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Kerala IAS officer Sriram arrested for killing journalist in drunk driving accident

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Crime
Sriram has been booked under Indian Penal Code Sections 279 (Rash driving or riding on a public way) and 304 (Culpable homicide not amounting to murder).
Kerala IAS officer Sriram Venkitraman was on Saturday arrested in connection with the death of 35-year-old Kerala journalist KM Basheer, who was killed on Saturday morning after the car the IAS officer was travelling in rammed into his motorcycle.  Sriram has been booked under Indian Penal Code Sections 279 (Rash driving or riding on a public way) and 304 (Culpable homicide not amounting to murder). While initial reports had stated that a woman friend of the IAS officer, named Wafa, was driving the car, the police confirmed to TNM that preliminary investigation shows he drove the car. Even eyewitnesses had stated that they had seen Sriram behind the wheels of the car. According to auto drivers who witnessed the accident, Sriram himself got out of the car, removed the journalist from the bike and placed him on the ground, reported Asianet.  Sriram had sustained minor injuries in the accident and was admitted to the KIMS hospital in Thiruvananthapuram. The Thiruvananthapuram police have come under major criticism for not collecting the blood sample of the IAS officer, despite the law giving them the rights to do so. Moreover, the woman passenger was allowed to go home in a taxi, despite the victim dying. Her statement was recorded only on Saturday noon. Also read: Blood sample of Sriram IAS taken in Basheer accident case: How cops read alcohol levels Immediately after the accident, which took place near the museum public office at 1 am on Saturday, Basheer was rushed to the Thiruvananthapuram Medical College hospital but he had passed away by then. Due to the  impact of the accident, Basheer's bike had hit a nearby wall and was found leaning against it in an upstanding position with its front wheel resting on top of the wall. Visuals from the accident site, which have been doing the rounds, show parts of the car and bike scattered on the road, with massive skid marks. Basheer, who had begun his career in Tirur in 2003, was a prominent journalist in Thiruvananthapuram who rose through the ranks of Siraj newspaper over the years and was the Thiruvananthapuram bureau chief of Siraj newspaper. His mortal remains were taken to the city's press club and thousands gathered to pay their respects. Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has also condoled the young journalist's death.
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Kerala IAS officer Sriram remanded in drunk driving accident that killed journalist

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Crime
Sriram Venkitraman's blood samples were drawn after about 9 hours following the accident
Kerala IAS officer Sriram Venkatraman, who was arrested on Saturday in connection with the death of a journalist in a road accident, has been remanded for 14 days. The officer, who is presently admitted at a private hospital in Thiruvananthapuram after he sustained minor injuries, will be moved to sub-jail once he is discharged. 35-year-old journalist KM Basheer was killed in the accident after the car driven by the IAS officer rammed Basheer's motorcycle, which was parked on the side lanes of Museum Road in Thiruvananthapuram at 1 am on Saturday morning. According to eyewitnesses, the IAS officer was in an inebriated state and was over-speeding, which led to the accident. Sriram who is the Survey Director, was remanded after the magistrate came to KIMS hospital, where he is admitted, reports Manorama News. As per reports, the remand report states that Sriram drove the car when the accident took place. Sriram Venkitraman has been booked under sections 279 (Rash driving) and 304 (Culpable homicide amounting to murder) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). As per the latter, a person can get imprisonment for life or up to 10 years. Read: Kerala IAS officer Sriram arrested for killing journalist in drunk driving accident Severe lapses were reported following the incident from the part of police officers. Though according to the witnesses, Sriram was seen coming out from the driver’s seat of the car following the accident and was visibly drunk, the police did not conduct a blood test, which is the preliminary procedure done when somebody is found drunk when driving. The blood samples were taken after about 9 hours following the accident after criticisms were raised and widely reported in the media. When TNM contacted the Commissioner of Police, Thiruvananthapuram, to ask about the alcohol level in Sriram's blood sample, he refused to reveal any details and said the report will be submitted before the court. The police were also criticised for letting the woman passenger in the car to go home in a taxi, although the victim was dead. KM Basheer, who was killed in the accident, was the Thiruvananthapuram bureau chief of Malayalam Daily Siraj. He is survived by wife Jaseela and two children. Basheer’s funeral was held on Saturday night at his hometown in Vadakara of Kozhikode district. Read: Blood sample of Sriram IAS taken in Basheer accident case: How cops read alcohol levels
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Kerala man stabs and throws acid on ex-wife allegedly for divorcing him

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Crime
While the 32-year-old woman is undergoing treatment, the accused is still absconding.
Image for representation
In a heinous act of revenge, a Kerala man stabbed and threw acid on his former wife on Saturday for allegedly divorcing him. The 32-year-old woman from Kozhikode was returning home after work when she was attacked. The incident took place at Kumaranellur in Kozhikode district around 6 pm on Saturday. Subash, a native of Mavoor in Kozhikode, was hiding in the bushes near her house when he ambushed and attacked her. The woman was stabbed multiple times, according to reports. Though the residents in the area rushed to the spot after hearing the screams of the woman, Subash fled the scene. According to police, the accused attacked the woman with the intention of taking her life. Speaking to TNM, an official at Mukkam police station in Kozhikode, said, “Subash was hiding in the bushes and waiting for her. On seeing her, he pounced on her, stabbed her multiple times with a knife and poured acid on her. Though she was stabbed multiple times, fortunately, the injuries are not deep and only her hands were burnt in the acid attack.” The woman sustained injuries on many parts of her body, including her neck and face, in the stabbing. She is admitted at Kozhikode Medical College for treatment. The woman has a nine-year-old child. The couple divorced eight months ago, and according to the police, the woman said this could be the reason for the attack. According to reports, the woman is presently married to another man. Subash, who was working abroad, carried out the attack when he came for leave. Report also states that he used to disturb the woman constantly over phone after the divorce.    The Mukkam police have started a probe in the incident but the accused Subash is still at large. “He is absconding since the incident, we have started a search for him,” said the official.
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SDPI member held for murder of Congress worker in Thrissur

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Crime
The arrest comes four days after Noushad was stabbed by a group of bike-borne assailants on Tuesday night.
A worker of Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) has been arrested for the murder of Congress party worker Noushad of Thrissur district in Kerala. Forty-year-old Noushad and other three Congress workers were attacked by a group of assailants on Tuesday night. Noushad, who was stabbed in the attack, succumbed to injuries on Wednesday while he was undergoing treatment at a private hospital in Thrissur. On Saturday, Chavakkad police arrested 26-year-old Mubin PM in connection with the attack. Police officials confirmed to TNM that Mubin was a member of SDPI. Soon after the death of Noushad, local Congress leaders and the Leader of Opposition, Ramesh Chennithala, had come out openly stating that SDPI members were behind the crime. According to the police, Mubin is one of the prime accused in the crime. He has been charged under section 149 (unlawful assembly) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). “He took part in the crime but is being questioned in detail to find out whether he was part of planning the murder. Accordingly, more charges will be slapped on him,” an official at the Chavakkad police station told TNM. Noushad was the booth president of the Congress in Chavakkad, Thrissur. According to reports, Mubin was arrested from Guruvayur KSRTC bus stand premises on Saturday. About 10 men, who came on motorcycles, had attacked three Congress workers Bijesh, Nishad and Suresh, in addition to Noushad, on Tuesday night. Though the police stated that the reason for the murder was yet to be ascertained, reports state that attack was following a ruckus between the Congress and SDPI in the area. Reports also state that because of Noushad’s influence in the area, many SDPI workers left the party and joined the Congress, which is also speculated to be one of the reasons for the attack. Ramesh Chennithala had raised criticisms that no accused have been arrested days after the murder. Hours before the SDPI worker was nabbed in the incident, Congress party members took a march towards the Chavakkad police station on Saturday, protesting the delay in arresting the accused. Read: Congress worker hacked to death by bike-borne assailants in Thrissur
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Kerala journo killed in accident by IAS officer: Questions raised on police laxity

