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AK Antony’s son to manage Rahul Gandhi’s Wayanad Twitter account

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Social media
The Twitter account, ‘RG-Wayanad,’ will cater to the needs of the Kerala media and include Malayalam translations of Rahul Gandhi’s tweets on his main account.
PTI
Anil Antony, the son of former Defence Minister AK Antony, on Tuesday said he will be managing the Wayanad-specific Twitter account of Congress President Rahul Gandhi."Rahul Gandhi's office has started a new Twitter account – RG-Wayanad. His office has given me the task of managing it till May 23," said Anil, who works as an IT professional. The Twitter handle, according to Anil, would cater to the needs of the Kerala media and announce programmes. It would include the Malayalam translation of Rahul Gandhi’s tweets from his main account as well as be updated with statements and messages pertaining to Wayanad in Kerala. The Twitter account was created in September 2018 and the first tweet was posted on April 10, a tribute to Kerala Congress (M) leader KM Mani. Rahul Gandhi will be contesting the Lok Sabha elections from both Wayanad as well as his home constituency Amethi in Uttar Pradesh. The Congress President is currently on a two-day whirlwind campaign in the state of Kerala and he is in his constituency Wayanad on Wednesday.  He also addressed election meetings in Thiruvananthapuram, Pathanamthitta, Alappuzha and Kollam. Rahul Gandhi also met the family of Sree Dhanya, who became the first person from Kerala’s Kurichiya tribal community to crack the civil services exam. The state of Kerala goes to polls on April 23 and with the arrival of Rahul Gandhi to contest as a UDF candidate from the Wayanad constituency, it has become yet another constituency which will be watched closely along with other constituencies like Pathanamthitta and Thiruvananthapuram, where a close triangular contest is expected between the UDF, LDF and the NDA. Of the total representation from Kerala in the outgoing Lok Sabha, the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) has 12 seats, while the CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front (LDF) has eight. According to a few poll surveys, the UDF is expected to increase its tally to as many as 16 seats. (With IANS inputs)
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The rare translator who is getting political speeches right: Meet Jyothi Vijayakumar

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Language
Jyothi’s apt Malayalam gets praised in a state where political translations have gone horribly wrong in the past.
Facebook.com
Jyothi Radhika Vijayakumar does not specify which translated speech it was that she watched one day in 2011, that made her want to be a translator of political speeches. You might wonder if it was one of those many translations that have been going wrong whenever a political leader landed from another state and spoke in Hindi or English in Kerala. Jyothi – a junior lawyer and a teacher of sociology at the Kerala Civil Service Academy – smiles away the praises that have been coming her way in the past 24 hours, after her strong and apt translations of Congress President Rahul Gandhi’s speeches on Tuesday. “I don’t know how it happened, may be because I have been listening to Rahulji’s speeches for a while,” she says. Rahul, who is contesting the Lok Sabha elections from Kerala’s Wayanad, apart from his home turf of Amethi, was in the state for a round of campaigning on Tuesday. At two places, Jyothi stood by him, her rhythm matching that of the Congress leader's. It was on the same day that Rahul Gandhi’s speech had been terribly translated by another party leader in Pathanamthitta. To Rahul’s "Congress is fighting BJP and RSS", the translator – PJ Kurien’s – version was "Congress is fighting BJP and Marxists". To his election promise that the party would give Rs 3.6 lakhs in five years to each of the poorest of poor, Kurien added the words "lakh crore"– Rs 3.6 lakh crore.  Jyothi is also the daughter of a Congressman from Chengannur, Adv D Vijayakumar, and on top of that a former journalist and television anchor. “I have also worked in Corporate Communications at UST, Technopark,” she says. But then translation has never been considered an easy job – even by those who write, bringing to their regional languages many gems from foreign literature. When it has to be spontaneous and on stage, one can guess how much tougher it can get. Quite a few speeches have famously gone wrong –Narendra Modi’s speech in his first visit to the state as Prime Minister, communist leader Brinda Karat’s speech in 2016, and Rahul Gandhi’s speech in Tamil Nadu which was translated by KV Thankabalu.  BJP leader K Surendran – now contesting from Pathanamthitta LS seat – had been trolled a lot for that 2014 translation of Modi’s very important speech in Hindi. Surendran had got the very first line wrong when he translated Modi’s apology for the late visit to Kerala, as "I am very happy to come to Kerala". He was replaced later by the BJP’s V Muraleedharan that day. It didn’t help Surendran that he had earlier asked Congress leader VT Balram to learn Hindi on a Facebook exchange. Malayalis, of course, can be very rude when it comes to mocking a person. Actor Rima Kallingal wrote a Facebook post in 2015, a year after the Surendran episode, when communist leader PK Sreemathy too got trolled for her lack of fluency in English. “From the Sreemathy Teacher incident to the K Surendran incident we Malayalis are exposing a weird complex we all inherit from where I do not know. Trolling and mudslinging on such low levels will only take out the importance of what we are actually looking at achieving,” she wrote. Not that it toned down the jibes. Brinda Karat’s comrade was no less mocked when he kept getting her words wrong, and even she could make that out. When Brinda said "women of Kerala", he translated it as "criminals of Kerala". When she expressed contempt at the brutal attack on the Perumbavoor rape victim, he added that she was insulted too. Finally, she said she could understand "kurachu kurachu" (bits of) Malayalam and began mixing English and Malayalam. Much like Rahul said at the end of his trying efforts to work with Kurien, that he would pick up a few words in the language. But both Rahul and Brinda had shown presence of mind, never losing their temper, and smiling patiently even after realising that their powerful speeches were going for a toss. It is to this crop of translators that Jyothi, with her perfect Malayalam and apt pronunciations stepped in, coolly, calmly. After watching a translation in Chennai in 2011, she told her dad she could help if the Congress party needed a translator. That year, when Rahul Gandhi came to Kerala, Jyothi would do her first translation of his speech. After that, she seems to have become an expert of sorts of the Gandhi family speeches –translating for both mother (Sonia Gandhi) and son during their various visits in 2014, 2016, 2017 and now in 2019. “I can handle Malayalam, English and Hindi pretty okay,” she says modestly.
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Summer showers bring relief to Kerala as mercury levels dip

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Weather
Thiruvananthapuram city recorded highest rainfall across the state measuring 33 millimetre (mm) till 5.30 pm, followed by Kottayam with 27 mm on Wednesday.
PTI / Representational image
With many parts of Kerala receiving summer showers accompanied by thunderstorm on Wednesday, the soaring mercury levels have shown a slight dip in the state, giving relief to the people of the state. Districts throughout Kerala received light to moderate rainfall on Wednesday. Thiruvananthapuram city recorded the highest rainfall across the state measuring 33 millimetre (mm) till 5.30 pm, followed by Kottayam with 27 mm, said a The New Indian Express report. For the past few weeks, the temperature across the state was up to 4 degree Celsius above normal, but after the rainfall, Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) reports that temperature levels will only be 2 to 3 degrees above normal on Thursday. Following the rains, mercury levels have come down in Thiruvananthapuram, Kollam, Alappuzha, Kottayam, Pathanamthitta, Ernakulam, Idukki, Thrissur, Malappuram, Palakkad, Kozhikode, Kannur and Kasaragode districts. According to the IMD forecast, most parts of the state will receive light to moderate rainfall till April 20. But IMD has predicted heavy rainfall on Thursday in one or two places at Malappuram District, measuring 7 to 11 centimetres. Heat wave conditions prevailed in the state between mid-February and March. Over 70 cases of sunburns and one sunstroke death have been recorded in the state since February. The Kerala State Disaster Management Authority had even alerted all districts that it was essential to stay indoors between 12 pm and 3 pm. The Labour Department had also brought changes in the timings for daily wage labourers so that they will not be working in the sun during peak afternoon hours. The department under various district administrations has also carried out inspection across the state to ensure this was followed. Though IMD has predicted that the country will get ‘normal’ rainfall from the Southwest monsoon, summer rainfall between March 1 and April 10 in Kerala was significantly less. The northern district of Kasargode recorded 99% deficit in rainfall (actual rainfall 13.7 mm and rainfall received 0.2 mm).
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3-year-old Kerala boy in ICU after he was allegedly assaulted, parents questioned

