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Hyderabad, Telangana, India
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Monday, December 26, 2011

Pubs to Offer Drunk Guests a Ride Home

Pub-hoppers need not worry about getting caught drunk driving this New Year's eve as pubs will provide cab service to drop their 'drunk' guests home. Uday Lama, manager of Cuba Libre pub at GVK One said they have hired additional drivers transportation of their clients after the New Year's celebrations. "We already have six drivers but we hired more drivers for the New Year's bash. We will strictly comply with rules and regulations to avoid drunken driving incidents. The new service will help us to get more clients," he added. Meanwhile, there is huge demand for drivers with most of the city pubs and lounges hiring cab drivers. "We don't know why managements are approaching us for drivers. As many as three club representatives approached us and hired 20 drivers paying Rs1,000 per day to each driver. Some pubs have also hired drivers for the period from December 25 to January 1,'' a consultancy organiser Saleem Pasha said. Stating the organisers and managements of pubs and lounges should provide adequate security, police commissioner AK Khan said they have to ensure decency of apparel, dances and gestures of guests and maintain sound levels at 45 decibels. "No minor should be permitted to attend programmes for couples. It should be responsibility of the management to ensure a designated driver be provided to drop inebriated guests home on the night of December 31. Any violation of these regulations will result in prosecution or cancellation of the pub's license," Khan said.

By Mouli Mareedu
moulimareedu@gmail.com


Sunday, December 25, 2011

Kakru's first task: Learn Telugu

In an attempt to silence detractors who found fault with a non- Telugu being made the chairman of the AP State Human Rights Commission (APSHRC), Justice Nisar Ahmed Kakru announced Friday that he would learn Telugu as soon as possible."I will learn Telugu so that I can directly communicate with complainants. Learning Telugu will help me understand their grievances," Kakru, who hails from Jammu and Kashmir, told Express.On December 9, an advocate Satyam Reddy filed a petition in the High Court opposing the move to appoint Justice Kakru as SHRC chairman on the grounds that he does not know the local language. The other reasons he gave was his Z Category police protection and that in his 18 month tenure, Justice Kakru had hardly delivered 12 judgements. The case is still pending in the High Court.But settling down in his new role as the chairman of the APSHRC, Kakru on Friday proceeded to lift all restrictions on the media and public. The move came a day after reports in these columns said that visitors to the SHRC were finding it difficult to even enter the office as Kakru has been provided Z+ security status. "People can come directly and lodge their complaints with the SHRC. There are no restrictions for media and public. We all work together on people's issues," Justice Kakru said.He dismissed as baseless reports that the staff were accepting petitions only written in English. Calling it a deliberate rumour, Kakru said: "We never asked petitioners to write grievances in English. We will receive petitions in Telugu, English or any other language."Meanwhile, the SHRC received as many as 60 petitions Thursday. The staff translated the key points of each petition into English and submitted them to Kakru for further action Friday.The bench comprising Kakru and members Kakamanu Peda Peri Reddy and Miriyala Rama Rao disposed of four out of the 127 cases in the cause list. Kakru also directed the secretary to help petitioners whenever they approach SHRC to lodge complaints.