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Controversy
IAS officer Sriram, who was arrested and remanded in the drunk driving accident, will be shifted to the government medical college from the private hospital where he is admitted presently.
A day after Thiruvananthapuram-based journalist KM Basheer was killed in an accident, questions continue to linger about the alleged police laxity in the investigation from the time the accident took place around 1 am on Saturday. Basheer was killed after his bike was rammed by a car allegedly driven by IAS officer Sriram Venkitaraman, who is currently the Survey Director. Sriram’s friend Wafa was also in the car at the time of the accident. Aravind Sasi, a journalist with Kala Kaumudi and a long-time friend of Basheer, recalls the sequence of events after he came to know that Basheer was hit by a car. Aravind was informed about the incident by a fellow journalist who had been informed by the police after getting Basheer’s details from his identity card. “I reached the accident spot around 1.45 am and then went to the Museum Police Station. At that time, neither the woman nor Sriram were at the station. Then I went to Medical College where Basheer had been shifted and came back to the police station by 3.30 am. I asked the police why the statement of the woman was not recorded if she was driving the car. The police response was that there were no women police personnel and hence the statement wasn’t recorded. Sub Inspector Jayaprakash was at the police station. I called the DGP then, and by 3.30 am the police summoned Wafa after calling two women personnel from the nearby Cantonment Police Station,” Aravind tells TNM. Also a medical graduate, Sriram first told police that he was a doctor. “When I went to the spot, a crime branch police personnel at the site told me that Sriram was driving the car, and it was Sriram who removed Basheer’s body from the bike and placed it on the road. Sriram told the police that he was a doctor, it seems police personnel at the spot didn’t recognise him, they recognised him when he gave his address later at the police station,” Aravind says. By the time Aravind came back from the Medical College, he learnt that Sriram was taken to the General Hospital by the police, who had not asked for his blood sample. Aravind asserts that one of the prime accusations against the police is that they allowed Sriram to leave the General Hospital by himself even when he was under police custody. Though Sriram was asked to go to the government medical college, he went to KIMS, one of the biggest private hospitals in the city. KIMS is located just 5 km from the General Hospital. According to Aravind, Sriram left the General Hospital by 2 am but reached KIMS only at 3.30 am. Aravind also claims the police are yet to check the CCTV visuals near Raj Bhavan. The spot where the accident took place is a prime location in the city, within a 1-km radius of the Chief Minister’s official residence and Raj Bhavan, the governor’s residence. City Police Commissioner Dinendra Kashyap, however, remained tightlipped. When asked about the grave lapse by the police in taking Sriram’s blood sample more than 9 hours after the incident, the Commissioner said that all aspects were being investigated. The Commissioner had maintained that they could not take blood samples as Sriram had not given consent. However, the law clearly gives the police the mandate to do that per Section 204 (2) (b) of the Motor Vehicles Act, which states that if the person having been required, whether at the hospital or elsewhere, to provide a specimen of breath for a breath test, has refused, omitted or failed to do so, a police officer can take blood sample if he or she has reasonable cause to suspect the accused of having alcohol in the blood. The blood samples were drawn after about 9 hours following the accident, reportedly at KIMS, after questions on the police investigation were raised and widely reported in the media. Sriram has been under remand at KIMS. After pressure from the journalist community, he is to be shifted to the Medical College later on Sunday. Meanwhile, participating at an event at the police academy in Thrissur, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said that everyone is equal before the law and that action would be taken whoever committed a crime. Opposition leader Ramesh Chennithala urged the government to suspend the IAS officer from service. He had also demanded that KIMS must issue a medical bulletin on Sriram’s condition and shift him to the Medical College, if needed, based on the bulletin.
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Amid drama, remanded Kerala IAS officer Sriram shifted to Medical College hospital

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Accident
The IAS officer was arrested on Saturday following the accident that killed 35-year-old journalist KM Basheer.
Kerala IAS officer Sriram Venkitaraman who has been remanded by police and admitted at a super specialty hospital in Thiruvananthapuram following an accident that resulted in the death of a journalist, was shifted to Government Medical College on Sunday after much drama.  The IAS officer was arrested on Saturday following the accident that killed 35-year-old journalist KM Basheer. Though later on Saturday he was remanded by the judicial magistrate for 14 days, Sriram was allowed to continue in the hospital. This kicked up a controversy as media raised questions on why Sriram was allowed to continue in a super speciality hospital and not being shifted to Government Medical College as is done usually. Reports had also stated that Sriram was getting luxury treatment inside the hospital, and that he was even found to be using phone and WhatsApp. The investigation officials or the hospital administration have not officially put out a statement on the health condition of Sriram, on what was the requirement for him to continue his stay at the super speciality hospital. This is even after media and a section of political leaders including Leader of Opposition Ramesh Chennithala, demanded to know the medical condition of the IAS officer. Following the controversy, orders were given to the administration of KIMS hospital, where he was admitted, for him to be shifted from there. Sriram was seen with his face covered as he was carried in a stretcher into the ambulance from KIMS. Though it was reported initially that Sriram will be shifted to Thiruvananthapuram Medical College, he was directly taken to the house of judicial magistrate Amal SR. The IAS officer was then taken to District Jail in Thiruvananthapuram after the magistrate examined him inside the ambulance. According to reports, the magistrate had stated that there was no need for Sriram to be admitted in hospital if his condition was found to be better. Though Sriram was finally brought to the District Jail, he was not taken inside the prison. A medical officer who came inside the ambulance examined Sriram and after more than an hour outside the entrance of District Jail, Sriram was again shifted again from there in an ambulance to Medical College hospital. Criticisms have been raised again and speculations are flying around as the medical condition of the IAS officer is yet to be declared in public. Leader of Opposition in Assembly, Ramesh Chennithala, demanded that a medical bulletin on the condition of Venkitaraman be released."According to the All India Service rules, now that his arrest has been recorded, he should be suspended from service... that has not happened. Also a probe should be initiated to find out how crucial lapses occurred the way the police handled this case after the accident occurred and for this Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan should act," the Congress leader said. State Public Works Department Minister and senior CPI(M) leader G. Sudhakaran said that IAS officers should be treated like common people. "If someone is IAS, it does not mean anything.... such people are not God," he said. Kerala Union of Working Journalists (KUWJ) on Sunday had put out a statement criticising the need for Sriram to be treated at a super speciality hospital while normally people will be sent in similar cases to Medical College hospital. Sriram Venkitraman, who is the Survey Director, was arrested under sections 279 (Rash driving) and 304 (Culpable homicide amounting to murder) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).
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Senior Congress MPs from Kerala threaten to boycott state's new representative in Delhi