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Crime
The boy has received severe injuries to his head and is on ventilator in Kochi.
It has only been three weeks since the body of a seven-year-old boy in Idukki was buried after he succumbed to the injuries inflicted by his mother’s partner. On Thursday, a similar suspected case of violence against a child has been reported in Aluva in Ernakulam district. On Wednesday, a three-year-old boy was admitted to the Rajagiri Hospital in Kochi with several injury marks on his body. He was brought to the hospital around 4 pm on Wednesday. “The boy has received severe injuries to his head. We performed the surgery on Wednesday, but he continues to be critical and is on ventilator. The hospital has called a medical board and will soon publish a bulletin,” an official at the hospital told TNM. The father of the boy, along with another person, had first taken the boy to Najath hospital in Aluva. Seeing the boy unconscious and the injuries on his body, a person at the hospital immediately alerted the Ernakulam Childline on their helpline number, 109. Speaking to TNM, a coordinator with the Childline said, “Considering how serious the boy was, the hospital authorities asked the father and the bystander to take him to another hospital. At Rajagiri hospital, the father claimed that his son fell from the terrace and sustained injuries. However, the marks on his body did not match with the incident the father described.” Suspecting that it is a case of child abuse, the hospital administration contacted the police on Wednesday evening. Meanwhile, the doctors at the hospital are continuing with the boy’s treatment. “The child has several injury marks on his body, including burn marks on his back. The doctors suspect the marks are the result of beatings,” the hospital official said. According to the Childline and the Eloor police, which is investigating the case, the boy’s parents are immigrants from Jharkhand. The family resides in Kalamassery in Ernakulam and the father works at a construction site. The police have taken the parents from the hospital to the police station for interrogation. While the police has not confirmed any details to TNM, a press release from the office of Minister of Health and Social Welfare of Kerala KK Shylaja said that a case has been registered against the parents for attempt to murder. KK Shylaja also announced said that the Health and Social Welfare department will bear all expenses for the treatment of the three-year-old. “Since the child is critical, he cannot be shifted to another hospital," she said in the press release. Read: After battling in ICU for 9 days, Kerala boy brutally attacked by mother’s partner dies Childline helpline: 1098
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Police case against Kerala BJP chief Sreedharan Pillai for derogatory remark on Muslims

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Controversy
Sreedharan Pillai had said that Muslims can be identified by ‘removing their clothes’.
The Kerala police on Wednesday filed a case against BJP state president PS Sreedharan Pillai for his distasteful comments on the Muslim community. On Sunday, at a rally in Attingal constituency, Sreedharan Pillai remarked, with a giggle, that Muslims can be identified by ‘removing their clothes’, referring to circumcision. The BJP leader came under fire for his remarks, and CPI (M) leader V Sivankutty filed a complaint with the Kerala Election Commission. In his letter, Sivankutty, who is the coordinator of CPI(M) candidate A Sampath’s campaign in Attingal, said that Sreedharan Pillai’s remark targets a religious community and was a blatant violation of the Model Code of Conduct (MCC). He also stated that Sreedharan Pillai’s comment was a criminal act. Following this, the Attingal police filed a case against Sreedharan Pillai, the Circle Inspector of the station told TNM. He has been booked under Section 153 (Wantonly giving provocation with intent to cause riot), 153A (Promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, etc) and 153B (Imputations, assertions prejudicial to national integration) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). On Wednesday, based on Sivankutty’s petition, the Kerala High Court also sought a response from the government, DGP and Kerala Police Chief Loknath Behara as well as Sreedharan Pillai himself in the matter. Sreedharan Pillai was campaigning for BJP’s Attingal candidate Sobha Surendran in the constituency on Sunday when he started talking about the Indian Air Force’s Balakot Air Strike. “Our Rahul Gandhi, Yechury, and Pinarayi are saying, our soldiers have to go there and see the count of the dead...their caste, religion etc,” he said. Referring to questions being raised about the number of people killed in the Balakot strike, he said. “If it is Islam, there are some signs, no? If you remove their clothes you will be able to know. Our soldiers have to do all that and return is what they are saying.” His remarks drew flak from several leaders from political parties such as LDF and Congress. Opposition leader Ramesh Chennithala said Sreedharan Pillai must offer a public apology, failing which the Returning Officer must take action against him. UDF’s ally, IUML leader and Malappuram MP PK Kunhalikutty said that the BJP was attempting to polarise and build their vote bank, "but that it would only result in loss of votes for the party in the state". AIMIM president Asaduddin Owaisi, too, hit back at the BJP, calling them the ‘experts in human anatomy’. He added, “If you want to identify a Muslim, ask. No need to lift clothing, what is this Sanghi obsession with Muslim men and what’s under their clothing?” The BJP leader, however, denied making these comments, He said that he was quoted out of context and that the video was heavily edited. He also said he will take legal action. Read: ‘Muslims can be identified by removing their clothes’: Kerala BJP chief sparks row
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CPI(M)'s MB Rajesh confident that Palakkad will vote for his 'report card'

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2019 Lok Sabha
MB Rajesh also holds the view that the Sabarimala issue will not become a decisive factor for polls in Palakkad.
FB / MB Rajesh
In 2009, when MB Rajesh was just 38, he did not have an easy victory. The CPI(M)'s young face won the polls from the Palakkad Lok Sabha constituency by just 1,820 votes against Sateesan Pacheni of the Congress. But by 2014, Rajesh's stature had grown spectacularly, and the man who had become popular across the district, defeated MP Veerendrakumar of the Socialist Janata (Democratic) Party who contested for the UDF, by a margin of 1,05,300 votes. Come 2019, Rajesh is once again the LDF candidate from Palakkad. The CPI(M) entrusting a seat to the same person for three consecutive terms is unusual, but a parliamentarian like Rajesh who has performed better than the national average is considered to be the party's best bet in Palakkad, yet again. From 2014 to 2019, Rajesh recommended development works worth Rs 27.38 crore from the MPLADS fund. His stellar record at the Parliament includes 84 percent attendance (national average is 80 percent and state is 77 percent) and participation in 248 debates (national average is 67.1 and state average is 142.5). He has also raised 578 questions (national average is 293 and state average is 424). The 2019 battle is not going to be just between the LDF and UDF in Palakkad; the BJP with its growing presence in the state counts Palakkad as a seat that the party can realistically win. MB Rajesh, however, disagrees. Speaking to TNM during a break from election campaign amidst soaring temperatures, he says that the fight is between the Left and UDF. “I will not agree with those who say Palakkad will see a triangular fight including the BJP,” Rajesh says. Two of the three opinion polls conducted by major media houses in Kerala have said that Rajesh will have a tough fight in the constituency and that he will only have a minimal vote margin this time. “I do not give any prominence to opinion polls. During the last election also they had predicted that I will face a tough fight, but you know what happened,” he says, adding that the LDF will secure more number of seats in Kerala than the UDF. Though Palakkad is one of the districts that saw violent agitations over the Sabarimala temple entry row, the LDF candidate opines that the BJP will not be able to make any gains using the controversy. “People here saw the real face of the BJP during the Sabarimala protest. People saw what the BJP did out in the streets, behaving like goons. So, this will not in any way be a decisive factor,” says Rajesh. Rajesh asserts that he is confident that his work will speak for him. He has put out a report card, listing out the developmental projects he has brought in. Healthcare initiatives, including a dialysis centre and early cancer detection centre, and various cultural projects like an open gym feature on this report card. “I have displayed what all I have done in the constituency during the last term in that report card. People can see that and decide who they want to vote for,” he says. Rajesh notes that he will now focus on tapping more employment opportunities for the people of constituency. “India is facing the biggest unemployment crisis in decades, so I cannot say that I can resolve the unemployment issues suddenly. A policy level change is required for that. But I can say that I will focus on bringing start-ups and women oriented employment opportunities to Palakkad," he says.
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Lok Sabha 2019: A battle between development and beliefs in Pathanamthitta

