demand for according official status to the Kannada flag.

The committee is headed by Kannada and Culture department principal secretary. Heads of Department of Personnel and Administrative Reforms, Finance and Law departments and PWD are the members of the panel, which will hold consultation with experts and Kannada writers in this regard.

The committee has been directed to submit its report, recommending steps to be taken for granting official status to the Kannada flag, sources in the Kannada and Culture department said.

The committee is likely to recommend to the government to enact a legislation to accord the official status to the flag, the sources added.

Kannada flag – rectangular in shape, with a strip of yellow (top half) and red in equal measure – has so far remained only an idea. The flag was first conceived by Kannada activist Ma Ramamurthy, who used it as a flag for ‘Kannada Paksha,’ a party founded by him in 1965. In 1998, the Kannada Development Authority had recommended to the government to give the flag an official status. However, the Law department turned down the proposal citing legal hurdles, the sources said.

In 2012, the then BJP government had issued a circular making it compulsory for government offices, schools and colleges to hoist the Kannada flag on November 1.

However, a division bench of the High Court of Karnataka questioned the government’s move to hoist any flag other than the national flag. The circular was subsequently withdrawn.

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News Network
April 4,2020

Bengaluru, Apr 4: The state government have taken all measures to ensure availability of essential supplies including foodgrains, in the state, Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa informed here on Saturday.

He was speaking to newsmen, after holding a meeting of the MLAs, MPs and others, where he had briefed over the measures taken by the state government to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 disease.

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News Network
February 10,2020

Chitradurga, Feb 10: President of the BJP State unit Nalin Kumar Kateel on Sunday hit out at Congress leader M. Mallikarjun Kharge for allegedly likening Prime Minister Narendra Modi to a “zero candle bulb”.

Mr. Kateel told reporters here that Mr. Modi was a “1,000 watt bulb that gave light to the world”, and compared Mr. Kharge to a lamp that had burned out politically.

Mr. Kateel charged that Mr. Kharge had become frustrated after losing the elections and after his party did not even consider him for a Rajya Sabha seat. And this had made the Congress leader to make wild charges against the Prime Minister.

Lashing out at the Congress, Mr. Kateel alleged that the Congress was continuing the “divide and rule” policy of the British and accused the former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda of being the “other face of the Congress”.

Mr. Kateel also came down on the former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. He ridiculed the Congress for the delay in choosing a new KPCC chief after Dinesh Gundu Rao submitted his resignation.

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Secular indian
 - 
Monday, 10 Feb 2020

I dont  think these  fights dont deserve to be on news. 

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News Network
February 24,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 24: Census authorities in Karnataka have requested deputy commissioners in the state’s districts to hold outreach and awareness campaigns about the National Population Register (NPR), as they fear misgivings about the exercise could hurt the forthcoming enumeration of population.

The house-listing phase of the Census and updating of NPR will be rolled out simultaneously by mid-April in the BJP-ruled state.

About 1,50,000 enumerators will handle the massive exercise.

Officials believe widespread awareness will help address concerns about the NPR data-gathering process and make people cooperate with enumerators when they visit houses for both NPR and census work.

“Sensing the kind of questions that enumerators may face when they do house visits, in all video conferences with deputy commissioners of districts, we have requested to establish contact with local representatives,” SB Vijay Kumar, director of Census Operations in Karnataka told news agency. “We have asked them to organise outreach programmes to ensure that people’s doubts are resolved before the information gathering work begins,” he added.

Census operations are handled by the Union home ministry. Several district officials are said to have raised concerns about the possibility of people refusing to share information when the work on the census and NPR begins in two months. This would affect the quality of the census work, making the exercise incomplete.

news channel earlier reported that people in parts of Karnataka had declined to share personal information with officials visiting households in connection with government programmes, suspecting them of gathering data for the yet-to-be unveiled National Register of Citizens, following enactment of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) recently.

Kumar said district authorities will train and sensitise enumerators to tread carefully while gathering information. Enumerators will be told not to demand information but seek it gently.

“We will tell enumerators to proactively engage with people. For instance, if an old man in a village does not know his exact date or place of birth, the enumerator may engage in a conversation with the person that may elicit some anecdotes and roughly establish the year and the place of birth,” the census director said.

As of now, the NPR questionnaire has 21queries, but officials say it has not yet been finalised.

With most of the census and NPR data gathering and storage happening digitally this time, the challenge before census officials is to convince people that the data would remain safe.

“Individual data is sealed and all that we can see is collective data. The information is consolidated and tailor-made. We are telling district officials to create awareness about data safety as well,” Kumar said.

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