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Politics
Kerala CM's decision to appoint CPI(M) leader A Sampath who lost the elections from Attingal this time did not sit well with the Congress MPs.
Upset by the decision of Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan of appointing a CPI(M) leader, who lost the Lok Sabha polls, to liaison with the Centre in Delhi, senior Congress MPs have threatened to boycott all meetings which the new appointee will attend. In a Cabinet meeting last week, Vijayan appointed three-time former Lok Sabha member A. Sampath as the state government's representative in Delhi. Senior Congress leader and son of K. Karunakaran, K. Muraleedharan, who registered a handsome win at the Vadakara Lok Sabha seat said on Sunday that the Chief Minister was sidelining all the MPs who had won the recent elections."This is a clear act of sidelining those who won the polls. We have nothing personal against Sampath and we wish he does not take up the post. We will not cooperate with this and in case he takes part in any meetings, we will even consider to boycott all such meetings. We are also planning to raise this issue in Parliament," said Muraleedharan. Sampath, who was aiming for a hat-trick of wins from the Attingal Lok Sabha constituency, was defeated by Congress legislator Adoor Prakash. The CPI(M)-led Left Front suffered one of its worst electoral reverses in the parliamentary polls when all but one of the 20 seats were won by the Congress-led UDF. Incidentally, Sampath's appointment comes at a time when there are 33 MPs from Kerala, which includes 20 Lok Sabha MPs, nine in the Rajya Sabha, two nominated members Suresh Gopi and Richard Hay (Anglo Indian), besides K.J. Alphons and Minister of State for External Affairs V. Muraleedharan (both elected to the Upper House from other states). Expressing his resentment over Sampath's appointment, Chalakudy Lok Sabha member and Congress veteran Benny Behanan said that the Kerala government did not consult with the MPs about his appointment."We are being sidelined by Vijayan. Even when the Parliament was in session, he did not even give us a copy of the memorandum that he gave to the Centre. Then came the appointment of Sampath which is nothing but an insult. We don't think there is a need to cooperate with the new appointee," said Behanan.
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When icons fall off pedestals: How Kerala reacted to arrest of Sriram IAS

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Reaction
The IAS officer, who has been hailed as a hero by many for his different stands, appears to have disappointed the many who admired him, following the accident that killed a journalist.
Honesty is very, very important – being true to yourself is as important as being true to others, Sriram Venkitaraman had said, sitting on a couch opposite Dhanya Varma, answering her question on what values he upholds the most. Values on which he doesn’t ever want to compromise. The IAS officer had given the interview on the Happiness Project about a year ago, at a time when he was hailed by many as one who could not be shaken. The tough one. Two days ago -- in the wee hours of August 3 -- when the car he was in smashed into a motorbike outside the Thiruvananthapuram Museum and killed the rider, the admirers could not believe the news. The dead man was a journalist of repute – KM Basheer, bureau chief of Siraj. Several reports said that Sriram had been drunk, that he'd insisted on driving in such a state, and that he'd tried to put the blame on the woman who was in the car. A day and a half later, Sriram is still in a high end hospital in Thiruvananthapuram – that he went to on his own accord – and being treated there, unavailable for comment. The police had recorded his arrest on Saturday evening. After the shock and the condolences, different versions of the accident began emerging – on who drove, how drunk Sriram was, conspiracy theories on why the blame was being "pinned" on Siram. He had just come back from Harvard and joined as director of the Kerala Survey Department. At Harvard, he did his Masters' in Public Health, taking a year off from work. He had left soon after a transfer following a controversy. Sriram as sub collector of Devikulam, Idukki, had been actively involved in an anti-encroachment drive. When he moved a Christian cross out of the way as part of the initiative, trouble erupted. The Kerala government – especially power minister MM Mani – had not been pleased with the move. Mani even said that Sriram should be sent to a "mental hospital". Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said it (removing the cross) was done without consulting the government and that the act would portray the government as anti-religion. But Sriram was admired for sticking to his stand. People expressed support for the sub collector they believed would stand no wrongdoing. Thus, Saturday morning came as a jolt for many. His fans took to the same social media they had once used to express their support. Radhika Gopakumar, a blogger, wrote, “A year-long sabbatical at Harvard for higher studies and back to service only recently, the last thing we imagined he would make the headlines for was drunken driving and manslaughter! Coming from a model officer who inspired so many, it is nothing but a disgraceful fall, especially with him lying that it was his friend who was driving at the time of the accident which killed a senior journalist. It is painful to think that a man of 35 lost his life only due to someone else’s negligence. It is also painful to think of how a promising young officer who could make a huge difference with his continued fight against corruption, threw all that away in such a deplorable manner.” She added that the justice for which he once fought would prevail, and that she hopes "he receives the punishment for what he has done, not only for the accident which was his making, but also for shattering the trust of so many who looked up to him".  Deepa Ananthapadmanabhan, a social entrepreneur, said, “It was quite a shocker. I have nothing against a person having a drink. But to drink and drive, trying to escape stating lies, not following the very laws one promised to uphold as a civil servant..... That was quite shocking coming from someone who looked promising in his chosen career.  I know quite a number of youngsters who looked up to him as a role model. This will be a letdown for most. But then such are the vagaries of life!” JV Ramana, an engineer with BSNL, Thiruvananthapuram, who has been recording a 100 Days of Running campaign on his Facebook, wrote that he had been on that Museum road, running, just two hours before the accident. He could easily have been a witness if it was a couple of hours later, or even turned out to be a victim. “A tragic end to the two promising youngsters who were contributing immensely to the society, one lost his life, and the other will be losing his career, and all because of liquor and drunken driving. Every drunkard feels that he is steady and can drive easily, never realising liquor is actually driving the senses,” Ramanan wrote, on the 99thday of his campaign. Along with the posts of disappointment, there were also those in Sriram’s favour – ridiculing people who were in a hurry to make a criminal of a “very truthful man”. Arguments broke out in the comments section of such posts, with some users pointing to the report of Sriram having tried to escape all blame by finding a scapegoat in the woman companion. “What kind of truthfulness is that?” they asked. Others picked out old videos of Sriram advocating road safety in sessions. In one of these -- a television programme with actor Annie -- Sriram had said that the least you could do when you cause or witness an accident is to help out the victim.   Dei Breik Progressive Minds has 24,847 members. 1. ഈ ഗ്രൂപ്പ് വിവിധ വിഷയങ്ങളില്‍ (കല, സാഹിത്യം, രാഷ്ട്രീയം, മതം, യുക്തിചിന്ത, കായികം തുടങ്ങിയവ) ചര്‍ച്ചകള്‍...   When a man and a woman who are not married to each travel in a car past midnight, it doesn't take too long for the issue to take a moralistic slant, though it is totally irrelevant to the accident. Some claimed that Sriram was attending a "joining back" party,  and since he was too drunk to drive, he'd called his friend to take him.  These supporters argued asking how someone who'd been so particular as to ask a friend to drive, would insist on driving himself later. Some went snooping around and dug out unnecessary details about the woman and her relationship with Sriram. “It is deeply disturbing how the morality factor in the Sriram Venkitaraman issue is being celebrated among the public and the media over the mourning of the death of an innocent man. While it is only natural to roast and mock him following the incident, the fact that he was with a female friend has been brought in multiple times, questioning their morality. Various media platforms are doing a great job as well, feeding the audience exactly what they desire. The laughing reaction in almost all the posts related to this incident proves that literacy and education has nothing to do with humanity,” wrote Krishna Radhakrishnan, a student of journalism. Another Facebook user put the focus on the victim and his bereaved family, adding a link of NRI businessman Yusuff Ali’s contribution to the family. “Have been seeing a lot of posts in social media against Sriram Venkitaraman. It is great that we are reacting spontaneously against such crimes. And being a democracy, it is of utmost importance to ensure that all are equal before law. It is equally important to do the needful for the journalist's family. He has two daughters aged 6 years and 6 months old respectively.” But the most common emotion is still shock, especially from those who have known Sriram for long. Writer NS Madhavan tweeted, “Attended a family function in which some of the relatives were Sriram’s old classmates and a former principal (Bhavan’s, Girinagar). They were all so immensely sad. The word most heard was why. Why oh why?” 
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Kerala International airports don't allow pets to be flown in, NRI-pet owners protest