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Lok Sabha 2019
It’s a three-way contest in the constituency, which was at the heart of the Sabarimala protests last year.
Pathanamthitta district, which is located in the central Travancore region in the southern part of Kerala, has always been considered as one of those “sleepy” districts, like the ones mentioned in RK Narayan novels. But within a span of just six months, Pathanamthitta has witnessed a drastic change. It grabbed international attention following the devastating Kerala floods in August last year, and the infamous controversy surrounding the entry of women of all ages into the Sabarimala temple, located in the district. Now, with the state of Kerala going to polls on April 23 for the upcoming Lok Sabha elections, Pathanamthitta will be one constituency which will be closely watched for several reasons. Firstly, it is a triangular contest between United Democratic Front’s (UDF) Anto Antony, Left Democratic Front’s (LDF) Veena George, and National Democratic Alliance’s (NDA) K Surendran. The contest in Pathanamthitta, just like in Thiruvananthapuram, will witness a two time MP, Anto Antony, looking for a third consecutive win; the LDF will be banking on Veena George’s popularity in the Aranmula region, where she is a sitting MLA; and K Surendran and the BJP will be riding on the Sabarimala wave. Secondly, the BJP fielding K Surendran as their candidate in Pathanamthitta amidst a lot of deliberation and delay, can be seen as a strategic move – considering the fact that Surendran was the face of the Sabarimala protests across the state. It will be interesting to see whether the BJP will be able to use this factor to gain more votes in the constituency, or whether it will backfire. Hattrick for Anto Antony? The Pathanamthitta Lok Sabha constituency, which was formed in 2008, has witnessed two General Elections so far, in 2009 and 2014. Both times, UDF candidate Anto Antony emerged victorious. But just like his party colleague Shashi Tharoor in Thiruvananthapuram, a third time victory is going to be an uphill task for Anto. During the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, Anto Antony defeated CPI(M)’s K Anantha Gopan by a huge margin of 1,11,206 votes. But in 2014, his margin came down to just 56,191 against Peelipose Thomas, an independent candidate. This time, there is a massive anti-incumbency wave against Anto. “In the last 10 years, there has not been any notable development in Pathanamthitta, with Anto Antony representing us,” said Francis, an autorickshaw driver in Adoor town in the Pathanamthitta constituency, “Take the example of Adoor. He has not done anything here apart from giving us a few lights. Even those are not working now.” Biju, a rubber planter in Pathanamthitta, feels that Anto was not able to do much when it came to solving the rubber crisis in the area. Rubber plantation is one of the chief occupations in the central Travancore region of Kerala and over the years, rubber prices have been hit badly. “Everyone has been suffering because of the dip in rubber prices. Not just rubber, many other agricultural areas are suffering here. In the last 10 years, the current MP has not done anything to better our condition,” said Biju. The other big challenge is that both his opponents this time around are prominent names. Popularity of being Aranmula MLA Going into the Lok Sabha elections, Veena George will be hoping that her popularity as the MLA in Aranmula constituency in Pathanamthitta district, and her career as a media professional, will act as an added advantage. There is also a talk among the people of Pathanamthitta that Veena George was handpicked by the party to contest in the constituency because of her Christian identity. “Pathanamthitta is a Christian dominated area, especially the Orthodox sect,” said Alex, who runs a hardware store in Ranni. But having said that, there are certain concerns for Veena George regarding the way the LDF handled the floods, as well as the issue of women’s entry into the Sabarimala temple. A recent Amicus Curiae report had stated that poor dam management was the reason behind the floods. Speaking to TNM, Veena George said that she is not too concerned about the Amicus Curiae report. “We are aware of the politics of the person who created the report. He used to hold a position in the Congress party. And as far as floods are concerned, I was right there on the ground with the people, during the floods and after it,” she said. Veena also said that she is not too concerned about the popularity of the other two candidates contesting against her. “I think the other two parties were concerned about their candidates contesting against Veena. The LDF was the first to announce their candidate and by the time the others settled their infightings and announced their candidates, Veena had already completed two to three rounds of campaigning,” said Francis. BJP riding on Sabarimala Pathanamthitta is one of the constituencies that the BJP is hopeful of winning in the state. However, when the BJP had initially announced their candidate list, they had not mentioned a name for the Pathanamthitta constituency much to everyone’s surprise. This was because of the fact that this seat was being eyed by many other state leaders of the party considering the Sabarimala issue, where the BJP feels that they “stood with the devotees”. It is no surprise that the BJP went with K Surendran, who led a number of protests against the entry of women of all ages into the temple. It was with the arrival of K Surendran that Pathanamthitta became a constituency to watch out for. Surendran, who was arrested during the Sabarimala protests last year, had remained in jail for almost a month. It is very clear that the BJP is heavily banking on this issue to gain votes in the coming elections. Development, not Sabarimala Ramachandran Pillai, who runs a small restaurant tells TNM that Sabarimala will not be the major issue in Pathanamthitta as people claim it to be. Ramachandran is also a member of the Nair Service Society (NSS), an organisation of Nairs, a caste which were mostly against the SC verdict on Sabarimala. “The NSS consist of members with various political affiliations and people from various political parties. Please don’t think that an issue like Sabarimala will make all the NSS members to vote for the BJP,” said Ramachandran Pillai, adding that only three out of 100 people might vote on the basis of the Sabarimala issue. According to Francis, there are around two lakh first time voters in Pathanamthitta. “The majority of the people going to vote this election will be the youngsters, which is the age bracket between 18 to 30. For them, development is the major issue and not Sabarimala.”
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Lok Sabha 2019: In Kozhikode, an intriguing contest between a popular MP and an MLA

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Lok Sabha 2019
With the CPI (M) picking sitting MLA A Pradeep Kumar, an equal opponent for UDF’s MK Raghavan, Kozhikode will witness a thick battle.
MK Raghavan (Left) and Pradeep Kumar (Right)
Incumbent Congress MP MK Raghavan is UDF’s candidate from the Kozhikode constituency, and standing against him is LDF’s candidate A Pradeep Kumar, who is from CPI (M). Pradeep has been a three-time MLA representing Kozhikode (North) constituency and is the Left’s answer to the Congress fielding a popular candidate again. Both candidates have many similarities when it comes to their public image. Endearingly called Raghavettan by the people of Kozhikode, Raghavan is a widely accepted political figure in the northern district irrespective of political differences. Pradeep, a soft-spoken leader with a clean image, also enjoys similar acceptance is public. Both are known to have played significant roles in development work in their constituencies as well. Even before he became one of the first candidates to begin campaigning in the state this election shake, Raghavan conducted a rally named Janahrudaya Yatra (people’s heart rally). In a counter move to the same, the CPI (M) had organised 'Kozhikode Mochana Yatra' (a rally to make Kozhikode free) that was headed by Pradeep Kumar. Raghavan’s political history The two-time MP and former General Secretary of the KPCC, Raghavan suffered a setback earlier this month when a Hindi news channel aired a report that he had sought Rs 5 crore kickback for negotiating a land deal. The channel had aired the footage of what it claimed was a sting operation in which Raghavan was seen seeking bribe for a land deal. Asking for the money to be donated to his campaign fund, he was seen saying that he was spending crores of rupees for the Lok Sabha polls. The report sent shock waves among his supporters as well. In a press meet held to explain his stand, Raghavan broke down and said that the report was untrue. He also filed a complaint with the City Police Commissioner and the Election Commission to 'expose' the truth in it.  Originally from Payyanur in the neighbouring district of Kannur, Raghavan won the Kozhikode seat in 2009 by 838 votes - the lowest margin in the state. He secured 3,42,309 votes (42.92% of the total votes polled). His nearest rival, PA Mohammed Riyaz of the CPI (M), got 42.81% of votes. Pic: MK Raghavan Facebook How Raghavan built up roots across Kozhikode during his tenure could be seen with the majority he gained in 2014 elections. He defeated his nearest rival A Vijayaraghavan, a senior and strong leader of the CPI (M) with a majority of 16,883 votes. Raghavan even won around 900 votes lead in Elathur, a strong Left bastion. Pradeep's political history Representing Kozhikode from 2006, Pradeep won from Kozhikode (North) in 2011 and 2016 Assembly elections as well. In the last Assembly election, Pradeep Kumar defeated his nearest rival PM Suresh Babu of the Congress by a margin of 27,873 votes.  He has been instrumental in revamping educational institutions in the government sector. For instance, he ensured that the 120-year-old Government Vocational Higher Secondary School for Girls in Nadakav in the city - which is attended by underprivileged students – was upgraded to international standards. Pradeep did so by entering collaborating with a private foundation. In 2014 none other than AR Rahman had visited the school to see the transformation.   Pradeep Kumar Facebook Page Pradeep Kumar's friendships, from the days he was leader of the SFI, as a member of the Senate of the Kozhikode University, has made him a household name in Kozhikode.  Deciding factors in Kozhikode As in other northern districts of the state, minority votes are a decisive factor in Kozhikode. However, the voters here are known to stand with the Left in the local body polls and Assembly polls, but not during the Lok Sabha Polls. This pattern can be viewed in several other constituencies, probably because voters look a political party that is capable of forming a government at the Centre.  Only four times since 1951 has the Left won from Kozhikode. Once, Imbichi Bava, a communist stalwart, won for the Left and twice the victory was through CPI (M)'s ally Janata Dal (S). MP Veerendra Kumar, who was then with the JD (S), had won the seat for the Left in Kozhikode. In 2009 however, the JD (S) split from LDF. Now, Veerendra has returned to the LDF as a part of another political party formed in May 2018 after splitting from the JD (S) - the Loktantrik Janata Dal. Hence only once the CPI (M) was able to make victory on its own symbol.   Therefore, in the Lok Sabha election, the UDF may be able to consolidate minority votes to take on the BJP. Further, with Rahul Gandhi's candidature from Wayanad, the Congress expects a sweep over in the state or at least in the north. With Pradeep Kumar the Left hopes to wrest Kozhikode at the very least.  BJP candidate released on bail recently The constituency is witnessing a rarity this time. The BJP candidate, Prakash Babu, was sent to jail on March 28 by a court at Ranni in Pathanamthitta for attacking a woman devotee who came to offer prayers in Sabarimala temple in November 2018. The incident happened during the right wing organisations’ protest following a Supreme Court verdict allowing women of all age groups to offer prayers at the shrine. On April 11, the Kerala High court granted him bail.   
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3-year-old boy in coma in Kerala hospital, mother arrested for assaulting him

