Suja Kushalappa is the richest among the candidates who have filed nominations for Legislative Council elections in Kodagu.
Suja Kushalappa’s total assets add up to Rs 26.22 crore. His wife Parvathi has assets worth Rs 11.27 crore (including ancestral property). He has liabilities to the tune of Rs 4.77 crore and his wife has availed loans upto Rs 17.59 lakh.
Suja, his wife and children own a total of twenty vehicles, out of which a pick-up vehicle is registered in Suja’s name. He has 350 gm gold worth Rs 16.38 lakh. His wife has diamond jewellery worth Rs 10 lakh, 1,400 gm gold and 10 kg silver.
Suja possesses a revolver, a gun and two 0.22 rifles. Suja has failed in SSLC, as declared in the affidavit submitted by him during the filing of nominations for MLC elections.
Dr Mantar Gowda’s declaration in the affidavit states that his assets are worth Rs 94 lakh and his wife’s assets are worth Rs 2.95 crore. He has an Innova Ford car, 600 gm gold and 2 kg silver. Mantar’s wife Divya has 1,500 gm gold and 3 kg silver. He has a license to grow tobacco. His education qualification is MBBS, MD (Radiology).
Isac Khan has Rs 1 lakh and his wife Fauziya has Rs 3.57 lakh. They have no liabilities. He has studied upto PUC.
source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by DHNS, Madikeri / November 23rd, 2021
The 20th Annual General Body Meeting (AGM) of Sri Kavery Kodava Association – Mysore East will be held at the Association Office, CA No. 4, Vidyashankar Layout, Sathagalli, on Nov. 28 at 10 am.
Association President P.S. Devaiah will preside over the meeting.
For details, contact Ph: 0821-2952010, according to a press release from Association Honorary Secretary Kademada M. Belliappa.
source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Briefs / November 23rd, 2021
Some libraries in the Gram Panchayats of Kodagu district have got a digital touch. There are 104 Gram Panchayats in the district and 98 Gram Panchayats have their own libraries.
Hoddur Gram Panchayat in Madikeri taluk has set up a digital library. Storybooks, novels, collections of poems, weeklies and books for reference to write competitive exams, are available in the library.
The digital library in the Gram Panchayat is beneficial to the youth.
Palibetta Gram Panchayat had first set up a digital library in the district. Later, Mullusoge and Hoddur Gram Panchayats too set up such libraries.
Now, Marakodu, Napoklu, Murnad, Kakkabbe and Makkandoor Gram Panchayats too have digital libraries in Madikeri taluk.
The District Central Library is situated at the Industrial Layout in Madikeri. There are libraries at Mahadevapete, Somwarpet, Virajpet and Kushalnagar as well.
“We have appealed to the district administration for the construction of own building for libraries at Mahadevapete and Kushalnagar. The building is likely to be constructed shortly,” said chief librarian N Leelavathi.
Earlier, the District Central Library was functioning on the premises of the fort in Madikeri. It was shifted to Industrial Layout one year ago, she said.
Through the digital app, books are reaching the readers. There are 10,491 members in the digital library of the district, she adds.
“We have written to the college principals to make students as members of the digital library,” said Leelavathi.
She said, “Several new books have arrived in the central library. They will be supplied to libraries in panchayats.”
The District Central Library has 42,660 books. The Zilla Panchayat has taken over the responsibility of libraries at the village level. The district has a community library as well.
Mohan, a reader in Madikeri, said, “The central library at Industrial Layout is good. It has come closer to the readers.”
source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by Adithya K A, DHNS, Madikeri / November 22nd, 2021
The property designed by SAKA Studio is a wholesome retreat with vernacular details, earthy materials, and a strong focus on the outdoors.
Nestled in the wilderness of Coorg is a family home that communes with the natural world. The home, designed by Gurugram-based firm SAKA Studio, is constructed with laterite with granite columns, Kota stone flooring, and terracotta tiles, all of which allow it to recede into its natural surroundings.
In the interior, pieces of antique furniture and décor gently ornament an open, contemporary floor plan, bringing the warmth and detail of the past into a comfortably modern lifestyle. “The reason the house is as interesting a space as it is, is because it uses a language which is deeply contextual of place,” says Swanzal Kak Kapoor, co-founder of SAKA Studio, “It manages to combine a very traditional expression with a very contemporary functional layout.”
