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Thursday, October 8, 2009

Venkatraman wins Nobel

Cambridge/Ahmedabad
Oct. 7: Indian-born American scientist Dr Venkatraman Ramakrishnan has won the 2009 Nobel Prize in chemistry for studies of the structure and function of the ribosome.

Dr Ramakrishnan, 57, who was born in Chidambaram of Tamil Nadu, shares the prize with Thomas A. Steitz of Yale University and Ada E. Yonath of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.

They demonstrated what the ribosome looks like and how it functions at an atomic level using a visualisation method called X-ray crystallography. Ribosomes produce proteins, which in turn control the chemistry in all living organisms.

Dr Venkatraman’s studies will in the long run enable better targeting of antibiotics that work by blocking the ability of bacteria to make the proteins it needs to function. The shy and modest Dr Venkatraman initially thought it was a prank when he was informed that he had won the Nobel.

“I didn’t actually believe it,” he said. “It was quite a shock initially. I only believed it after talking to the other people in the room at the Swedish Academy.”

Dr Ramakrishnan, who is a visiting professor at the Indian Institute of Sciences in Bengaluru, said he had been working for a long time on the problem of how a cell takes information encoded in the gene and uses it to make protein. “We wanted get the structure of these atomic sub-units,” he said. “It was in the mid-1990s that technology had advanced enough to enable us to do that. It was in 2000 that the structure for both halves of ribosome became determined.”

Revealing his India connection, Dr Venkatraman, who is called Venki by his colleagues, said he did his schooling and pre-university college in India, before moving to the US. He has has a doctorate from the Ohio University.

Source::DC

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It’s time for operation relief

HYDERABAD/KURNOOL/VIJAYAWADA
Oct. 7: With floodwaters receding in most parts of the affected districts, the focus of the state administration has shifted to massive relief works to provide succour to the affected people.

The flood-hit districts are in dire need of sanitation, supply of essential commodities and normal transportation services. Kurnool and Mahbubnagar districts are slowly limping back to normalcy, but the slush on the streets is making relief work difficult. District officials have engaged more than 2,000 workers just to clean it up.

Sanitation officials said about 750 tonnes of debris had been deposited by the flood waters in the city. Residents are also facing a severe shortage of essential commodities and are being forced to pay Rs 100 for an ordinary meal.

Floods in Kurnool, Mahbubnagar, Krishna, Guntur, Nalgonda, Kadapa and Prakasam districts have also resulted in crop loss to the tune of Rs 1,250 crore. Meanwhile, the Centre on Wednesday said it had released in advance the second instalment of Central share for the Calamity Relief Fund of Rs 156.84 crore for Andhra Pradesh.

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Girish takes over as new DGP

Hyderabad
Oct. 7: The low profile and suave Mr R.R. Girish Kumar is the state’s new director general of police. In a minor but effective reshuffle at the top levels of police, the Chief Minister, Mr K. Rosaiah, on Wednesday replaced the DGP, Mr S.S.P. Yadav. Mr Yadav was a favourite of the late Y.S. Rajasekhar Reddy, but had been under fire for not responding properly to his disappearance and death.

Another YSR favourite, Mr K. Aravind Rao, who was heading the crucial intelligence bureau, was also shifted to the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) in place of Mr Girish Kumar.

The senior police officer, Mr P. Gautam Kumar, who was initially considered for the ACB, was made principal secretary of the home department.

However, the Chief Minister took care to give a message to the police machinery that he was not vindictive. Mr Yadav got a plum posting as managing director of the AP State Road Transport Corporation.

Mr Dinesh Reddy, another official who held key posts under YSR, had to make way for Mr Yadav. Instead, he was made director general of vigilance and enforcement.

By making changes at the top level, Mr Rosaiah has also indicated that the reins of the government are firmly in his hands. Mr Yadav’s transfer was a foregone conclusion and the government promoted Mr Kumar as a special case since rules permitted only three DGs in the sanctioned cadre posts.