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Crime
The incident came to light when the authorities at the hospital, where he is undergoing treatment, found injuries and burn marks on the boy’s body.
Image for representation
“He was gasping for breath and was unconscious. He was resuscitated. He had multiple bruises on both lower limbs, a fresh burn on his right foot. The child is in coma, not responding to painful stimuli. He continues to have spontaneous breathing movement. He is on ventilation support,” reads a health bulletin released by the Rajagiri hospital in Kochi, describing the condition of a three-year-old boy from Aluva who is battling for his life in the ICU. It was not an accidental fall from a staircase, as his parents had first claimed. The police say it is a case of alleged assault against the child by his own mother, Hena. The Kerala police, after hours of interrogating the parents, arrested the boy’s mother on Thursday for attempt to murder. The Eloor police, which is investigating the case, has booked the Hena under various sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). Hena has been arrested and charged under Section 307 IPC (Attempt to murder) and Section 75 of Juvenile Justice Act (Punishment for cruelty to Child). “We have also booked her under two more sections after consultation with the doctors, that is, sections 323 (Punishment for voluntarily causing hurt) and 326 (Voluntarily causing grievous hurt by dangerous weapons or means),” said a police official at Eloor police station told TNM. The parents of the boy are natives of Jharkhand and are currently residing in Kalamassery. The father has been working at a construction site. According to the hospital authorities, the boy's father told them that the boy fell down from an 8-foot high staircase at their house on Wednesday and fell unconscious immediately. From a local hospital in Aluva, he was referred to Rajagiri Hospital, where he was brought at 1.45 pm. Since the details provided by the father was not consistent with the injuries, the hospital authorities informed the police and Childline. Once the child was brought, he was evaluated by a team of doctors including a paediatric intensivist, neurosurgeons, a neurologist, and an anaesthetist. When he was first brought to the hospital, he was shifted to the ICU under the supervision of the paediatric intensivist. On further evaluation by a team of multidisciplinary doctors, an emergency craniectomy (a surgery that involves removing a portion of the skull to relieve pressure on the brain) was advised. “However, the child’s father insisted on taking the child to another hospital. Despite explaining the risks associated with transporting the child, he was reluctant for the surgery. With the intervention of the police and the hospital administration, the father consented for surgery," read the medical report released by the hospital. Even after a three-hour surgery, the child continues to be on ventilator support, it said. Kerala Health Minister has announced to bear all expenses for the treatment of the three-year-old, who continues to be in a critical condition. Meanwhile, the police are currently at the spot of the incident and filing the report. (With inputs from Neethu Joseph)
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It took 4 pages to publish criminal cases against BJP’s K Surendran: Here’s why

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K Surendran is BJP-led NDA’s Pathanamthitta candidate for the Lok Sabha polls and 90% of cases against him are related to Sabarimala.
On Thursday morning, readers of the Pathanamthitta edition of the Janmabhoomi newspaper came across a strange four-page advertisement. Soon, they realised it was not an ad for a product, service or a government tender notice; it was a list of criminal cases against BJP’s Pathanamthitta candidate for Lok Sabha polls, K Surendran. The criminal charges were published in the newspaper as it is mandated by Election Commission of India that all candidates with criminal records should publish this in three leading newspapers or thrice in a single paper, so that voters are made aware of such details before the polling. The 240 criminal cases against K Surendran took four full pages of the newspaper, which is the mouthpiece of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in Kerala. According to the cases published, K Surendran has cases in almost all the districts in Kerala, but at a cursory glance, almost 90% of the cases are Sabarimala related. Surendran who lead most of the protests in Sabarimala had been arrested by the Kerala police for obstructing an old woman from entering the temple. Even when he was in jail, more cases were filed against him in different parts of Kerala. The cases that have been charged against the Pathanamthitta Lok Sabha candidate ranges from attempt to murder (related to stopping a woman from entering Sabarimala), inciting violence, voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous weapons, destruction to public property, obstruction to public way, use of obscene language and various other sections in various districts of the state. Out of the 240 cases that have been published in the Janmabhoomi newspaper, it was found that Surendran has 68 cases only in Kollam district. The paper states that he has three cases in Thiruvananthapuram, 30 cases in Pathanamthitta, 56 cases in Alappuzha, eight cases in Kottayam, 17 cases in Idukki, 13 cases in Ernakulam, six cases in Thrissur, two cases in Kozhikode, 33 cases in Kasaragod and one case each in Malappuram, Wayanad and Kannur. According to sources, publishing a four-page advertisement like this in a newspaper, which has decent circulation, requires at least Rs 20 lakh. This means, if it has to be published thrice, it will require Rs 60 lakh. The total amount of money that a candidate is allowed to spend for the elections is Rs 75 lakh, which means, Surendran will only be left with around Rs 15 lakh and if found to be breaking this rule, there can be serious consequences to his candidature. However, since Janmabhoomi is the mouthpiece of the BJP, it can be safely assumed that printing the ad would have cost Surendran much lesser or only a nominal fee. The Pathanamthitta Lok Sabha constituency is a seat in Kerala that the BJP is hopeful of winning as they have led countless protests against the Supreme Court verdict of allowing women of all ages to enter the Sabarimala temple. And K Surendran has been the face of these protests, which even got him arrested and landed him in prison for almost a month. Read: Lok Sabha 2019: A battle between development and beliefs in Pathanamthitta
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3-year-old boy in Kerala succumbs to injuries after alleged assault by mother

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The boy, who sustained severe head injuries, was in the ICU for two days.
Image for representation
The three-year-old boy in Aluva, who had been hanging on to life at the ICU of Rajagiri Hospital in Kochi since Wednesday, succumbed to the numerous injuries inflicted on his body. He was pronounced dead at 9 am on Friday.  The child was brought to Rajagiri hospital on Wednesday afternoon with a severe head injury. The following day, despite a three-hour surgery and other extensive treatment, he slipped into coma. "The reason for the death is the severe injury to his head. The child was in coma and was not responding to any treatments," a hospital staff told TNM. But the medical evaluation had revealed that the boy had several other injuries on his body, including burn marks, raising suspicion of assault against the child. His father claimed that he had fallen down a staircase. However, after the parents were interrogated, the child's mother Hena was arrested on Thursday evening.  According to sources, she revealed that the child was assaulted. Some reports also said that she allegedly used the rolling board used to make chappatis to beat the child. Hena, the three-year-old boy's mother The child was unconscious when he was brought to the hospital. He had multiple bruises on both lower limbs and a fresh burn on his right foot. When he was first brought to the hospital, he was shifted to the ICU under the supervision of the paediatric intensivist. On further evaluation by a team of multidisciplinary doctors, an emergency craniectomy (a surgery that involves removing a portion of the skull to relieve pressure on the brain) was advised. “A surgery had to be done but the father insisted on taking the kid to another hospital. With the intervention of the police and the hospital administration, the father consented to the surgery. But even after that the child remained unconscious and was not reacting to any stimuli. His condition remained very serious throughout Thursday. He was living only because of the ventilator support,” a hospital staff told TNM. According to the Eloor police, the father is a native of West Bengal, while the mother is from Jharkhand. They had been living in Aluva for the last few weeks. The boy's mother was charged under Section 307 IPC (Attempt to murder) and Section 75 of Juvenile Justice Act (Punishment for cruelty to Child). After consultation with the doctors she was also booked under two more sections, that is, sections 323 (Punishment for voluntarily causing hurt) and 326 (Voluntarily causing grievous hurt by dangerous weapons or means). Though the father is not arrested at present, police have taken him into custody.
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‘Can we forgive Cong for what they did to scientist Nambi Narayanan’: Modi in Kerala