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Pets
Currently, NRI pet-owners returning to Kerala cannot fly into any of the state’s four international airports.
Photo courtesy: www.yokota.af.mil
In May 2018, customs officials at Cochin International Airport seized a pet cat who had landed up with a Malayalee couple all the way from Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. After 24 tension-fraught hours without its parents, the cat was deported to Jeddah via the same airlines which had brought it to Cochin. CIAL's officials had then stated that Cochin was not a designated flying route for pets.  One year later, pet-owning gulf Malayalees returning to Kerala have protested the inability to fly-in animals directly to the state's four international airports. The lack of an animal quarantine centre in any of the four airports at Kochi, Kozhikode, Thiruvananthapuram and Kannur is what has led to quite a bit of inconvenience for NRIs who wish to bring their pets along. Sushil Varghese Mambara, a pet-owner based in Oman demanded that the state authorities take swift action to address the issue."It is high time the authorities concerned should act on swiftly to relieve the pet owners and their pets from unnecessary anguish as many of us Keralites are to be prepared leaving our present jobs due to many adverse factors. At the same time our pets became part of our daily life and do not want to abandon them to suffer," he wrote. Omana John, a gulf Malayalee with two dogs and two cats, expressed the inconvenience caused while traveling to Kerala."I am not allowed to take my pets to Kerala through any of Kerala airports.  We need a solution for this problem.  I hope kerala government will look into this issue and will come forward to help us," she added. In addition to protests by pet-owners, the issue has even led to higher rated of abandonment of pets by NRIs moving back home."The gulf economy is down and a lot of people are returning to Kerala for good. Many of them own dogs or cats and they want to bring them along. But as Kerala does not have any designated air routes for pets, we are seeing a lot of cases where these animals are being abandoned and this is rather sad," Jaison Mathai, founder of Tiger by the tail, a homeless animal welfare centre based in Oman tells TNM. Import of pets are only allowed in airports which have a certified animal quarantine facility. Pet owners have to produce a health certificate from the country of origin and upon arrival, the animal will also be inspected by an animal quarantine officer and then released. Currently, none of the airports in Kerala have an animal quarantine facility."Most pet owners fly into Chennai, Hyderabad or Bengaluru and enter Kerala via rail, road or air. But this is so inconvenient and results in unnecessary expenses. Besides, if these 3 South Indian cities can have an animal quarantine centre, why can't one airport in Kerala get the same?," Jaison asks. Pets accompanied by their owners can be flown into India as checked- baggage in select airports. In Mumbai, Chhatrapathi Shivaji International Airport and Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport, pets can even be flown in unaccompanied as air-cargo. To import over 2 dogs or cats into the country, a licence by the Director General of Foreign Trade is required. Speaking to TNM, a representative from Cochin International Airport said, "We have raised this concern a few times and are planning to take it up again. To set up an animal quarantine facility in any airport, the centre must give its approval and for this the state needs to make a request to the central government. We have a plant quarantine centre where officers insect ornamental plants etc and decide which ones can be allowed into the state. For animals, Chennai and Bengaluru are the closest designated air routes for pets." In February 2019, Jaison had even petitioned the Chief Minister's office highlighting the plight of pet owning gulf Malayalees who are retuning to Kerala. Despite promising to look into the matter, no steps has yet been taken on the issue, Jaison adds. People for Animals Kerala too has been roped in to support the demand for an animal quarantine facility in Kerala's airports. "We will be taking the issue up with the government. On behalf of People for Animals, we are planning to send a covering letter to the state requesting for the setting up of an animal quarantine facility in a few of the airports. We would like at least Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram airports to have this facility. We are expecting a positive response. PFA is concerned about plight of these poor animals and do not want them to be abandoned in gulf countries," Maria Jacob, trustee of People of Animals, Thiruvananthapuram, told TNM. 
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Kerala IAS officer Sriram suspended from service after arrest in accident case

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Bureaucracy
Sriram's car rammed into journalist KM Basheer's bike in the early hours of Saturday in Thiruvananthapuram.
PC/Sri Ram Venkitaraman Facebook
IAS officer Sriram Venkitaraman has been suspended from service after he was arrested for his involvement in the death of journalist KM Basheer. Sriram's car rammed into Basheer's bike in the early hours of Saturday in Thiruvananthapuram near the Museum public. Basheer was killed in the incident.  The government issued an order for the suspension on Monday. Sriram was serving as the Survey Director and has been remanded to judicial custody. Sriram was booked under Indian Penal Code Sections 279 (Rash driving or riding on a public way) and 304 (Culpable homicide not amounting to murder). Basheer had been working as the Thiruvananthapuram bureau head of the Siraj Daily. According to the order issued by Chief Secretary Tom Jose, “Government views the matter seriously and accordingly Shri Sriram V IAS is placed under suspension with immediate effect under Rule 3 (3) of All India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Rules, 1969. The officer will be eligible for subsistence allowance.”   Meanwhile, the Chief Judicial  Magistrate Court in Thiruvananthapuram has adjourned the hearing for the bail plea to Tuesday. Sriram was allegedly drunk at the time of the accident, but police did not conduct a blood examination until nine hours later. He admitted himself to a private hospital allegedly without police accompaniment.  Sriram had taken a year off work and had been studying for his Masters degree in Public Health at Harvard University. He returned a week ago and the government had appointed him as the director of the Land and Survey Department. After the accident on Saturday, he was shifted to government medical college on Sunday evening amid drama. From the specialty hospital KIMS, where he was admitted and where his arrest was recorded, Sriram was taken directly to the house of the judicial magistrate. He was later taken to the district jail in Thiruvananthapuram, and then to the Government Medical College. SIT to probe incident A special investigation team (SIT), headed by ADGP (Law and Order) Shaik Dervesh Saheb, has been formed to probe the accident in detail. State Police Chief Loknath Behera issued the order in this regard on Monday evening. Crime Branch Superintendent of Police (SP) A Shanavas, Thiruvananthapuram City Narcotic Cell Assistant Commissioner Sheen Tharayil, Vizhinjam Coastal police station Inspector A Aji Chandran Nair and Crime Branch Sub-Inspector SS Suresh Babu are the team members. Sheen Tharayil has been designated as the prime investigating officer. The team has been given directions to submit the report  at the earliest. Also Read: Kerala journo killed in accident by IAS officer: Questions raised on police laxity  
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How students of this Kerala school are reviving paddy fields polluted by tourists