The outgoing DGP made a last-ditch effort to stay on by currying favour with the home minister, Ms Sabita Indra Reddy, and YSR’s close friend, Dr K.V.P. Ramachandra Rao. But it did not work. The CM, however, saw to it that Mr Yadav was accommodated in a respectable manner. Sources said Mr Aravind Rao had sought a transfer from the post of intelligence chief as he had held it for more than five years.

He was reportedly in a dilemma as he had to gather intelligence against the dissident activity of the YSR camp headed by his son Mr Jagan Mohan Reddy and brief the CM.

Source::DC

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Ready for T20, says confident Laxman

Hyderabad
Oct. 7: He is regarded as the best in the business and VVS Laxman looks fit and fresh as he takes guard for the T20 test which begins on Thursday in the form of Champions League. The Hyderabadi promises to put up a good show for the Deccan Chargers.
Speaking about his recent stint with Lancashire, Laxman said, “It is always great to play a county season in England as that not only keeps you match fit but gives you useful outing in the middle. They have a great set of boys who get along well and playing is fun.”
Laxman was part of the victorious Deccan Chargers side that won the coveted IPL-2 trophy in South Africa. When asked on the crucial element of that success, VVS said, “It’s a brilliant outfit and what is exceptional about this bunch is that most of them played IPL in South Africa on bouncy wickets. They adapted to those pitches quickly.”
He mentioned that playing in front of the home crowd will work in favour of the Chargers. “We will definitely have a home advantage when we play in Hyderabad. There is no added burden on us at all as we have tasted success and it is only a matter of carrying out the good work done by us in South Africa.”
On the likelihood of opening the batting with skipper Adam Gilchrist, VVS said, “Well, in the first edition of the IPL, I had opened for the Chargers and performed well. I am ready to contribute at any level for the team.”

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Back to basics for Chargers

Hyderabad
Oct. 7: It was back to the basics for the Deccan Chargers at the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium on Wednesday, a day after their four-wicket win against Otago Volts in a practice match at the same venue.
The shaky start for the current Indian Premier League champions meant that skipper Adam Gilchrist had to start the session with a pep talk with the boys before getting into the drill. The Chargers who were bolstered with the arrival of R.P. Singh looked sharp in the field — be it during the fielding sessions or while playing football. The second part of the session saw the bowlers wielding their willows instead of hurrying the batsmen. So, one witnessed RP, Fidel Edwards and Harmeet Singh playing shots and they did not disappoint. The regular batsmen then took over.
The Bulls will be a hungrier outfit facing Hyderabad XI in the practice game on Thursday at the Gymkhana grounds

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All set for champion stuff

Bengaluru

Oct. 7: A lot of water has flown under the bridge since the invention of the India Premier League. The Indian domestic league, with adequate foreign flavour, has not only changed the fortunes of the Twenty20 format but has also injected the entertainment quotient into the game of cricket.
It was at Bengaluru’s M. Chinnaswamy stadium that IPL kicked-off in a spectacular opening ceremony in 2008. Come Thursday, the stadium will witness another extravagant show as Champions League Twenty20 will take its first steps.
For sure, the buzz that surrounded the IPL is conspicuous by its absence but the format and the entire nature of the 16-day tournament, trust Lalit Modi for it, is such that it is set to lay the foundation for a long haul.
The tournament, which failed to take off last year due to the terror strikes in Mumbai, will witness three Indian and nine other teams, from seven countries battling out for the $2.5 million winner’s bounty on offer. Even though crowd-pullers like Sachin Tendulkar, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh will be missing as their IPL teams have failed to qualify for the event, the presence of top-class domestic teams from Australian and South Africa will add spice to the contest.
On Thursday, after a glitzy 35-minute opening ceremony scheduled at 6.45 pm, the tournament will kick-off with a match between IPL-2 runner-up Royal Challengers Bangalore and South African T20 champions Cape Cobras.
While both teams look equally balanced on paper, the Indian conditions and the slow pitches give a slight advantage to the Challengers.
Interestingly, the Anil Kumble-led side has four South African players — Jacques Kallis, Mark Boucher, Dale Steyn, Roelof van der Merwe — and it would be interesting to see how they fare against their country-mates.
The Cobras, who are missing skipper Graeme Smith, can be ignored at one’s own peril. With the explosive Herschelle Gibbs and reliable J.P. Duminy in their batting line-up along with five more players who have played international cricket, the team will not be short of experience.