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi was addressing a public meeting at Central Stadium in Thiruvananthapuram, the same venue where Rahul Gandhi addressed his party workers on Tuesday.
It was a no holds barred campaign for Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Thiruvananthapuram on Thursday evening, as he launched a scathing attack on both the Congress and the Left. Addressing a public meeting at Central Stadium in Thiruvananthapuram, the same venue where Congress President Rahul Gandhi addressed his party workers on Tuesday, Modi said that the BJP will protect the beliefs and customs of the people when they come back to power. “We are aware that the Congress and Communists have acted against the faith of the people of the state. Political violence is not the culture of the state, but the culture of Congress and the Communists. This is against the state’s great tradition and culture. The political violence of the Congress and Communist has claimed the lives of scores of BJP workers in the state,” he said. He added, “In a democracy, political parties are formed on the basis of ideologies, not on family rules. But the ideologies of the Congress and Communists are that of opportunism.” He flayed Rahul Gandhi for coming to Wayanad to contest the elections. “The Congress president said that he won’t say anything against the Left. This is not politics but protection of one’s own interests and political opportunism. If they think the people of Kerala won’t understand that, it will be their biggest failure. The Congress president says that he is contesting from Wayanad to give a message, then why didn’t he do so by contesting in Thiruvananthapuram or Pathanamthitta? Are they (constituencies) not part of Kerala? This is not an attempt to give a message to south India; but an appeasement tactic of the Congress,” Modi said. ‘We’ll protect people’s faith, customs’ Though he was conscious, once again, not to mention the word Sabarimala in his speech, he did say that they will protect the people’s of customs and faith, “something that the Congress and the Communists won’t do,” he said. “Neither the Congress nor the Communists care about people's lives or their faith. The Communist government here have booked people who chanted God's name. They are intolerant about the rituals. Once the Modi government comes back to power, we will fight to protect your customs and we will also take action to give constitutional protection to these beliefs. BJP's stand is clear. It is the Congress that is playing a double game here. They maintain one stand in Delhi and another in Kerala,” he said. ‘Kerala govt’s lackadaisical attitude caused floods’ Recalling that the Kerala Chief Minister is an accused in the Lavlin case and calling him corrupt, the PM added, “They have not even dispersed the money which was given for the flood victims to the deserved. Now it has been come out that it was the lackadaisical attitude of the government that cause the floods. The government has no moral right to be in office for a single moment.” ‘What has Congress done to Nambi Narayanan’ “I hope you are aware what the Congress has done to Kerala's own scientist Nambi Narayan,” the Prime Minister asked the crowd. “Can we ever forgive the Congress for what they have done to Nambi Narayanan, who is the proud son of the soil? This is the difference between the government of those who would just give promises and the one that takes decisions,” he added. Incidentally, Modi made these remarks in the presence of former DGP TP Senkumar, who has been active in BJP’s campaign meetings. Senkumar is one of the police officers accused of falsely booking scientist Nambi Narayanan in the infamous ISRO spy case. Read: Rahul Gandhi in Kerala does not attack the Left, criticises BJP-RSS  
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100 years old, ready to vote: Kerala to see 2,000 plus centenarian voters this election

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What’s your excuse to not vote?
Kuttanad native Govinda Pillai has been suffering from age-related ailments for the last decade or so. At 110, the former firewood cutter belonging to the Aelimadathil house cannot hear, cannot walk and seldom steps out of his house. But come April 23, Govinda Pillai will be present at the polling booth in Alappuzha to exercise his franchise in the world’s biggest election, just like over 2,000 other centenarians in Kerala who will get out and cast their vote. “My father has been a long-time supporter of the Congress party. He has voted in every election as far as I can remember. Now, he can barely walk but he insists that he will cast his vote this election. So we will arrange a car and wheelchair and take him to the booth on April 23,” the 110-year-old’s son Purushothama Pillai tells TNM. While Govinda Pillai votes in the southern district of Alappuzha, up north in Kasaragode, 101-year-old KN Sham Bhat will exercise his franchise in Kumbala panchayat, Manjeshwaram. The retired temple priest has been supporting the Bharatiya Janata Party for the last two decades, ever since he moved to Kerala from Mangaluru. “Depending on his health, we will take him to the Narayanamangalam ALP school, which is our booth, so that he can cast his vote. His mind is still very sharp and he knows all the party symbols,” Sham Bhat’s relative tells TNM. The 101 year-old speaks several languages and enjoys cricket commentary, his kin adds. In the state capital of Thiruvananthapuram, where Shashi Tharoor (INC), C Divakaran (CPI(M) and Kummanam Rajasekharan (NDA) will battle it out this election, 103-year-old TK Janardhanan, a resident of Kolathur, will play his part in the democratic process. A retired tea seller and shopkeeper, Janardhanan, who had worked for long in Tamil Nadu, was a big supporter of MGR and AIADMK. He later moved to Kerala and placed his faith in the Communist party, his son says. “My father is very sure that he wants to vote for the Communist party. He has always been a fan,” Janardhanan’s son Radhakrishnan tells TNM. According to his son, Janardhanan is an enthusiastic participant and has cast his vote in all elections in the recent past. “He gets ready and leaves early in the morning and waits at the booth. Sometimes he is the first to arrive. The booth officials greet him and take him inside so he can cast his vote,” Radhakrishnan adds. According to the latest data published in March 2019 by the Election Commission, Kerala has an impressive 2,000 plus centenarian voters with about 700 men and 1,400 women on the list. This group, however, comprises less than 1% of the state’s voter base. Nonetheless, instructions have been issued by Chief Electoral Officer Teeka Ram Meena to the 24,970 polling booths in the state to fix ramps so that aged voters and those with disabilities will have easy access. Drinking water will also be supplied in all stations at all times. The relatives of these centenarian voters say that booth officials have been helpful in the past too and have given priority to aged voters, so as to not make them wait in queues to cast their vote.
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Winning Attingal is a challenge I took up for the party: UDF’s Adoor Prakash to TNM

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The UDF candidate speaks about the development issues left unattended by the incumbent MP, about Sabarimala and the solar scam case his name featured in.
Somewhere on the road from Kallara to Anad, where it is rows and rows of trees and no high rises on either side of the road, an old man comes to an open jeep, that’s loud with music and hoots. From the top of the jeep, Congress MLA Adoor Prakash, with several garlands of ribbons on him, bends to receive a piece of white cloth from the old man. The thin, skimpily clad octogenarian shouts at the top of his frail voice, ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’, and takes you back to the days of India’s freedom struggle and loyal Congressmen laying down lives. Adoor Prakash is new to this place – Attingal, a constituency that took a Congressman a lot of courage to contest from. The Lok Sabha seat has not been won by the Congress-led UDF in 18 years, remaining famously a strong bastion of the Communists. “It is a challenge,” says the man who has won the Konni assembly seat for UDF five times in a row. “It is a strong place of the Left and I am aware of the challenges and difficulties that come with it. But when the party gives me a responsibility, I take it. The Congress had won this seat for 20 years at a stretch from 1971. It is after that the LDF clinched the seat and, for whatever reasons, has remained with them. Now I have been given an opportunity to get it back and I strongly believe Attingal will come back to the Congress,” Prakash says, never stopping waving at the men, women and children coming out of their standalone houses and huts, smiling shyly by their gates. It is a marvel to watch him campaign – he does not show exaggerated emotions or make pretences, but makes sure his eyes reach every person the jeep passes by. He stops when they pass a house where a death has occurred. For the old man who voiced his emotion for his country, Adoor Prakash stopped his vehicle to let the senior citizen have his moment. There is no denying he is a strong opponent to CPI(M)’s A Sampath who has held the seat comfortably for a decade, and even tripled the vote margin in the last general election. Prakash says he won’t criticise the MP but observes that as a parliament member, Sampath appears to not have paid much attention to the development issues facing the constituency. “The traffic snarls, for instance. People need hours to get away from the traffic jams in Attingal. Even trains wait for half-an-hour or more, causing the railway gates to be closed for a long time, causing a lot of suffering for the people. He has been an MP for so long, he should have taken care of all this,” Prakash says. The other opponent is BJP’s Sobha Surendran, whose presence he cannot ignore after the role she played during the Sabarimala row last year – when the Supreme Court verdict allowed all women to enter the famed Ayyappa shrine, and there rose massive protests against the implementation of it. Sobha had made many speeches and led fasts, along with other BJP leaders. The Congress had also taken a stance against the implementation of the SC verdict. “The UDF took an importance stance, in favour of believers. We had given an affidavit in favour of believers when we were in power before VS Achuthanandan’s government came to power in 2006. They gave another affidavit, contradicting ours, which we again corrected in 2011. But then the LDF came to power again in 2016,” Prakash says. “The BJP is ruling the country. Instead of playing this drama in the state, they could have taken a decision to overcome the SC verdict. They could have passed a law. But they wanted to take political advantage and played double standards. It is only the UDF that stood with the believers. And for this we were made accused in cases, I too am an accused,” Prakash says, leading the conversation to another case his name had appeared in. The infamous solar scam case where some Congress leaders have been accused of having links with the main accused, Saritha Nair. “It is a political play – a new trick by the Marxist party to bring down our morale. But in this case, this person (Saritha) had taken away all the money from a retired teacher in my constituency and he came to me for help. As an MLA, I couldn’t ignore it. I called her (Saritha) and I told her if she didn’t return the teacher’s money, I would file a case against her. That’s how my name got dragged into this false case,” he says.
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Kerala police arrest man for allegedly calling ‘ambulance baby’ a ‘Jihadi seed’