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Environment
Students of Govt Vocational Higher Secondary School, Kadamakkudy have so far cleared waste from a 2-km polluted stretch of paddy fields along the Kadamakkudy Road in Ernakulam.
A 40-minute ride will take you away from the hustle and bustle of Kochi city to Kadamakkudy Islands cluster, located amidst the backwaters of Vembanad Lake. Valiya Kadamakkudy, one of the islands in this cluster, is mostly covered by paddy fields. The natural beauty of this place and good roads have made it one of the favourite leisure spots for people in and around Kochi. But with the increasing inflow of sightseers on a daily basis, the paddy fields along the roadsides are now turning into waste dumping spots, threatening the fragile ecosystem of the place. Kadamakkudy (Credits: FB / ErnakulamKochiKerala) The students of Government Vocational Higher Secondary School in Kadamakkudy are on an endeavour to address this growing issue and restore the paddy fields to their pristine glory.  The paddy fields are also home to an endemic paddy variety – the Pokkali rice, which has got a Geographical Indication (GI)-tag. About 75 higher secondary students of this school, have so far cleared about two-kilometre polluted stretch of paddy fields along the Kadamakkudy Road. Interestingly, the garbage collected from here is recycled by the students into ornamental items. The school officials with the collaboration of National Service Scheme unit and the summer internship program of Suchitwa Mission, have given training to the students on how the garbage can be recycled to make useful products. Using the waste bottles and vessels picked up from these fields, the students are making vertical gardens and ornamental pieces. Beer bottles, which are the mostly commonly collected waste item from here, are being converted by the students into beautiful indoor decorative pieces. Apart from helping to clean the fields, sale of these decorative pieces is also providing a source of revenue for the students to extend their community programmes. Gijo Ittoop, a teacher and NSS program officer of the school, tells TNM about the activities of the students and the reason behind this initiative. “As part of our green initiatives, we used to make the students cultivate Pokkali rice, which is one of the special varieties of paddy in Kerala. We used to take the fields around the schools for lease and had successfully completed cultivation in the last few years. But this year, we couldn’t do it as children were finding it difficult to enter into the fields for cultivation since the area was full of waste bottles. There were even broken beer bottles embedded in the soil. Unless this is cleared, no cultivation is possible here,” says Gijo. She also says that the fields have started to get polluted as more people have started to come and spend time in the area. “These paddy fields are very significant because these are Pokkali fields, which have unique characteristics and are endemic in nature,” says Gijo. Pokkali fields Another important reason for the students to take up the initiative was also because of the significance of the Pokkali fields. Pokkali is one of the major natural organic farming varieties of rice prevalent in Kerala. With the GI-tag, it is a saltwater tolerant paddy variety endemic to just about 33 panchayats, two municipalities and one corporation, spread across Ernakulam, Alappuzha and Thrissur districts in the state. The fields are submerged in the saline water of the backwaters for most of the year. With the onset of monsoon, the salinity of the soil gradually decreases and the water become fresh and fit for cultivation of paddy. Pokkali rice is usually cultivated in the months of June to October.   Neither fertilisers nor chemicals are used to cultivate the crop. The tidal flow of the backwaters and the natural deposit of aquatic weeds makes the Pokkali fields nutrient rich. “It is our responsibility not to spoil a place which has got these many specialities, which is also a livelihood for a lot of people. It is in fact our duty to preserve this natural resource and beauty of the place,” says Gijo.
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‘BJP slaughtering democracy by bifurcating Jammu & Kashmir’: LDF

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Politics
The ruling CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front is planning to organise a protest against the Kashmir Reorganisation Bill at 200 places across the state on August 7.
From Left A Vijayaraghavan, Ramesh Chennithala and Oommen Chandy.
The ruling CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front will organise a protest in 200 places across the state against the Centre introducing the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Bill. The protest that has been scheduled for August 7, will be in the form of demonstrations and public meetings, LDF convenor A Vijayaraghavan told TNM. “This is slaughtering of the democracy, once again after the Emergency. Jammu and Kashmir symbolises the secularism of the country in front of the world – the secularism between Hindus and Muslims. By erasing this symbol, the BJP has proved that it has no national interest and that they don’t view the country as a diverse one. It’s against the pluralist principles of the country,” Vijayaraghavan said. “With the bifurcation of Kashmir, the Sangh Parivar government led by Modi has implemented a decision to sacrifice democracy and constitution”, said Opposition Leader Ramesh Chennithala. “What has been exposed through this is the agenda of the Sangh Parivar. With this decision, Modi and Amit Shah have divided the people of the country and not solely Kashmir. They have done this sabotage of democracy without discussions or debates and by keeping Parliament in the dark. All the former governments had taken all actions relating to Kashmir by taking the people of Kashmir into confidence. But the BJP government has unilaterally imposed their agenda of division by silencing. The BJP has created a situation similar to that of 1947 when the country was divided. The BJP is moving towards eventually erasing the Constitution of India,” the Congress leader said in a statement. Former Chief Minister and senior leader of the Congress, Oommen Chandy said that it is a huge blow to the secular, democratic and federal values of the country. Oommen Chandy, who is currently AICC General Secretary, also said that by isolating Kashmir, the Centre is destroying the Indian Constitution and fanning communalism in the country."It is the special power and rights that had been given to Jammu and Kashmir for the past seven decades which have been scrapped without holding any discussion. The Centre is implementing this by putting prominent political leaders there behind bars, by deploying army in huge numbers and by keeping the people hostage. The cost for this will be too high," he warned."It won’t be surprising if the anti-constitutional actions will be extended to other places as well. The Congress will organise a nationwide protest against this," he said. Meanwhile, state Police Chief Loknath Behera has issued a high-security alert for all districts in Kerala."No move that would cause law and order situation will be allowed", the DGP said in a statement. The DGP has directed district police chiefs to deploy police officials at various places and to take action if needed, after reviewing the situation.  Also Read; What is Article 370? What does its revocation mean for J&K, and other Indian states?  
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Kerala SFI members accused in Univ College stabbing case removed from PSC rank list