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RIL gives bonus shares

Mumbai
Oct. 7: In a surprise move designed to woo its shareholders, many of whom are also shareholders of the Reliance ADAG, the board of Reliance Industries on Wednesday declared a 1:1 bonus for the first time since 1997.
The board also proposed an interim dividend of Rs 13 per share for the financial year 2008-09 which will result in a payment of Rs 2,219 crore inclusive of taxes of Rs 322 crore.
Reliance Petroleum shareholders will also be eligible for the bonus and dividend.
Analysts were taken by surprise as there was not a hint of bonus from Reliance Industries.
The company has declared a net profit of Rs 14,950 crore for the financial year 2009 against Rs 19,523 crore for the financial year 2008. The company’s net turnover stood at Rs 1,51,224 crore in the fiscal 2009 as against Rs 1,37,147 crore a year-ago.
RIL has told the Supreme Court that it cannot sell natural gas to ADAG firm Reliance Natural Resources Ltd at a price 44 per cent lower than the government-approved rate and said that it would incur huge cash losses if it is forced to do so.

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Low rates may end

Mumbai
Oct 7: The Reserve Bank of India is likely to hike interest rates marginally in the fourth quarter of this fiscal to rein in the steady rise in prices, a top financial sector expert said.
“To give a signal that the government is concerned about inflationary pressures, there is a chance of a marginal hike in interest rates in the January-March 2010 quarter,” the HDFC chairman, Mr Deepak Parekh, told reporters here. The hike in interest rates could be by at least 0.5 per cent, he said.
Mr Parekh said that lending to top commercial real estate developers is unlikely to pick up and disbursements may not happen in the sector. Mr Parekh, who was speaking on the sidelines of a forum here on private equity said, “Comme-rcial real estate is in surplus today and I don’t see real estate picking up.”
The demand for home loans in the retail sector has increased significantly, he said. The sequential growth in loan approval for July-September has been 30 per cent and he expects good disbursements in the second half of 2009-10.

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Police to file case against Pervez

Islamabad, Oct. 7: A Pakistani court on Wednesday directed police to register a case against the former President, Mr Pervez Musharraf, and several of his key aides in connection with the killing of Baloch nationalist leader Nawab Akbar Bugti in a military operation in 2006.
A division bench of the Balochistan high court had summoned Mr Musharraf to appear before it for Wednesday’s hearing of a petition seeking his trial for Bugti’s murder but neither he nor his counsel was present at the proceedings.
The court directed police in Dera Bugti district to register a first information report and to conduct an investigation.
The lawyer of Bugti’s son, Mr Jamil Akbar Bugti, who had filed the petition, said the FIR would be filed once the court’s formal order is received.
Meanwhile, the government may ask the Interpol to issue a Red Corner Notice for Mr Pervez Musharraf, if Pakistani authorities seek his arrest in connection with the case the interior minister, Mr Rehman Malik, said on Wednesday. Mr Malik said Mr Musharraf is no longer the President and did not enjoy any sort of immunity. The government can ask the Interpol to issue Red Corner Notices for Mr Musharraf and Mr Aziz if authorities and investigating officers in Balochistan make a request in this regard, Mr Malik told reporters.