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Binil Somasundaram was arrested for his Facebook post, now deleted, which said that because of the child's religion, the Kerala government stepped in to help.
At a time when the live Facebook telecast of the journey of an ambulance, carrying a 15-day-old baby with a heart problem, was being followed with worry and hope, a keyboard warrior was at work. When the Kerala government was stepping in to make sure the baby receives treatment swiftly, much to the relief of the parents, Binil Somasundaram, a resident of Kadavoor, decided to write on social media that the government was doing this only because the baby is a ‘jihadi seed.’ “Kerala should make way for the ambulance bearing the number plate KL 60 J 7739 because the patient coming in that is the child of ‘Sania-Mithah’ couple,” Binil wrote in the Facebook post. He also added that the kid was ‘Jihadi seed’ and that was the reason why the government was giving the treatment free for the baby. The Facebook post created massive outrage and was subsequently deleted. Binil, who has described himself as a ‘sevak at Hindurashtra’ in Facebook, later put up another post claiming that his account was hacked and some people were trying to defame him. However, screenshots of his Facebook post were widely circulated and a suo motu case was filed against him under the direction of Kochi city Police Commissioner Surendran. Binil, who is resident of Kadavoor in Ernakulam district was arrested by the Central Police on Friday morning. “Binil has been arrested under charges Section 153 A (Promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc., and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony), Section 505 (2) (Statements creating or promoting enmity, hatred or ill-will between classes) and Section 295 A (Deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage reli­gious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or reli­gious beliefs),” a police official told TNM. The news of the journey of the ambulance, carrying the 15-day-old baby from Mangaluru to Thiruvananthapuram, had gone viral earlier this week. The baby needed a heart valve surgery and the journey was being telecast live on Facebook so that people would know when the ambulance was approaching and make way for it. The Kerala government then intervened and offered to sponsor the treatment at a hospital in Kochi, rather than the ambulance needing to travel all the way to Thiruvananthapuram. The baby received treatment at Amrita Hospital in Kochi. Also read: Kerala govt to pay for 'ambulance baby' surgery, vehicle diverted to Kochi
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LDF’s stand on Sabarimala has affected people of all faiths: BJP’s K Surendran to TNM

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“This is not just an issue for the Hindus. There are people from other faiths as well who depend on Sabarimala temple for their livelihood,” said K Surendran, who is contesting from Pathanthitta.
It came as a surprise for many when the BJP did not initially announce a candidate to contest from the Pathanamthitta constituency in Kerala for the upcoming Lok Sabha elections, given the fact that the party had spearheaded a number of protests against the Supreme Court verdict allowing women of all ages to enter the Sabarimala temple, located in the district. But when they did finally announce a candidate, it wasn’t a surprise after all as K Surendran, one of the general secretaries of the party in Kerala, was also the face of the Sabarimala protests across the state.  TNM caught up with K Surendran, as he was campaigning in the Poonjar area to find out about his plans for the Pathanamthitta constituency.  “The main issues that we will be raising these elections will be regarding the development of this place and the faith of the people,” said K Surendran. He said that Pathanamthitta lags far behind when it comes to development, infrastructure and industrialisation.  As far as the Sabarimala issue is concerned, Surendran said that there are lakhs of people in this district that is dependent on the Sabarimala temple. “This is not just an issue for the Hindus. There are people from other faiths as well who depend on Sabarimala temple for their livelihood. The stand taken by LDF has affected people of all faiths,” he said.  When questioned about the Election Commission’s (EC) order against using the Sabarimala issue to gain votes, Surendran lashed out stating that the EC has no right to say so. “Nobody is using Sabarimala for votes. But there is also no problem is raising the Sabarimala issue,” he said. The protests carried out by various right wing forces regarding the Sabarimala issue had turned violent in many parts of the state injuring several people and damaging public property. When asked if this will be a backlash for the BJP, Surendran replied, “The violence was unleashed by the police, not by the BJP or the RSS. They filed 240 cases against me in a single day. It is the government that will face the backlash regarding this, not us.” Watch the full interview here:
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Sabarimala and floods: Two factors at the heart of polls for voters in Alappuzha