By Mouli Mareedu
moulimareedu@gmail.com

Friday, December 23, 2011

Power cut marks Kakru's first-day as SHRC Head

The former chief justice of AP High Court, Nisar Ahmed Kakru, who took charge as chairperson of the State Human Rights Commission on Thursday, disposed of 10 cases out of 121 in his list on the first day. However, the Z Plus security provided to Kakru saw many visitors hesitating to even enter the office while the security personnel also did not allow visitors inside while Kakru had to dispose off cases under two emergency lamps as there was a power cut for nearly half hour. The full bench comprising Kakru, members Kakamanu Peda Peri Reddy and Miriyala Rama Rao today sat in the Court hall of the SHRC and disposed off cases. It is learnt that the new Chairperson of the SHCRC also directed his officials to set up another Court hall for speedy disposal of cases. On his first day, Justice Kakru spent most of his time in the court hall interacting with the victims. When he was interacting with the victim, suddenly their was a power cut and with the help of two emergency lights, the bench conducted the proceedings though later, power supply was resotored using a generator. In fact, it was after a long time that the full bench comprising Kakru met to hear the cases. Around 10.30 am, Kakru taken over charge at his chamber from the Acting chairperson Peda Peri Reddy. Later, he come down to ground floor where court hall is located and attended the proceedings. He was present in the Court hall till 1.30 pm.  ``It is rare and great opportunity for me. I will do level my best in helping people. I will discharge my duties as Chairperson of the SHRC and work towards people's issues. Sure, I will do help in looking into public problems and giving solutions as well,'' Kakru told Express. He said that he will accept cases that comes under SHRC jurisdiction and its limits. ``I will take up Suo Moto cases and will concentrate in disposing all pending cases as soon as possible. I will utilise my powers what I have in helping people's issues. My first priority is to concentrate on people's problems,'' he added. Meanwhile, Peda Peri Reddy informed Kakru that at least 4,671 cases were pending and submitted the documents to Kakru. During August 2010 to 21 December 2011, as many as 13,065 cases disposed. In 2011, 12,171 cases filed while 9,566 cases lodged, 2,605 cases registered in the SHRC, 267 cases were disposed and 2,338 cases are in pending. Kakru also directed the officials to set up a new court hall in the SHRC to speed up the proceedings further. It is learnt that Kakru and Peda Peri Reddy will attend the proceedings in one court hall and another member will deal proceedings in yet to be set up court hall in SHRC. Petitioners, who came to the SHRC, to lodge complaints had tough time to submit their grievances due to heavy security. With the government providing ` Z plus' security to the new Chairperson, people appeared hesitatant to enter the office. So tight was the security that the petitioners were not even allowed to enter the building while Kakru was in the Court hall and then his chambers on the first floor. Metal detectors were also set up at the entrance gate and security staff also took up frisking of the visitors. A constable posted at the office directed the petitioners to lodge their complaint at the In-ward section. After spending a couple of hours, Kakru left for his residence located in Nyaya Vihar, which is a temporary arrangement.

By Mouli Mareedu
moulimareedu@gmail.com

Akhil Had Just a Glass of Wine, Says His Father

Akhil is a teetotaler and hates boozing, according to his father. However, on a pre-Christmas event, the budding racer had a glass of wine which landed him in the hands of traffic police. Akhil Khushlani appeared in court on Wednesday and paid a fine of Rs2,000 for drunk driving. He then took away his BMW car was seized by Marredpally police. The young racer had missed his scheduled court date on Monday.  "Akhil is a teetotaler. He never indulges in pubbing or partying. He just had a glass of wine along with his friends and was caught for drunken driving,'' Dinesh Khushlani, his father told Express. He also raised some doubts on breath analysers, the instruments used by traffic police to check drivers for alcohol content in their body. "I don't know how these machines are functioning. Though Akhil just had a single peg of wine, the analyser showed he was drunk," he said. R Kalinga Rao, traffic inspector, Maredpally said Akhil appeared before the court and paid Rs2,000 fine. "He later paid his challan and took back his seized BMW car," he added. Akhil has won fifth place at the World Karting Championships- 2005 at Langkawi in Malaysia and became the first Asian to do so in any motor sport contest. He has also participated in the Rotax Max Challenge 2006, the national championship as a senior and test-driven in Formula BMW Asia in Malaysia and Indonesia. 