SAKA’s achievement with this particular project is balancing the dualities—the wholesomeness of vernacular architecture while fulfilling modern day requirements. Even though most practitioners tend to design from the outside in, SAKA typically designs the structure and the interiors in parallel. “The reason the home was built was for the garden,” Kapoor explain. “It is the reverse of why people normally build, but the client is incredibly gifted when it comes to gardening, and she was building in this place because of its natural beauty.”
In the outdoors, the architects constructed the retaining walls, slopes and created steps, but the rest was left largely untouched. “There is a certain wildness about the surroundings, which is deeply respected by the locals,” she says. “There is this belief that, at the end of the day, the gardens return to the wild at night. So they don’t light their gardens up at night—it is only your threshold which is yours and the rest belongs to nature.”
In the interiors, the home opens into a fluid, contemporary layout; seeing an interplay of double and single-height volumes, and open-plan spaces. An entrance lobby leads to a combined living and dining area, beyond which is a kitchen, pantry and powder room. The ground floor also holds a double height main bedroom and three decks which face south, west and north respectively. On the higher floor are two more bedrooms, one of which also functions as a study, as well as a balcony which overlooks the hills. “The beauty is really in the interconnectivity,” Kapoor says. “For instance, the guest bedroom on the upper floor has a lovely little balcony which overlooks the double height dining room, so you can look into the dining room or the entrance lobby, or out the other direction onto the hillside.”
The focus of the home is a semi-outdoor space, which leads from the dining and living area to the garden. “In most of these homes which are retreat homes, you don’t want to be indoors,” says Kapoor. “This plan really respects that, so when you’re sitting in the outdoor room, you can spend hours watching the hills, watching the sun rise, watching the sunset, and watching the rain. It is a space where you can literally spend your day.”
Flourishes of vernacular detailing root the home in its South Indian context: finials on the roof, hand-dressed granite columns on the deck, low ornamented lintels, and antique furniture. Before she began work on the project, Kapoor was careful to research the aesthetic of local Coorg homes, to understand the materials, the floor plans, and how people traditionally inhabited those spaces.
“It is important, especially in places like Coorg, where they have managed to honour their past very well,” says Kapoor. “Everything you add, is going to become a part of the woven narrative of the place, whether it’s a motif or a lintel or a coping.”
While the interior layout was planned carefully in collaboration with the client, the design of the home—in terms of its furnishing and artwork—was done by the client herself, which Kapoor insists is the best way for a home to develop. “It is much better to have families come in and personalize the space,” she says. “They’re not consuming the space, they’re inhabiting it, so they’re co-creating it.”
SAKA Studio’s approach to the project is a lesson in timeless design—it is an approach that honours the agency of the client, and future-proofs the home by allowing it to remain incomplete. At its heart, the home is a living being in its own right, growing and changing with the world around it. “When you have truly collaborative relationships between architect and client, which is very rare, you acknowledge not only what a person is today, but what that person is going to be 10 years from now,” says Kapoor, adding that “it is a more nurturing approach to design.”
source: http://www.architecturaldigest.in / Architectural Digest / Home> Decorating / by Avantika Shankar / November 22nd, 2021
M P Keshava Kamath will be the new president of Kodagu district Kannada Sahitya Parishat, after his victory in the elections held on Sunday.
He edged past his close electoral rival Lokesh Sagar, with a margin of 134 votes. Of the total votes, Kamath got 924 votes and Lokesh Sagar got 790 votes, while 12 votes got rejected.
Keshav Kamath received maximum votes in Madikeri, Virajpet and Ponnampet taluks, while Lokesh was leading in Somwarpet and Kushalnagar taluks.
Votes cast
A total of 1,726 votes were cast during the elections. In Somwarpet, 490 among 647 voters exercised their franchise, while 337 out of the total 424 votes were cast in Kushalnagar, 216 out of 303 people voted in Virajpet, 468 out of 766 votes were cast in Madikeri and 215 out of 280 voters exercised their franchise in Ponnampet.
Supporters of Keshava Kamath gathered outside the counting centre and rejoiced after results were declared and raised pro-Kannada slogans.
District Kannada Sahitya Parishat former president T P Ramesh, Kodagu Patrika Bhavana managing trustee Manu Shenoy, writer Shamsuddin, literature enthusiasts Navin Kushalappa, Munir Ahmed, Baby Mathew and DSS leader Diwakar were present, among others.