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The Alappuzha seat, won eight times by the UDF and four by the LDF, is witnessing a two-cornered fight this time as well.
Shanimol Usman, AM Ariff, KS Radhakrishnan / Courtesy: Facebook.com
Perhaps it is the backwaters, or the food, or else the reputation it comes with, but Alappuzha has always managed to be a favourite cosy spot for travellers. Even when the 2018 floods came to really whip it hard on the chest, the Venice of the East - as Britishman Lord Curzon once called it - resurfaced, and the foreign visitors could no longer stay away. The people of Alappuzha will remember the floods when they line up to vote on April 23. Not all of Alappuzha comes under the Alappuzha Lok Sabha constituency, which is one of the 20 in the state. Kuttanad, for instance, which was one of the worst affected in the flood, comes under the Mavelikkara constituency. And Karunagappally, which is in Kollam district, comes under Alappuzha. Aroor, Cherthala, Alappuzha, Ambalappuzha, Haripad and Kayamkulam form the other six assembly segments that come under the constituency. The candidates this time are – Shanimol Usman for the UDF, AM Arif for LDF and Dr KS Radhakrishnan for NDA. The seat, won eight times by the UDF and four by the LDF, is likely to witness a two-cornered fight this time as well.  Alappuzha Lok Sabha constituency Year Party 1962 CPI 1977 Congress 1980 CPI (M) 1984 Congress 1989 Congress 1991 CPI (M) 1996 Congress 1998 Congress 1999 Congress 2004 CPI (M) 2009 Congress 2014 Congress   Will Alappuzha accept new Cong face? Alappuzha has mostly been Congress’s fort. The constituency has traditional Congress supporters, who would like to see them come back to power. “Politically, we have been voting for the UDF for years. I am happy with our current MP KC Venugopal. We wanted him to contest again this time, but Shanimol is equally acceptable,” says Annie, a voter from Haripad. But the question is, will all such Congress supporters accept a new candidate when the predecessor – despite the allegations of sexual assault he faced in the solar scam case – had managed to retain his seat in the last election?  For the last two general elections, the people of Alappuzha voted the UDF to power – KC Venugopal of the Indian National Congress (INC) won both times. This time, however, he is not standing for the elections, citing organisational responsibilities. Instead, the UDF has chosen Shanimol Usman – the first woman from the district to become the secretary of All India Congress Committee. During the 2014 elections, there were speculations that Venugopal, whose name had cropped up in the solar scam case, might lose. There were also rumours that Shanimol, who had reportedly wanted to contest from Alappuzha, was not actively campaigning. There were words tossed back and forth then, between then KPCC president VM Sudheeran and Shanimol. KC Venugopal finally won, but with a lesser victory margin than in 2009. In 2014, KC Venugopal beat CPI (M)'s CB Chandrababu by 19,407 votes. In 2009, he won by a larger margin of 57,635 votes, defeating Dr KS Manoj of CPI (M). Five years have passed and today, you see Shanimol wasting no time in telling people about the achievements made by Venugopal. She is, in fact, running briskly for her campaigning, reminding one of NDA’s candidate from Ernakulam, Alphonse Kannanthanam’s style of sprinting while appealing for votes. video But there is another section of voters who seem to be a little sceptical over the UDF’s performance so far. “What achievements,” asks Adarsh, a voter from the constituency. “For the last 10 years, Alappuzha has been aching for development. The slow pace of development of the Alappuzha bypass is a cause for concern for those taking the route through Alappuzha. The promises have long vanished and the construction is moving at a slow pace. The tourism sector in Alappuzha, too, has not grown much in the last decade. The coir sector of Alappuzha has been under severe stress. The industry is facing a cash crunch. The constant sea erosion along the coastal belts every rainy season is another important problem that needs to be fixed. I would vote for the party that would readily take up the above issues,” elucidates Adarsh. Will CPI (M) get a foot in the door? Alappuzha is home to one of the most famous uprisings by the Communists - the Punnapra Vayalar uprising of 1946. In this communist uprising against the Diwan of Travancore, CP Ramaswami Iyer, more than one thousand communists were reportedly killed. It is the land that produced leaders such as former Chief Minister VS Achuthanandan and KR Gowriamma – a minister in the first Communist government of the state. And yet, after the first victory by PK Vasudevan Nair of the Communist Party of India (this was before the party split in 1964), the next election was won by VM Sudheeran of the Congress. The CPI(M), in the subsequent years, won only three more times – Susheela Gopalan in 1980, TJ Anjalose in 1991 and KS Manoj in 2004. But the CPI (M)-led LDF would have hope this time, for, in the 2016 Assembly elections, the party had won six out of the seven assembly seats under Alappuzha – only Haripad was lost to Ramesh Chennithala, the Opposition Leader. This time, LDF has decided to field Arif, who won the 2016 assembly elections from Aroor by a comfortable margin of 38,519 votes, beating UDF’s CR Jayaprakash. Arif – one of the six MLAs that LDF is fielding this time – has in the past, defeated veteran politician KR Gouriamma, who had contested for the UDF, to win the assembly seat in the 2006 elections. He won in 2011, too, which was his third term. He can depend on the people of his assembly to vote for him this time, but there is no predicting how the rest of the constituency would vote – the scales of the balance show no obvious leaning. Floods, Sabarimala: The other factors Three years since the 2016 Assembly elections and the voters have witnessed newer incidents, such as floods and Sabarimala women’s entry, that could significantly influence them this General Election. And among these factors is the recent flood and the way the government handled it. The district administration was in full swing, under Collector Suhas and Sub-Collector Krishna Teja, putting together an ‘I am for Alleppey’ initiative to rebuild the region, which contributes a good percentage to the state’s tourism industry. But there are also people who complain that they haven’t received the relief packages as promised. Another very obvious factor would be, of course, Sabarimala and the court verdict that lifted the ban on the entry of women between the ages of 10 and 50. Quite a large number of people took to streets, protesting women’s entry. Here is where the BJP – that supported those fighting women’s entry - would hope to score a little in Alappuzha. KS Radhakrishnan, former Kerala Public Service Commission chairman, had only recently joined BJP, but he would certainly hope to gain traction with Sabarimala, without, of course, mentioning the name (as directed by the Election Commission). But then Alappuzha’s Hindu population has a high percentage of Ezhavas – 55.3 per cent according to the 2011 census, and Vellapally Natesan, General Secretary of the Ezhava community organisation SNDP (Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam), has been speaking for the entry of women in Sabarimala. This might, therefore, influence more votes for the LDF, which had supported women’s entry, while the UDF and the BJP-led NDA stood against it. NDA’s Wayanad candidate Thushar Vellappally is also the vice president of SNDP. His party BDJS is the political wing of SNDP. During the Sabarimala, while Thushar opposed women’s entry, his father Vellapally Natesan supported the SC verdict. The fight, therefore, is likely to be shouldered by the UDF’s woman candidate and a three-time MLA that LDF trusts.
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‘Palakkad is as much a Congress bastion as LDF’: UDF candidate VK Sreekandan to TNM

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VK Sreekandan believes Sabarimala issue cannot be used to consolidate votes in Palakkad.
FB / VK Sreekandan
VK Sreekandan was just 12 years old when he first held the Indian National Congress party flag. He was studying in the Government High School at Shornur in 1983 when he became the unit president of Kerala Students Union, the student’s wing of the party. Since then, over the last 36 years, VK Sreekandan worked his way up as a dedicated Congress party worker: General Secretary of Youth Congress All India Committee (2003), executive member (2006) and then Secretary of Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee (2016) and finally President of Palakkad District Congress Committee (2016). The 48-year-old Congress leader, who currently holds the reins in the party in Palakkad as its district chief, has finally been fielded as a Lok Sabha candidate of the party for the first time. Though the party had fielded him in the 2011 Palakkad Assembly polls, Sreekandan lost to CPI(M)’s M Hamza by a margin of 13,203 votes. Sreekandan’s chance of being the Palakkad Lok Sabha candidate of UDF was obvious. Even before the official candidate list of the party came out, Sreekandan took out a walkathon across the constituency titled ‘Jai Ho’, interacting with the people. In the 25-day event in March, he covered 88 panchayats and the eight municipalities on foot. It had created a huge impact among the people as it was something that no other Congress leaders have tried out in the recent past. ‘Palakkad, a Congress bastion, too’ As the Lok Sabha candidate, Sreekandan is campaigning to reclaim the constituency, which is generally considered as Left stronghold. But Sreekandan does not accept this easily. Speaking to TNM between his election campaigns, Sreekandan says that both the LDF and UDF are equally strong in the constituency. “Congress has also won the Lok Sabha polls in the past,” he says. “CPI(M)’s MB Rajesh, the present candidate of CPI(M), won with high margins last time because he did not fight against a Congress candidate. MP Veerendrakumar of the Socialist Janata (Democratic) Party was the candidate, whom UDF supported. He did not even contest on the party symbol. Besides, the traditional Congress supporters of the constituency did not even know him. This worked in favour of the CPI(M). But this time, things are not the same. We will win by large margins,” Sreekandan told TNM. ‘Will work for development of people, Palakkad’ In his campaign, Sreekandan is focussing on the Central government’s anti-people policy and the developments the constituency still lacks. He is quick to put the blame on the sitting MP and LDF candidate MB Rajesh for the state of affairs in the constituency. “What has the two-time MP done to solve the lack of employment opportunities in the constituency? About the 23 companies that were closed in the past three years, as a result of which 7,000 people lost their jobs?” he asks, adding, “Palakkad is an industrial belt, but both the state government and the Centre have not resolved this issue.” Sreekandan says his poll promises for the people have been designed to address the issues the people face in the constituency. “If voted to power, I will do a comprehensive study of the constituency to prioritise the basic developmental issues. Palakkad’s tourism possibilities have not been fully explored by anyone. I will also focus to address the problems faced in the agricultural and industrial sector because these are the main employment sectors in the Palakkad constituency. I will also work towards improving the education level of the people in the constituency,” he said. His list also includes the development of tribal areas in the constituency. “Tribal areas, including Attapadi, need a boost. There is no coordination between departments in such areas and the problems, as a result of this, can be seen in these tribal hamlets,” said Sreekandan. ‘Sabarimala not a decisive factor’ Like the Left candidate in Palakkad, UDF’s Sreekandan also believes that Sabarimala issue will not become a decisive factor in the polls and it will not, in any way, be an obstacle for UDF’s victory. “People of Palakkad, like in other parts of Kerala, know that the BJP used the Sabarimala issue to boost their growth in the state. So there will not be a consolidation of votes based on Sabarimala as they claim,” says Sreekandan, adding that the CPI(M), too, is unlikely to get any support considering how they handled the Sabarimala issue.
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LDF’s Attingal candidate Sampath stresses on need for democratic secular govt

