Citizenship Act: Detained Kerala journalists in Mangaluru been released, say police

News Network
December 20, 2019

Mangaluru, Dec 20: Eight journalists from Kerala covering the anti-citizenship law protests here a day after two persons were killed in police firing, were detained by the city police on Friday.

They were released about seven hours later at Thalappady on Karnataka-Kerala border after the intervention of Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan.

Mangaluru city police commissioner PS Harsha earlier said several Keralites had entered the city in the guise of journalists.

The Malayalam television journalists were detained outside the Wenlock Hospital, where those injured in the violence were being treated. Police allegedly snatched away their equipment and cellphones, saying they were not accredited journalists.

A viral video-which was not independently verified-showed Harsha interrupting a journalist on-air from the hospital. Though the reporter showed his identity card, the commissioner rejected it saying it was not a government-issued accreditation card. The reporter and his support staff were taken to a police van.

Soon after their detention, Kerala revenue minister E Chandrasekharan asked the state chief secretary to contact the Karnataka government and to probe the detention of journalists.

Karnataka chief minister B S Yediyurappa told reporters in Bengaluru that he had received a letter from his Kerala counterpart. "The journalists had no identity cards. We have asked the police to release them. Only seven-eight persons were detained and not 40," he said.

Police released the journalists at Thalappadi and returned the confiscated equipment around 3.30pm. "No case was booked against them," a police source said.

After returning to Kerala, the journalists said they were treated like criminals. The reporters said they were on-air from 8.15am, and the police commissioner asked them to leave the hospital.

Outside the hospital, police asked for their identity cards, and detained them.

"We were forced to remain in the police vehicle for four hours before shifting us to Mangaluru Town South Police Station," Mujeeb Rahman, senior reporter of Asianet, said. "Some of us were made to sit on the bus's platform, and were not allowed to talk to each other.

Rahman said others from the national and Kannada media were allowed to report. Police, however, said nearly eight journalists from Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu were also held.

Cameraman Sumesh Morazha of News18 said they were not shifted to the commissioner's office as claimed by the police.

Pratheesh Kappoth, a cameraman with Asianet, felt the journalists reporting from the hospital and airing the versions of the relatives of the slain men, could have provoked the police.

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News Network
April 9,2020

Apr 9: A panel of experts in the Karnataka state has suggested that the ongoing lockdown should be continued in districts identified as Covid-19 hotspots, including Bengaluru, to limit the spread of the pandemic.

IT companies and government offices providing essential services should be allowed to function with 50% staff, according to the committee headed by Narayana Health chairman Dr Devi Shetty, which submitted its report to chief minister BS Yediyurappa on Wednesday.

It has also asked the government to ease restrictions gradually and take adequate care over the next six months to contain the outbreak. The committee urged the government not to permit AC buses and metro services till April 30 and allow private vehicles only on alternate days (even-odd number-wise) for two weeks after April 15.

The government must close schools and colleges till May 31 and allow only inter-state movement of goods transport. The government could allow non-AC shops to open. It has suggested that the ban on inter-state train and flight services should continue.

Education minister S Suresh Kumar, who is the state Covid-19 spokesperson, said the Cabinet, which is meeting on Thursday, may discuss the recommendations and take a view on de-escalation of the lockdown.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will interact with chief ministers through videoconference on April 11, after which the government will get an idea about the Centre’s thinking, he said.

While some states including Kerala, Maharashtra and Telangana have favoured continuation of the lockdown, Yediyurappa has not taken any stand publicly and has instead been implementing the Centre’s decision.

Six new cases

Karnataka on Wednesday reported six new Covid-19 positive cases, including that of a 65-year-old person in Kalaburagi, who died due to severe acute respiratory infection.

The health authorities have issued a notice to the private hospital -- where the deceased was initially admitted before being taken to a government hospital -- for not reporting the case to the government. The government has locked down the hospital, kept its entire medical team under quarantine, and police have registered a case of criminal negligence against the hospital authorities.

Of the other five positive cases, two had a travel history to Delhi, one had contact with a Dubai returnee and two others had close contacts with infected people.

This takes the total number of positive cases in the state to 181. Five people have died, while 28 have been discharged so far.

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News Network
April 26,2020

Mangaluru, Apr 26: After directions from Karnataka government, migrant labourers are being sent to their native villages in batches by hiring as many as 60 buses.

Divisional Controller of Mangaluru KSRTC Division S N Arun said on Sunday that 100 buses from Mangaluru and Puttur ferried stranded labourers on Saturday. Buses were disinfected before the journey.

Buses also left from Dharmasthala, Bantwal, Puttur and Sullia to different destinations. In adherence to social distancing rules, each bus left with 20 to 22 labourers.

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News Network
March 14,2020

Kalaburagi, Mar 14: Utter negligence of Kalaburagi health department officials was one of the main reasons for the death of his father, alleged family member of Kalaburagi man and India's first COVID-19 victim here on Friday.

The victim's son said 'if officials of Kalaburagi health department had advised us to admit his father in isolated ward, which was opened in Gulbarga Institute of Medical science (GIMS), my father's survival time may have been extended,' he said.

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