18 IPS officers transferred

DHNS
March 11, 2018

Bengaluru Mar 11: The state government, late on Friday, transferred 18 IPS officers. These transfers come two months before the Assembly elections. The following is the list of officers with their new postings (in brackets).

B Dayananda, (IGP central range); Amrit Paul (IGP administration); Umesh Kumar, (IGP and secretary to government, Home department); Vipul Kumar (IGP and director, Karnataka Police Academy, Mysuru); Soumendu Mukherjee (IGP, Ballari range) and N Shivaprasad (IGP and director, security and vigilance, KSRTC); M N Anucheth (SP criminal investigation department). He will continue to hold the charge of investigation officer in special investigation team probing the Gauri Lankesh murder case.

Other transfers: Amit Singh (SP, Mysuru), Ravi D Channannavar (DCP, west in Bengaluru), Kuldeep Kumar R Jain (commandant 9th battalion, Karnataka State Reserve Police, Bengaluru), Nikham Prakash Amrit (SP, Vijayapura), 
Dr Bheemashankar S Guled (SP, Bengaluru Rural), G Radhika (SP, Anti-Corruption Bureau, Bengaluru), Dr Anoop A Shetty(SP, Intelligence, Bengaluru), Renuka K Sukumar (SP, Koppal district); S Girish (SP, Mandya), Kala Krishnamurthy (DCP Northeast division, Bengaluru).

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coastaldigest.com news network
May 10,2020

Puttur, May 9: City based Team B-Human today distributed Ramadan kits among 70 families in Koodu Raste Jamaat and 30 families in Papetthadka Jamaat in Puttur taluk. 

This was the second phase of Ramadan kit distributions carried out by the Team B-Human. So far the team distributed Ramadan kits among 200 families in three different Jamaat.

Koodu Raste Juma Masjid Khateeb Yaqoob Darimi offered dua before distribution.  Team B-Human members Ashraf Aina group, Althaf, Shia Deals, Ahnaf Deals, Abdul Shukoor Haji, and E-Friends founder president Imtiyaz Perla, Saleem U B of Youth Congress, Juma Masjid president P K Mohammad Shafi Papettadka were present. 

A release issued by the Team B-Human sated that it distributed food among 35,000 people since April 23. The beneficiaries include a large number of migrant workers irrespective of their caste and religion. It also arranged Iftar and Suhoor for around 450 stranded migrants every day.

Asif Deals, found of Team B-Human, said that in next phases more Ramadan kits will be distributed among needy families in some jamaats.

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News Network
June 17,2020

New Delhi, Jun 17: A class 12 student, aspiring to study medicine, has taken up the job of handling bodies of COVID-19 victims to provide for his siblings’ school fees and his mother’s treatment.

Chand Mohammad's mother suffers from a thyroid disorder and needs her medicines urgently, but the family does not have the means for the treatment.

“We are barely making our ends meet since my elder brother lost his job at a merchandise store in Krishna Nagar market during the lockdown,” the 20-year-old from Seelampur in Northeast Delhi says.

His family has been surviving on ration provided by neighbours and whatever little Chand’s brothers could earn doing odd jobs.

A week ago, Chand joined a company which deployed him as a sweeper at the Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Narayan Hospital here. The job requires him to handle bodies of those dying of coronavirus. The shift runs from 12 noon to 8 pm.

“I took the job after I exhausted all my options to find work. This is a dangerous job, as I am at a higher risk of contracting the infection, but I need the job.

“Our family, including three sisters, two brothers and parents, is struggling without money. Right now, we need food and medicines for my mother,” Chand says.

“Kayin din ghar me khana ek hi baar bana (On many days, we cooked food only once). There is a possibility that we may survive the virus, but we cannot escape hunger,” he says.

Chand says his three sisters are in school. He, a class 12 student himself, is yet to pay the school fee.

“Paisa chahiye padhai ke liye (you need money to study),” he says.

Chand hopes that his first salary will set things right to a certain extent.

“I offer ‘namaz’ before I step out of home for work. I have faith in the almighty. He will take care of me and show me the way,” Chand, who wants to study medicine, says.

But what bothers the youngster is that employees like him who are into high-risk jobs do not get any insurance from the private companies employing them.

“The most dangerous job in the world right now (handling bodies of COVID-19 patients) pays around Rs 17,000 per month,” he sighs.

Every day, Chand handles around two to three bodies along with another sweeper.

“We are required to put the bodies inside the ambulance, take it to the crematorium and put it down on a stretcher once we reach the crematorium,” he says.

“And, you have to do all this wearing the personal protection equipment (PPE), which is very heavy. It limits movement and suffocates a person. In this heat, you end up bathing in your own sweat,” he says.

On Tuesday evening, Chand handled a body on his own.

“I had no help. So, it took me some time, I was gasping for breath at the end,” he says.

"I heard a doctor saying the body had been lying in the mortuary for a month and that nobody claimed it. The person who packed it did not do his job properly. When I tried taking it down from the ambulance, the cover came off and some liquid spilled on my thighs," he says.

Desperate to get some money, Chand says he has approached people giving money on low interest rates.

"I took my Aadhaar card and voter identity card, hoping to get some money on low interest rates," he says.

Chand’s family is worried about his safety, but they are also aware that this is the only way for them to survive at present.

“My parents inquire about my work daily. They pray for my safety. My mother cries a lot, but I make her understand,” he says.

Chand adds he takes a bath as soon as he reaches home and keeps a distance from his family members.

“I have been taking all precautions, but we may never know what would happen. For now, I want some help so that the family remains afloat,” he says.

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Angry Indian
 - 
Sunday, 5 Jul 2020

Very heart touching reality..YA Allah save him from covid and protect and finance his family for life long...

 

hats off to this boy coutage

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Agencies
June 27,2020

New Delhi, Jun 27: Wasim Akhtar, a journalist and founder of an online news portal, is helping the poor and needy people in the ongoing lockdown.

Not only is he helping them financially but also providing emotional support and setting the right example of humanity.

"I was very disturbed during the first 14 days of lockdown especially after seeing such sad videos about needy and poor people. But then I decided to move out of my house and help these poor people despite the fear of COVID-19 coronavirus. We supply ration to around 200 people every day so that their families won't sleep hungry," narrated Wasim Akhtar.

Waseem Akhtar and his team are contacting daily wagers and other needy people who have been locked jobless in their houses for the past 70 days. They are the people who will not beg for food to anybody, rather choose to sleep hungry. They are making sure to help the people in the remotest places by directly transferring the money in the accounts of needy people.

They have been feeding many migrants at Kurla and VT stations. "At VT station, there was a group of Tamilian migrants among which there were six women and two men, who didn't know Hindi or English language, who were helpless and nowhere to go to, we send them back to their natives," said Wasim when asked about it.

The Giving Care Foundation also funded the funeral of a 65-year old man at the Worli crematorium. They took care of the expenses of the delivery of a Kolkata-based woman whose husband was stuck in Mumbai. Along with this, they arranged everything for the funeral of a young girl who died after her prolonged illness amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Being a Muslim myself, I urge all the fellow Muslims that limit your expenses and help the poor and needy in such times," concluded Wasim Akhtar.

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