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Lok Sabha 2019
The three-time MP answers the Sabarimala question with an old anecdote about late actor Prem Nazir and talks about the everyday problems of the people.
Facebook / Dr. A Sampath
Once upon a time, when the Attingal constituency had not existed and it was still Chirayinkeezhu, late actor Prem Nazir, hailing from the village, famously donated an elephant to the Sarkara Devi Temple there. The story goes that upholders of tradition went and questioned him on why he gave an elephant to a Hindu temple. Prem Nazir is believed to have replied, “Asse (a term he used for addressing people fondly), the elephant has no problem with it, Sarkara Devi (the deity) has no complaints, and I have no issues either. Then, asse, is it the passers-by who have a problem?” Dr A Sampath, the Communist MP from Attingal, contesting for the third time in a row, narrates this tale as he has a hurried breakfast at the Varkala railway station. “Prem Nazir was not a Communist, but I am. And what he told those people decades ago is what I have to say now,” he leaves his line incomplete. Sampath means the people who ask him about Sabarimala – and the stand that the ruling LDF took in implementing the Supreme Court verdict allowing entry for women of all ages to the temple. There were huge protests against this, men and women coming out on the streets, demanding that tradition (of not allowing women of a certain age) be upheld. You can see where the Prem Nazir story comes in. The leader’s answers are calm like this, unaggressive and logical. Sampath does not seem the kind of man to ever lose his temper, as you watch him walk through the railway platform, talking to people. He doesn’t spare a young boy, not old enough to vote – “You can’t vote yet? But I see bits of a moustache on you already,” he says and the boy smiles shyly. Most of them know the face of the MP who has been in charge of Attingal for 10 years now. While people appear fond of him, there have been murmurs of traffic problems affecting the constituency and Sampath not bringing a bypass to solve it. “The widening of the National Highway 66 is happening, covering 13 kilometres. The notification had come from the Government of India. Objections against taking over the land have been dealt with. It is not a bypass, it is a new National Highway. It would be four-lane with bus shelters and toilets and everything. With the state government’s help, it is all happening fast,” Sampath counters. Before the last two consecutive terms, Sampath had won in 1996 when it was still Chiryainkeezhu – the same place his dad Aniruddhan had won three decades before that. Incumbency does not seem to work against Sampath. In 2014, he had tripled his victory margin from 2009. He doesn’t make elaborate speeches of why this has happened or the developments he has brought to Attingal. Instead he says, “I am not a merchant of dreams, neither a distributor of big projects. I am one among the people, doing my job as an honest parliamentarian. I do not make false promises like putting Rs 15 lakh into every person’s account.” In the April general elections, his opponents are Konni MLA Adoor Prakash from the UDF and Sobha Surendran from the BJP. “They are both good candidates. I am not going to speak ill of them the way they do about me,” Sampath says. He does not utter the name Sabarimala, even when he is asked about it. Instead he says what troubles people are the day-to-day problems they have to face. “And there are so many of these. We, as LDF’s members of parliament, represent it there.” Sampath says the Congress does not try to fight the NDA in the parliament as Left MPs do. “I have asked my friends in the Congress party why have they not taken a strong attitude against the NDA, like we do. That is why once Sonia Gandhi had to repeat the Malayalam slogans that I raised in the parliament against the NDA.” This happened in February 2018 when Opposition MPs were protesting for the Andhra special package. When Sampath shouted ‘Evide poi evde poi vagdanangal evde poi? (Where’d they go, where they’d go, where did the promises go?), the former Congress president repeated the slogan after him. The main idea of this election, he says and for once without mincing his words, is to oust the BJP government at the Centre. To put a democratic, secular government there. “That’s the only way the country can survive. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru has said that as long as India as a nation would last, we won’t die. But when India dies, we die too and our democracy is facing such threats.” Also read: Winning Attingal is a challenge I took up for the party: UDF’s Adoor Prakash to TNM
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A cracking battle in Kollam: RSP’s lone popular leader takes on a CPI(M) strongman

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Lok Sabha 2019
Kollam, the land of cashew nut workers and fishermen, a traditional Left fortress, is the only region where the Revolutionary Socialist Party exists in the state.
Balagopal (Left) and Premachandran (Right)
In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, Kerala’s Kollam constituency saw an intense battle. NK Premachandran, the most popular and the lone powerful leader among his contemporaries from the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP), took on CPI(M) ideologue MA Baby. Polit Bureau member of the CPI(M), Baby had everything in his favour – the acceptability to match Premachandran’s popularity, a clean and intellectual image, the reforms he had carried out when he was education minister from 2006 to 2011, and his local connections. Baby was the sitting MLA of Kundara at that time. A large overwhelming crowd had gathered when CPI(M) stalwart VS Achuthanandan inaugurated Baby’s election convention. But Baby was humbled by Premachandran. Premachandran secured 4,08,528 votes, 46.47% of the total votes polled, while Baby got 3,70,879 votes, which was 42.19% of votes cast. The reason many attribute to the debacle is then party state secretary Pinarayi Vijayan’s ‘paranari’ (scoundrel) usage on Premachandran, which had created ripples even in other parts of the state and turned the public feeling in favour of the latter. RSP, a long-time ally of the CPI(M) in the Left Democratic Front (LDF), had left the coalition on the eve of the 2014 elections after being denied a seat. Kollam was the only Lok Sabha seat the RSP contested from, for it is the only district where the party exists. This time also the RSP has fielded Premachandran. But Pinarayi, now the chief minister of the state, repeated the same usage in an election campaign in Kollam this time too, saying there should be truthfulness in politics. NK Premachandran Facebook Page KN Balagopal, a one-time Rajya Sabha member and former district secretary of the CPI(M), is pitted against Premachandran this time. Like Premachandran, Balagopal is familiar with the pulse of the constituency. He also has a clean image and wholehearted acceptance among party workers in Kollam. In the 2016 Assembly elections, the LDF secured more than 1,70,000 votes over the UDF overall in Kollam. And the man who spearheaded the Left campaign was KN Balagopal. The bypass inauguration and ‘Sanghi’ label for Premachandran The Kollam bypass, a major development the district witnessed in the last two decades, was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January. This happened at a time when the state had decided that the inauguration would be done by the chief minister. The Left blamed Premachandran for ruining their plans and calling Modi. CPI(M) state secretary Kodiyeri Balakrishnan even accused Premachandran of ‘being close’ to the BJP. The ‘Sanghi’ tag irked the latter and he reacted saying that it was Pinarayi Vijayan who is a Sanghi for postponing the Kochi Metro Rail inauguration thrice for the convenience of Modi. KV Sabu of the BJP is the NDA candidate. The BJP got 6.67% of the votes in 2014. The outsiders who won in Kollam Kollam has traditionally been a Left bastion. In the 16 elections held so far, the Congress won five times.  Barring P Rajendran of the CPI(M) (who was in office from 1999 to 2009), all other MPs from Kollam have been from other districts. N Sreekantan Nair, the tallest leader of the RSP who was instrumental in the party flourishing in Kollam, won from the district five times. He was from the neighbouring Alappuzha S Krishnakumar of the Congress, a former IAS officer and a native of Thiruvananthapuram, won three times. The legacy of Sreekantan Nair was carried forward by Premachandran, winning three times – in 1996 and 1998 as well apart from 2014. He was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 2000. He was elected to the Assembly in 2006 from Chavara and held the water resources portfolio. Though the CPI(M) had taken the seat from the RSP in 1999, the RSP backed its ally in the two consecutive elections in which the CPI(M) Rajendran candidate won. Strengths and community votes Both Premachandran and Balagopal are known for their outstanding performance as parliamentarians. Both are known orators. The initiative in finishing the bypass after over four decades, the second entrance of the Kollam railway station which was a long pending demand of locals, and similar developmental works will act in favour of Premachandran. The party unit with the strong backing of the CPI, the second largest ally of the LDF, are advantages for Balagopal. Kollam is one of the constituencies where the young women’s entry into Sabarimala – and the state government’s move to implement the Supreme Court verdict – could see an impact. Since BJP’s Sabu is not a familiar name in the constituency at all, anti-Left votes could turn in favour of Premachandran. Both Premachandran and Balagopal are from the dominant Nair community, an advantage in a constituency where community could be decisive in the poll result.  However, Balagopal can defend it for he is the brother of Kalanjoor Madhu, who is close to the Nair Service Society chief N Sukumaran Nair. But the comradeship won’t necessarily ensure Nair votes for Balagopal. KN Balagopal Facebook Page  Kollam is also predominantly a land of cashew nut factory workers and fishermen who are unlikely to be influenced by the Sabarimala issue. “Whatever Premachandran had done for labourers like me, now he has become distanced from us,” says Ammini, a daily wage labourer from Thankassery. “True, there could be an anti-incumbency feeling which is normal. And it is also true that in most of the Assembly constituencies, barring Kollam where the Left MLA and actor Mukesh has failed to perform as per people’s expectations, the Left is stronger. But the final outcome might be in favour of Premachandran, because the UDF can get the BJP votes and also due to the general feeling in favour of the UDF during LS polls,” says a local activist who did not want to be named. The Assembly constituencies that fall under Kollam LS constituency are Punalur, Chathannoor, Kundara, Kollam, Eravipuram, Chavara and Chadayamangalam. In the 2016 Assembly elections, the CPI(M) won three seats while the CPI won the rest. Chavara and Eravipuram are considered strongholds of the RSP. But the party failed to win even a single seat in 2016. Hence Premachandran’s victory or failure in this constituency is crucial for the RSP’s future as well. Also Read: Sabarimala and floods: Two factors at the heart of polls for voters in Alappuzha  
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