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French firm snaps up Gandhi house

Johannesburg

Oct. 7: Mahatma Gandhi’s historic house here that was his home almost a century ago has been snapped up by a French tourism company for what is believed to be almost twice the asking price of $377,029, outbidding other bidders including Indians.
The specialist touring company Voyageurs du Monde, which is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange, plans to turn the property into a Gandhi museum in line with its philosophy of investing in heritage properties worldwide.
The then young lawyer Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi lived in the house from 1908 to 1910. The thatched-roof rondavel- style house was designed by Gandhi’s confidant and architect Hermann Kallenbach.
The previous owners of the house, Nancy and Jarrod Ball, bought the house for Rand 65,000 in 1981 and have sold it because they are retiring to the coast.
The couple said they were very relieved that the buyer would be respecting the Gandhian heritage that had also led to them retaining the original character of the home.
Informally referred to as “the Kraal”, the house in the leafy suburb of Orchards in Johannesburg is one of several that Gandhi lived in during his stay here as he developed his Satyagraha philosophies and led the local Indian community in their struggle against oppression.
The others are the Gandhi Square in central Johannesburg; the Johannesburg Prison where Gandhi was once detained; the Victory House where Gandhi ran his law practice; the Hindu cemetery in Johannesburg which was started by Gandhi; and Tolstoy Farm at a place called Lenasia here.
In addition, there are several other Gandhi sites in the cities of Durban and Pietermaritzburg where Gandhi first initiated his Satyagraha or passive resistance philosophy. The sites include the Mahatma Gandhi settlement in the area called Phoenix; and the Pietermaritzburg railway station where Gandhi was dumped after being thrown off a train for riding in a whites-only coach.
Source::DC

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US: Dalai meet not postponed

Washington, Oct. 7: Terming as “inaccurate” reports that US President Barack Obama has postponed his talks with the Dalai Lama, the White House has said a meeting was never on the cards during the Tibetan leader’s current trip here and it will take place later in 2009 after the Sino-US summit in November.
It also said that a strong US-China relationship will help the cause of the Tibetan people. “Tibetan people know that our strong relationship with China helps them,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters, as the mainstream US media tried to corner him on the issue of Mr Obama postponing his meeting with the Dalai.
It has been a tradition since 1991 that the Tibetan spiritual leader meets the US President, whenever he visits Washington. This is for the first time since then that the US President is not meeting the Dalai during his Washington trip.
The US media has interpreted this as a change in the American policy towards Tibet and accused the Obama administration of trying to appease the Chinese government.
Both the Dalai Lama’s special envoy and White House have refuted such reports and asserted that a meeting during the current trip of the Tibetan spiritual leader was never on the cards and it was decided long ago that the two leaders would meet after Mr Obama’s visit to China in November.
Mr Gibbs said the statement that the Dalai Lama and his supporters put out was fully in support of a meeting that will take place later in the year.

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Congress will win in UP: Rahul

Thiruvananthpuram/Kochi, Oct. 7: Unfazed by UP chief minister Mayawati’s criticism, Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday said he will continue with his visits to dalit homes telling her if she doesn’t like it “my apologies to her”.
On a visit to Kerala to strengthen the party’s youth wings, Mr Gandhi expressed confidence that Congress will come to power in UP but did not want to hazard a guess on when it will happen. “I can guarantee that this is going to happen and people are going to be proud of the Congress government in the state,” he said. Chiding Ms Mayawati for ridiculing his visits to dalit households as a political stunt, Gandhi said, “If she doesn’t like it, my apologies to her”.
The Congress general secretary brushed aside criticism that his visits to dalit households were aimed at wooing them for political purposes, saying he doesn’t subscribe to the caste system and his aim was to reach out to the poor people.
“I personally don’t believe in the caste system ... I go to a human being’s house and not a dalit’s house,” he told reporters here. Mr Gandhi said if he went to a tea vendor, he doesn’t ask whether that person is a dalit.
Meanwhile, Mr Gandhi, who arrived at Kochi from Thiruvananthapuram to interact with college students, made an unscheduled visit to the St. Teresas women’s college. Addressing the students, her said that his advice to “budding politicians” is that they should “just listen to people and ask questions”.
When a student, Monisha Titus, a first year MA student wanted to know his advice to “budding politicians”, Mr Gandhi said “just listen to people and ask questions”.
Dressed in jeans and shirt different from his usual attire of white Kurta and pyjamas, Mr Gandhi was greeted by the students and teachers with a bouquet.