By Mouli Mareedu
moulimareedu@gmail.com


Down the memory hole of terrorism

Four days after the third anniversary of the terror attacks on Mumbai, six suspected Indian Mujahideen operatives, including a Pakistani national, were arrested from across the country for their alleged involvement in several blast cases, including in Delhi. With these arrests, investigators claimed to have solved several blast cases, including the German Bakery case in Pune, the Chinnaswamy Stadium blast in Bangalore and the Jama Masjid shooting case. But that’s hardly any consolation to the victims of terrorism — the injured as well as the kin of those killed — as they struggle through their forever changed lives. Snehlata Choudhary is one of them. A 26/11 widow, she’s at her wits end to decide what’s worse – losing her husband or doing the rounds of the Secretariat in the hope of getting a promised petrol pump dealership. Her husband Murlidhar Chowdhary was a Railway Protection Force jawan posted at Mumbai CST and died a martyr in the carnage. “Time has not healed my wounds. It still feels like yesterday when I called my husband to inquire what was delaying him. His colleague answered the phone to tell me he had been killed,” Snehlata remembers. Thirty-seven year old Rakesh Chavan, a private security guard who was shot at by a terrorist while accompanying NSG commandos as they cleared the Taj Hotel, regrets he can’t play cricket anymore because of the limp in his leg. He still harbours the hope that he would be reabsorbed in the Taj Hotel security detail in recognition of his services rendered. In Orissa’s Balasore, Satyananda Behera of Chalisimedha village sits idle. He has no choice; he can’t even stand. Satyananda is the only victim from Orissa who received bullet injuries during the 26/11 attacks. He then was working at a small restaurant near the Victoria Terminus (VT) railway station and had a regular income, most of which he sent home. A handicapped Satyananda now struggles hard to eke out a living and manage his four-member family. Despite the tall claims of the Centre and the Maharashtra government he is yet to get the full compensation amount and a job assured to him. “I had received a letter from the Home Ministry to get a compensation of `3 lakh. But so far I have got only `50,000 each from the Railway Ministry and Maharashtra government. A job in the railway department is still a distant dream,” he says.Not far away, in the satellite town of Navi Mumbai, Ganpat Anap keeps a brand new shirt in its original package in remembrance of his son Atul who died of injuries sustained in Pune’s German Bakery blast of February 13, 2010. For Anap, a former World Bank consultant, the shirt that his son purchased on the same day is one of the cherished memories of his son. “After making the purchase, Atul rang at about 2.30 in the afternoon and told me about the shirt,” says Anap. Atul, a telecom engineer, a brilliant student and accomplished sportsperson, was loved by all. “We retrieved their car that was parked near German Bakery and I found the shirt he had bought for me,” says Anap. Further north, in Varanasi, 25-year-old Darakhta Anjum continues to grieve the loss of her husband Kamaruzzama in the Varanasi blasts of November 23, 2007 which killed nine per sons. “I can only wail against my fate,” says Anjum. She tried picking up the threads of her life that was shattered by the blast, getting married again. It did not work, and she’s back with her father now. Except for monetary compensation from the state and Central governments, none of the promises made to Anjum have been kept. “The state government had announced that Anjum would get a house in Varanasi. But later on, they put a condition that if Anjum would remarry the house would not be given,” says Anees, Anjum’s father, who has retired from a Class IV government job. In the deep south, memories of Coimbatore’s serial blasts that killed 46 and injured 200 at 11 locations across the city on February 14, 1998 may have gone cold, but for the unfortunate victims the nightmare doesn’t end. K Ganesh miraculously survived a powerful explosion that went off hardly 20m from him in the textile shop where he was working as a salesman. He carries the memories of the blast in more than just his mind. Doctors have been unable to completely remove the hundreds of iron nails that pierced his body. “They took out a bowl full of iron nails from my body soon after the incident. But they told me it is impossible to remove all of them,” says Ganesh. He has to gobble nearly six tablets everyday to kill the pain and to make sure the infection does not spread. “I don’t even remember how many times my body has been operated upon since the blasts,” says Ganesh.In Hyderabad, where 42 persons died in two near-simultaneous blasts on August 25, 2007, Asadullah Khan breaks down as he remembers the death of his son Akramullah. Minutes before he fell victim to the blast at Gokul Chat Bhandar, 21-year-old Akramullah had called his mother Jilani Begum to know if she wanted something from the eatery. Akram was accompanying two of his five sisters as they bought books. He left them in an auto to step into the shop, only to die. Akram was devoted to his family and as his father was suffering from high blood pressure, he managed the house. “He was a gem,” says Asadullah. 

By Ganesh N, Subhash Mishra, J Santhosh, Hemant Kumar Rout, Vikram Sharma and Mouli Mareedu.
moulimareedu@gmail.com