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Controversy
An internal committee found the three accused guilty of malpractices during the police constable examinations of the Kerala Public Service Commission.
Sivaranjith
In a major turn of events, regarding the Public Service Commission controversy in Kerala, the names of Sivaranjit, Nizam and Pranav – the members of the Students Federation of India (SFI) of the Thiruvananthapuram University College accused of stabbing a fellow student – have been removed from the police constable rank list. The three have also been barred for life from taking the PSC examinations. According to reports, the action was taken after an internal Vigilance committee discovered major irregularities and malpractices in the police constable examinations of the Kerala PSC in which Sivaranjith had secured the first rank, Pranav secured the second rank and Nizam had secured 27th rank. Questions were raised regarding the irregularities in the PSC examinations after bundles of Kerala University answer sheets were seized by the police from the house of Sivaranjit, who is the main accused in the stabbing case of an undergraduate student at the University College during clashes. The seizure of answer sheets was followed by the findings that three of the accused were also rank holders in the PSC examinations which had raised eyebrows. As per a report by The New Indian Express (TNIE), the PSC issued a statement saying that according to the report submitted by their internal vigilance committee on August 5, 2019, it was found that all the three accused have indeed engaged in malpractices during the examinations. As per the TNIE report, the commission will be approaching the Kerala police in order to file a criminal case regarding the matter. The vigilance committee had also carried out an investigation into the activities of the registered mobile phones of the three candidates with the help of the cyber police and it was discovered that the three had been receiving answers of the examinations via SMS. According to a report by News18 Malayalam, the Vigilance Committee will also request the police to carry out an investigation into whether any scientific and technological methods have been used to cheat during the PSC examinations and who are the people who have been helping the accused to cheat in the examinations. 21-year-old Akhil, a student of Political Science at the University College as well as an active member of the college SFI unit, was stabbed by the three last month after a scuffle between SFI members turned violent.
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'The Fat Lady Scribbles': Meet the Kerala artist who challenges body shaming on Instagram

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Art
Nimmy Mohammed Saffir uses the Instagram handle The Fat Lady Scribbles, a name that many had asked her to change, but one she proudly sticks to.
At first, ‘The Fat Lady Scribbles’ was just a name she chose to have an identity of her own. Nimmy Mohammed Saffir didn’t think too much about it, just needing a handle on Instagram when she decided to come back to art after many years. It had been a hobby once, but it’s quite a stress reliever now, an answer perhaps to all the body-shaming comments she and many other women face every day of their lives. “It was when people began suggesting that I should change the handle that I decided to stick with it. I mean, random people – strangers on the internet – were telling me what I should name my handle,” says Nimmy, on a day she is visiting Thiruvananthapuram. Nimmy grew up in Kollam, finished her electronics engineering and became a lecturer. Not for long, though. She went on to learn graphics and the web. “But then I got married, had a child, moved to Dubai and took a long break from work and art,” Nimmy says. She’s moved back to India now, and is rediscovering her love for art. “It began as lettering and inking. I put quotes – my own words or else ones that inspire me for which I give credit. And then I began using digital media, and with it, pictures of fat women in the nude,” says Nimmy.       View this post on Instagram         "Into the trash goes all those unwanted opinions. Thanks for your concern. It doesn't HELP" . . Recently I have been getting alot of unwanted opinions and comments. Seriously, I don't know what really bothers the people. My body is not of ur concern. Cheers . . #procreate #thefatladyscribbles #bodypositive #bodyshaming #procreatedrawing #digitalart #digitalillustration #procreateillustration #illustration #ipadsketch #sketch #instaart #fatwomen #fatisbeautiful #curvywomen #curvygirl #boldandcurvy #curvyillustration #womenillustration #graphicdesignersclub @graphicdesignersclub A post shared by Nimmy Mohammed saffir (@the_fat_lady_scribbles) on Jul 8, 2019 at 12:11pm PDT  It didn’t take long for the moral police to come with their unasked-for opinions, suggestions, commands - sent to her as direct messages. “A Muslim woman should wear a hijab,” one said. “You should not be drawing women in the nude, especially fat women!” said another. It didn’t bother Nimmy. It used to – body shaming comments said in person, over the internet, random people she met giving her tips to lose weight. “It stopped bothering me after a point. I think I just matured. I wouldn’t lose weight to please anyone, but I would if I need to for health reasons.” There’d be comments of concern too. “People who never met me saw my handle and said don’t worry, I am not fat. And then I would say, yes of course I am fat, you have not met me!” It is just a fact that she has accepted, but somehow others are not able to. Nimmy could not understand what everyone’s problem was with the word fat. Some would advise her to make it ‘broad’ because fat is just unhealthy. Nimmy responds to all such comments with a hash tag ‘fatisbeautiful’ and then that would bring another bunch of offended reactions – ‘you are glorifying something unhealthy’. But what keeps Nimmy going is the need to do this for herself and other women like her, burdened every day by body-shaming comments. “Once I got a message from a 20-year-old, who weighed 100 kgs. She seemed suicidal, she said she just couldn’t take it anymore. I am happy I am able to help out such young people, through my art.”       View this post on Instagram         "What if u fall?, What if I fly!!! #thefatladyscribbles #procreate #procreateillustration . . #procreatedrawing #ipadsketch #ipadart #curvygirl #curvyillustration #fatisbeautiful #curvywomen #bodypositive #artistsoninstagram #graphicdesign #digitalart A post shared by Nimmy Mohammed saffir (@the_fat_lady_scribbles) on Jul 13, 2019 at 12:21pm PDT  From being a naïve young woman once, Nimmy has grown into a confident artist, very sure of what she wants in life. She didn’t think she was a feminist until she realised all the women she admired and followed were one, and it is that quality that attracted her – the stands against patriarchy, male chauvinism and the decision to take control of your life. “The feminichi (word used to mock Malayali feminists, but one many proudly attach themselves to) inside me just came out,” she says, laughing.
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Kerala IAS officer Sriram gets bail in accident case, without spending a night in jail