Source::DC

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No proof of China funding Naxals: PC

Mumbai
Oct. 7: Union home minister P. Chidambaram on Wednesday said that there is no evidence that the Naxal movement in India is being funded by China. He also appealed to the Communist Party of India (Maoist) to give up violence and start a dialogue with the government. “There is no evidence that the Naxals are getting funds from foreign countries. They are able to raise resources within the country. Besides, they also resort to bank robberies and kidnappings to raise funds,” the home minister said in a press conference held in Mumbai.
Mr Chidambaram also said that the confrontation with the Naxals is not a war. “The government and my position on Naxals is clear. It is the Naxals who believe in an armed struggle and they call it war. But we do not wage war against our own people. My appeal to them is that they should first abjure violence and take the path of dialogue,” he said.
However, the home minister also clarified that the government will do everything to tackle the armed struggle of the Naxal movements and restrict their further spread. “We can discuss all of their issues, including neglect, deprivation, corruption, governance system etc. But no democracy in the world that has taken an oath under the Constitution to accept an armed liberation struggle. Therefore, there will be a dialogue only when they abjure violence,” he said.
Mr Chidambaram’s comments came a day after Jharkhand police inspector Francis Induwar, who had been abducted on September 30, was found beheaded on the Ranchi-Jamshedpur highway.
Regarding the Naxal threat to the life of political leaders campaigning for the Maharashtra Assembly elections, Mr Chidambaram clarified that there are no specific intelligence reports.

Source::DC

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Cops in naxal-run ‘jails’

New Delhi
Oct. 7: A day after the beheading of a police inspector in Jharkhand, the Maoists have claimed to have imprisoned a number of police personnel in makeshift “jails” in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region.
The claim follows massive operations launched by the security forces to flush out the Maoists, who have moved from smaller guerrilla attacks to higher and more intensive attacks involving larger forces in Chhattisgarh.
Speaking to this newspaper from Lalgarh, Koteswar Rao, alias Kishenji, a CPI (Maoist) politburo and central committee member, said: “In Bastar we have built makeshift jails and have imprisoned some police intelligence officers. Their punishment will be decided after trials by the Revolutionary People’s Committee.”
Kishenji, who shifted base from Chhattisgarh and now runs the outfit’s operations in Orissa, Jharkhand, Bihar and West Bengal, also claimed the Maoists have over the last few years killed at least 50 policemen, mainly of the lower ranks, “who ventured into our areas to gather information”.
He, however, refused to comment on the beheading of the police officer in Jharkhand, claiming that he was “yet to get a report from the state unit of the Maoists”.
Kishenji revealed that “vacant houses and captured school buildings in our strongholds have been transformed into makeshift jails”, adding, “We have been adopting this measure for some years now.”
These Maoist “jails” are set up in villages and surrounding areas completely controlled by Maoists.
He refused to reveal the exact number of policemen imprisoned in these “jails” awaiting “trial” by kangaroo courts.
However, he maintained that these “jails” exist only in Bastar region and that the Maoists have not yet been able to set them up in other states, like Orissa and Jharkhand.
“Despite our strongholds, the Revolutionary People’s Committee has not emerged properly. We still need to take the movement forward,” he said.

Source::DC

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Tax exemptions sought on donations