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Accident
The court said that police had failed to prove if he was drunk during the accident.
Sriram Venkitaraman, the IAS officer who was arrested for his involvement in the drunk driving accident that led to the death of journalist KM Basheer, has been granted bail. The Chief Judicial Magistrate Court, Thiruvananthapuram, granted him the bail on Tuesday. Basheer was the Thiruvananthapuram Bureau Chief of Siraj newspaper.  After spending two nights in the 'remand cell' of the Government Medical College in Thiruvananthapuram on Sunday and Monday, he was granted bail without the police having given custody. Asking how the officials concluded that Sriram was drunk at the time of the accident, the court rejected the plea to grant the police his custody. Meanwhile, the Siraj management, which manages Siraj newspaper, has filed a plea to subject him for a dope test and also to include the police as accused in the case. Reacting to the bail, the Kerala Union of Working Journalists (KUWJ) General Secretary C Narayanan said that the people understood the hidden motives of the police in the case and there will be protests from journalists. The union will also move legally. In the early hours of Saturday, Sriram’s car had rammed into the motorcycle of Basheer, which was parked on the roadside. There was another passenger in the car. According to eyewitnesses, Sriram drove the car and was visibly drunk. The police, however, came under fire for not taking Sriram’s blood sample for alcohol content soon after the accident. It was only nine hours after the accident the blood test was conducted and the arrest was recorded.   Sriram was arrested for the drunk driving incident that killed 35-year-old Basheer early Saturday morning. The accident took place at 1 am on Saturday near the museum public office in Thiruvananthapuram.  He was booked under Indian Penal Code Sections 279 (Rash driving or riding on a public way) and 304 (Culpable homicide not amounting to murder). He was remanded to judicial custody on Monday and was suspended from service as the Survey Director. Meanwhile, on Monday, a special investigation team (SIT), headed by ADGP (Law and Order) Shaik Dervesh Saheb, has been formed to probe the accident in detail. State Police Chief Loknath Behera issued the order in this regard on Monday evening. When icons fall off pedestals: How Kerala reacted to arrest of Sriram IAS  
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Kerala cops nab two men for harassing, assaulting TN couple in Wayanad

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Crime
The incident, which took place on July 21, went viral after a video of three men assaulting the couple went viral on social media.
Image courtesy: Mathrubhumi News
A special investigation team of the Wayanad police have arrested the main accused in the Ambalavayal moral policing case, where three men allegedly harassed and beat up a young couple from Tamil Nadu and attempted to rape the woman.  The main accused, identified as 39-year-old Sajeevanandan, was arrested on Monday, confirmed Mananthavady ASP Vaibhav Saxena, who led the team which tracked down the accused.  Sources aware of the developments also confirmed that Sajeevanandan had fled to Karnataka to evade arrest and was working as a farm labourer when he was tracked down. "There are three accused and we have arrested two of the accused so far. Search is on for the third accused who only accompanied the two others. We were initially focusing on tracking down the first two accused," Vaibhav told TNM.  On July 21, the husband who hails from Ooty and the wife from Coimbatore, had arrived at Ambalavayal and had taken a room at a lodge, which was owned by second accused Kumar. Kumar called Sajeevandan and the third accused and entered the couple's room when the husband had stepped out. "Under the assumption that the man and woman were friends, the accused persons entered the woman's room and demanded that she sleep with them, without her consent. When the husband returned and got to know what happened, a physical fight broke out between the accused and the couple," an officer at the Ambalavayal station added.  On vacating the lodge, the third accused - Roy -  allegedly held the woman's hand and asked her to stay back, the officer added. As they were walking to the town bus stop, Sajeevanandan and Kumar came in their bike and stopped them. Following this, the Sajeevanandan allegedly beat up both the man and the woman.  The incident came to light after a video of the three men assaulting the couple spread on social media shortly after the incident took place. "We have registered a case under sections 452 (house trespass after preparation for hurt, assault or wrongful restraint), 341 (punishment for wrongful restraint), 323 (physical assault), 294 - B (uttering obscene words in public), 354 (Assault or criminal force to woman with intent to outrage her modesty), 354 (A) (2) - punishment for sexual harassment, 354 (B) - assault or criminal force on woman with intent to disrobe, 354 (D) (1) - stalking, 427 (mischief causing damage to the amount of Rs 50), 325 (punishment for voluntarily causing grievous hurt), 506 (criminal intimidation), 511 of 376 (attempt to rape) and 34 (acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the IPC," the officer said. 
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‘Will probe mobile phone activities of other rank-holders also’: Kerala PSC chairman

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Controversy
MK Sakeer was speaking on irregularities in the PSC exams after the names of three SFI members of University College, accused in the stabbing case, were removed from the police constable rank list.
The Chairman of the Kerala Public Service Commission (PSC) had a lot of explaining to do on Tuesday regarding the controversy surrounding the irregularities in the Public Service Commission (PSC) examinations, after the names of three SFI (Students Federation of India) members of the Thiruvananthapuram University College, accused in a stabbing case at the same college, were removed from the police constable rank list. Sivaranjit, Nizam and Pranav of the SFI — the student’s wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), have been barred for life from taking the PSC examinations after an Internal Vigilance Committee discovered major irregularities and malpractices in the police constable examinations of the Kerala PSC in which Sivaranjith had secured the first rank, Pranav got the second rank and Nizam had secured 27th rank. With the help of cyber police, these three have come under the suspicion of using their mobile phones through which they allegedly received the answers for the examination through SMS. Addressing the media on Tuesday, MK Sakeer, the Chairman of the Kerala PSC stated that the Commission will register a complaint with the police regarding the findings of the Vigilance Committee and will request an investigation into all the other rank holders as well, regarding any sort of malpractices. “We have already sought the help of the cyber police to investigate into the mobile phone activities of all other rank holders as well,” added Sakeer. By reiterating that no harm has been done to the trust of the people in the PSC as an institution, Sakeer stated that the PSC has always been at the forefront of tackling any malpractices that have been reported over the years. “There have been issues of examination hall malpractices in the past as well, and we have investigated into each and every issue and solved it.” The chairman said that PSC takes all complaints very seriously and that even if they receive a complaint from an anonymous letter, they will look into it. “As far as the PSC is concerned, whether or not a complaint is controversial, we will investigate the matter and take necessary action,” he added. Questions were raised regarding the irregularities in the PSC examinations after bundles of Kerala University answer sheets were seized by the police from the house of Sivaranjit, who is the main accused in the stabbing of an undergraduate student at the University College during clashes. The seizure of answer sheets was followed by the findings that three of the accused were also rank holders in the PSC examinations which had raised eyebrows. Following the allegations, an internal Vigilance Committee led by senior police officials was formed to look into the matter. During the investigations, the statements of the fellow candidates as well as invigilators of the three exam centres were taken and they indicated no discrepancies, according to the chairman. As part of the investigation, the Vigilance Committee looked into the mobile phone activities of the three students. “It was found that the accused were receiving text messages from a couple of numbers during the exam timings and this led to the suspicion about them using unfair means in the examination hall,” said Sakeer. According to Sakeer, the ‘Rules of Procedure (22)’ of the PSC state that a candidate can be disqualified from the rank list and barred from taking the examinations in future if there is a suspicion of malpractice and that a police complaint can be registered against the candidate in this regard. “More than anyone, the PSC is hell-bent in finding out all the persons involved in the malpractice and in taking the necessary steps at the earliest. And we are leaving no stone unturned to ensure that all the issues are solved promptly. We have decided to file a police complaint based on the reports regarding the mobile phone allegations,” said the PSC chairman. Read: Kerala SFI members accused in Univ College stabbing case removed from PSC rank list
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IAS Sriram drunk driving case: Can blood alcohol reading be 'altered' using meds?