Hyderabad

Oct. 7: The state government on Wednesday announced that 100 per cent tax exemption could be claimed on donations given to the Chief Minister’s Relief Fund to help the flood victims.
The revenue minister, Mr Dharmana Prasada Rao, told mediapersons that the exemption could be availed under 80 (G). The donors can also avail the online facility at http://cmo.ap.gov.in/cmrf and make payments through debit and credit cards, he said.
Under 80 (G) the donation will be deducted from the gross taxable income and tax will be calculated on the remaining amount.
For instance, a person earning Rs 10 lakh per annum has to pay a tax of Rs 1.79 lakh in normal circumstances. If a donation of Rs 10,000 is given to the CMRF, the person will get a tax benefit of Rs 3,000.
“If the donor decides to respond to the calamity and anyway give financial assistance at his level, the 100 per cent exemption under 80 (G) will give some tax benefit,” said Mr Giridhar Toshniwal, a chartered accountant.
The revenue minister also announced that the kin of the flood victims would get Rs 1 lakh from the Prime Minister’s Relief Fund in addition to Rs 2 lakh already announced by the state government. He said the state would also provide Rs 10,000 for loss of cattle.
The minister said the loss incurred in the energy sector because of damage to substations and poles was Rs 236.79 crore.
Power has been restored fully in Kurnool district and would be done in Mahbubnagar by Thursday evening. There were 179 breaches on roads out of which 50 were already restored.
Mr Prasada Rao said the government allotted Rs 75 crore for roads, Rs 36 crore for rural water supply and Rs 40 crore to municipal administration.

Source::DC

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Techies, docs clean temple

Mantralayam (kurnool)
Oct. 7: The clean-up after the floods may be tardy in other places, but in Mantralayam, doctors, techies, lecturers and priests are pouring in from Bengaluru and Hyderabad to wash away the mud and slush at the Sri Guru Rahgavendra Swamy temple premises.

The floods from the Tungabhadra had surged into the temple and had made a mess of its premises. “I took leave for three days and came here,” said Mr N. Prasanth, an employee of a BPO in Bengaluru. “Hundreds of volunteers are coming from Karnataka. We are searching for books, talapatras and manuscripts.”
Dr Sindhu Joshi, a diabetologist of Mahaveer hospital and poorvashrama daughter of the present pontiff Sri Suyateendra Teertha Swamy, had reached the temple on October 6 and had set up a medical camp as the mutt hospital was washed away in the floods. “It is just to show my dediation to the Sri Raghavendra Swamy,” she said.
Her husband, Mr Vittal Joshi, a resident of Kachiguda who owns the Corpus Media Lab in Hitec City, had flown to Bengaluru and had roped in seven other techies working for Oracle, HP, Infosys and HSBC Bank. They are all involved in the clean-up efforts now.
Mr N. Venkata Subba Rao, a lecturer in Sanskrit in St Francis Xavier College at Barkatpura, is also part of the team.
“I came here for Dasara holiday and took part in relief efforts from the first hour of the flood,” says Dr Archak Jayateerdha, a dental doctor working in Mahaveer Hospital in Hyderabad. “My father Archaka Madhaveshachar was one among those we saved.”
The Mula Ramo Digvijaya Rama idol which should always be with the Pontiff was taken to Bengaluru. It was brought back along with swamy who returned on Tuesday.
Temple authorities said that gold and diamonds worth crores of rupees were intact. The Karnataka Chief Minister, Mr B.S. Yeddyurappa, has announced an assistance of Rs 10 crore to the mutt but the state government is yet to make any such move though officials estimate that its losses could be pegged at Rs 50 crore.

Source::DC

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Crop damage to up prices

Hyderabad

Oct. 7: Consumers will face another bout of increase in the prices of essential commodities, particularly rice and red gram, due to the extensive damage to crops in 2.41 lakh hectares of land.
There is also a likelihood of a drop in food grain production this kharif. Prices had shot up due to drought and now it’s the turn of floods to wreck havoc. Floods in Kurnool, Mahbubnagar, Krishna, Guntur, Nalgonda, parts of Kadapa and Prakasam districts have resulted in crop worth Rs 1,250 crore being damaged, according to preliminary estimates.
Food grain crops grown on as much as 2,41,000 hectares were submerged in the floods in the
affected districts and 9 lakh metric tonnes of food grains, worth Rs 860 crore, have been damaged, according to the agriculture minister, Mr N. Raghuveera Reddy.
Paddy production is expected to drop from 85 lakh tonnes to 55 lakh tonnes, a shortfall of 30 lakh tonnes. Andhra Pradesh may have to import rice from other states, if needed.
The Chief Minister, Mr K. Rosaiah, has asked the agriculture minister and other senior officials to
assess the damage to crops.
“After a disastrous drought unseen in the last 50 years, the state is reeling under
worst floods in last 100 years. Many places, including six districts, have been badly hit. Farmers are most affected by both drought and the floods,” Mr Raghuveera Reddy remarked. Paddy, cotton, groundnut, pulses, castor, maize, horticulture crops and sericulture in 2.41 lakh hectares have submerged in swirling waters.

Source::DC

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Thousands await relief in Vijayawada

Vijayawada
Oct. 7: The situation of relief works in many flood-hit places in Vijayawada is akin to Nero fiddling when Rome was burning: the district administration is dilly-dallying on extending relief to flood victims, who are stranded without supplies, especially in the Diviseema area.
The administration has been concentrating only on relief camps in Vijayawada city, neglecting victims at Mopidevi, Nagayalanka, Avanigadda and Koduru.
Most of them do not have money to buy supplies, though NGOs and other organisations are supplying food packets and clothes.
Traders are not willing to provide essential commodities on credit even though flood victims promised them to pay later.
“Our crops have been totally destroyed. We don’t see any scope of improving our financial condition in the next six months. Traders know this well and so have refused to give supplies even though we know them well,” said Ms M. Ramanamma, a resident of Mopidevi mandal.
“The government should provide flood-victims with money so that they can get essential goods. Money is essential as it restores our confidence by making us not depend on others,” said Ms J. Lakshmi, a resident of Rudraram.
The government is yet to identify the real flood victims to distribute money based on the damage to their houses and properties.
The Krishna district collector, Mr Peeyush Kumar, said up to Rs 8,000 will be given to people who lost their houses in floods. To buy utensils Rs 1,500 will be given.
The condition of flood-victims in relief camps in Vijayawada is deplorable. Though officials claim that 40,000 victims have taken shelter in relief camps, the number may not be more than 22,000 as many have left the camps, which lacked facilities.
Also, there is no coordination between government agencies and non-governmental organisations in providing succour.
Source::DC

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Temple manuscripts damaged

Mantralayam

Oct. 7: Rare talapatras and original manuscripts of Sri Madhvacharya Mutt in the Vidyapeet in Manatralayam have been damaged by the flood waters of the Tungabadhra that engulfed the temple town.
The talapatras and manuscripts in Sanskrit date back more than 450 years and some are from the period even before Sri Guru Raghavendra Swamy.
It is feared that some of the talapatras have been lost for ever. Crores worth of publications in Kannada, English, and Telugu were also damaged as the rooms in the temple premises and in the Vidyapeet were filled with mud and water.
About 150 students of the Sri Sri Guru Sarvabhouma Sanskrit Vidyapeetam spent two days and nights, between October 2 and 4, on the top of the adyapaka quarters. Aged between seven and 19 years, they were finally rescued by their teachers.
Dr N. Vadirajachar, the principal of the Vidyapeetam, described the harrowing experience.
“We shifted the students one by one from the Vidyapeetam building as the water came in. We didn’t have any food so some of the lecturers, the warden and senior students went out into the flood water to the storehouse and brought back a few bags of rice. Then we cooked food on the top of the quarters and served it to the students as well as the locals.”
“Rare manuscripts, some of which are 450 years old are soaked in water. Some of them have been digitised but the original scripts are lost. We will try to restore them. But right now we are unable to enter the library which still has slush,” said Dr Vadirajachar.

Wedding turns into funeral
A Kurnool resident, G. Ayappa, 30, who had come to this town to attend the marriage of his niece on October 2, drowned in the flood waters.
His relative, Mr B. Hanumanthu, who had filed a police case, said Ayappa was walking with two other persons on the flooded street. Although the two others survived, Ayappa was washed away. At least four other unknown bodies were found in Mantralayam.


Source::DC

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