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Accident case
A day after the accident in Thiruvananthapuram involving IAS officer Sriram Venkitaraman, suspected of drunken driving, there was speculation of him taking medication ahead of the delayed blood test.
Speculation that has been doing the rounds about the Sriram Venkitaraman accident case in Thiruvananthapuram is how the IAS officer took medication to remove traces of alcohol in his blood, and how the delayed blood test has hence proved negative. It was around 1am on Saturday when the car in which Sriram and a woman were in hit a parked bike in front of the Museum and killed a journalist. KM Basheer died before reaching the hospital. Different versions of the story have emerged as to who was driving the car and how it was a case of drunken driving. Sriram who refused to take the blood test immediately had gone to the KIMS private hospital on his own accord and got admitted there for treating his injuries. It is there that some speculate Sriram, who has completed his medical studies before becoming a civil servant, took medication to remove traces of alcohol content so that a delayed blood test will help prove him innocent. It took nine hours from the time of the accident – 1 am on August 3 – to finally do the blood test on Sriram. “Even without medicine, alcohol content can be eliminated in nine hours,” says Dr Sampath Kumar, forensic expert. “You can take plenty of water or a medication that will produce urine, through which all the toxins will be washed away. Like diuretics, which are medications used to increase the amount of water and salt expelled from the body as urine. This will cause you to be dehydrated and make you take plenty of water, like what happens during dialysis.” However, gastroenterologist Dr Surendran says diuretics will not affect the blood alcohol level, it has to do with the metabolism of the person. “If someone has a high metabolism, then the liver will quickly break down the alcohol, however if their metabolism isn't that high, then it's possible that the alcohol may stay in the blood up to 24 hours, in theory. In practice, it usually stays in the blood for 12 hours or so,” he says. In both cases, a delayed blood test can help the accused. A general physician from Chennai also agrees that the blood alcohol level will go down on its own within a span of a few hours. “There is no specific medication per say which will cause the blood alcohol level to go down. But if there are medications that the person is taking, it makes the liver enzymes work faster. This is just theory, for argument, in case such a medication exists. In practice, however, it is not seen.” On average it takes about one hour for your body to break down one unit of alcohol, according to the UK National Health Service. One unit of alcohol is equivalent to 10ml or 8g of pure alcohol. Late consultant physician Alex Paton, in his paper ‘Alcohol in the Body’, wrote that more than 90% of alcohol is metabolised by liver and only 2-5% of it is excreted in urine, sweat, or breath. On an empty stomach, blood alcohol concentration peaks about one hour after drinking. Lawyer Manu Sebastian cannot recall a similar case where an accused has used medication to remove alcohol traces after drunken driving. “But in this case, evidences other than a blood test can be used to prove drunken driving. It is only in the Motor Vehicles Act that it says a blood test is a statutory condition for punishment in drunken driving. But here IPC 304 is charged. So other evidences – for example, a bill that shows how many drinks the accused ordered before the ride – can be used. Testimonies can also be used,” Manu argues. 
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15 dogs allegedly hammered to death in Kerala’s Malappuram, FIR filed

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Animal cruelty
A video showing the dead dogs in a vehicle prompted an animal rights organisation to file a complaint.
The Manjeri police station in Malappuram, Kerala, filed an FIR against the killing of 15 stray dogs in the district. The case was filed after a complaint by Humane Society International, India. The incident came to light after a video which was circulated on social media showed 15 dead stray dogs dumped into a truck reportedly owned by the Manjeri municipality. Voices in the video also spoke about hammering the stray dogs to death.  All of the dogs were also sterilised and vaccinated. The Humane Society International, India conducts sterilisation drives for stray dogs every 2 years in Manjeri. The dogs in the video had ear tags which proved that they too had been sterilised.  Malappuram is a district in Kerala where HSI India carried out vaccination and sterilization programs for over two years.  According to a TOI report, Manjeri’s municipal chairperson VM Subaida stated that the municipality had nothing to do with the culling of stray dogs but had merely lent a tipper truck to transport the dead dogs. She also added that the incident took place in Thurakkal, near the Manjeri bypass road, where resident were reportedly battling the stray dog menace.   HSI India’s campaign coordinator Sally Varma said that it was unfortunate that such cullings of stray dogs happened in a place where the organisation had worked to see almost 70 percent of the dogs had been sterilised.  “This is a blatant violation of the orders of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India which has repeatedly said that street dogs cannot be killed,” she added, thanking the Manjeri police for filing an FIR on the issue.  Killing of stray dogs is prohibited as per IPC section 429 and subsections 11(a) and (l) of Prevention of Cruelty to Animals act. A case was registered under the same sections by the Manjeri police.
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Sr Lucy, who protested against rape accused Bishop Franco expelled for her 'lifestyle'

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Church
Sister Lucy of Mananthavady Diocese in Wayanad was given two letters prior to this, warning her for her “lifestyle” and for challenging the wrongdoings of the Church.
She wrote and published her poems, learnt how to drive, bought a car and even supported the protests against rape accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal. These are Sister Lucy Kalappura’s crimes according to the Franciscan Clarist Congregation (FCC), for which she has been dismissed from the congregation on Monday. Superior General of FCC, Ann Joseph, issued the letter, dated August 5, to Sister Lucy, stating that she “did not show the needed remorse and you failed to give a satisfactory explanation for your lifestyle in violation of the proper law of the FCC”. The General Council, which was held on 11 May 2019, unanimously voted to dismiss her from the FCC. This decree was sent to the Congregation for the Oriental Churches in the Vatican through the Nunciature in New Delhi. This, according to the letter, received confirmation from the Vatican. “The Congregation for the Oriental Churches, by virtue of the faculty given to it by the Supreme Pontiff Pope Francis having considered everything seriously, has granted the confirmation, as per the request, so that the same professed one remains freed from her religious profession and other obligations and separated from her Religious Congregation, and to be considered dismissed from her religious life, and to be considered as a simple layperson the other things to be done what are to be done according to the law,” a part of the letter of confirmation from Vatican read. Sister Lucy has been given a deadline of 10 days to make recourse to the Congregation for the Oriental Churches against this decree of dismissal. “In case you accept this decree of dismissal without any recourse, as per canon law and as per the decree of confirmation, you will be freed from the obligations of the vows of chastity, poverty and obedience that you have taken in the Franciscan Clarist Congregation and you will have no more rights and duties in the Franciscan Clarist Congregation and hence, you are to leave the present community within 10 days from the reception of this communication, after having handed over your religious habit to the superior of your local community,” the letter added. Reacting to this decree, Sister Lucy told the media, “There is no fault on my part. I will not move out from the convent and I will fight against this (dismissal) legally.” Sister Lucy of Mananthavady Diocese in Wayanad was given two letters prior to this, warning her for her “lifestyle” and for challenging the Church for cornering the survivor nun in the rape case against Franco Mulakkal. Even then, she stood by what she says now, that she has not done anything wrong, but has been right. The first letter was issued in January, and the second one in February. In both letters, the Superior General pointed out that her life was “against the principles of religious life” and “against the rule and constitution of FCC”. In fact, a few days after joining the protests led by five nuns of Missionaries of Jesus in September 2018, Sister Lucy was banned from teaching the Bible and attending prayers, worship services and other activities of the parish, including offering holy communion. Publishing poems, supporting rape survivor: 'Crimes' by Sr Lucy, according to church
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