Speaking on the occasion, the newly elected president of district Kannada Sahitya Parishat, Keshava Kamath, said that it is not his victory alone, but, the victory of all literature enthusiasts and members of Kannada Sahitya Parishat.
He also said that he will utilise the opportunity provided to him, to serve the Kannada language.
My first priority will be building Kannada Bhavana in the district, he said.
He added that he will carry out his duties by taking into confidence, all his voters, non-voters and former presidents of Zilla Kannada Sahitya Parishat.
Former president T P Ramesh said that there is a need to work unitedly towards the development of Kannada Sahitya Parishat.
As a senior member, he will give rightful suggestions to the Parishat, he added.
The election was held in Madikeri, Somwarpet, Virajpet, Kushalnagar and Ponnampet from 8 am to 4 pm.
The election process was headed by tahsildar Mahesh.
source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by DHNS, Madikeri / November 21st, 2021
The Codava National Council (CNC), led by its president N U Nachappa, celebrated Huthari or Puthari — the harvest festival of Kodagu, at a paddy field of Nandineravanda Uthappa, in Chikkabettageri village, near Kushalnagar, on Friday.
Wearing traditional Kodava attire, the members participated in the celebrations by cutting paddy sheaves. Later, they offered prayers for the prevalence of peace and to eradicate Covid-19 from the world.
The members offered prayers to the gods and initiated the process of Huthari celebrations by ‘Nere Kattuva’ ritual using the leaves of Arali, mango, jackfruit, Kumbali and cashew nut trees.
After the rituals, the members took out a procession to the paddy field, accompanied by the ‘Dudikottpat’. After firing thrice in the air, Nachappa offered puja rituals and cut paddy sheaves.
Later, the paddy sheaves were brought back to the house and puja rituals were conducted.
CNC members presented ‘Kolata’, ‘Pareyakali’ and other cultural programmes.
Later, they also danced to the traditional beats and relished rice payasa, ‘Thambittu,’ ‘Kadubu,’ ‘pandi curry,’ ‘chicken curry’ and others.
Speaking on the occasion, Nachappa urged the government to declare a national holiday for the Puthari festival.
The Kodavas should be considered as a separate race to save the Kodava tribal culture for the future generation. Kodava language should be included in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution, he said.
“Kodava culture has all the qualifications to be included in the Intangible Cultural Heritage List of Unesco. By showcasing our rituals, we can assert our rights,” he added.
source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by DHNS, Kushalnagar / November 19th, 2021
A total of 1,334 voters from the local bodies of Kodagu will exercise their franchise for the upcoming Legislative Council election.
Deputy Commissioner Dr B C Sateesha said that out of the total voters, 654 are men and 689 are women. As many as 108 polling booths have been opened across the district.
Additional Deputy Commissioner Raju Mogaveera held a meeting with the college principals and requested them to take necessary measures to add the names of students above 18 years to the voters’ list.
As per the census, there are 16,674 people in the 18-19 age group. However, according to the voters’ list published on November 8, 2021, only 5,841 people in this age group have enrolled themselves in the voters’ list, he said.
Nominations
The candidates may submit their nominations to the returning officer or the assistant returning officer at the third floor of the DC’s office in the district administration complex till November 23 between 11 am and 3 pm, except on November 21 and 22 which are holidays, said the deputy commissioner.
source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by DHNS, Madikeri / November 17th, 2021
Napanda Poonacha of Kodagu district, a progressive farmer, who hopes to be recognized as a pro-nature farmer
He was recently granted the Plant Genome Saviour Farmer Reward (2019-20) for his efforts to save indigenous ‘Adi Pepper’ crop
Napanda Poonacha of Kodagu district, a progressive farmer, who hopes to be recognized as a pro-nature farmer and has set examples for the other farmers to come forward to encourage them. He is working hard to establish commercial crops that have minimal or no negative impact on biodiversity, and he was recently granted the Plant Genome Saviour Farmer Reward (2019-20) for his efforts to save indigenous ‘Adi Pepper’ crops.
The Union Agriculture Ministry’s Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Authority bestowed the honour on Poonacha, who received it from union agriculture minister Narendra Singh Tomar at an event in New Delhi on November 11.
He is the owner of Adi Pepper Demo Farm and Research Center in Garvale, where he is actively engaged in discovering natural crops in the district that have the capacity to become commercial crops while inflicting minimal environmental impact.
Napanda Poonacha expressed his happines for recieving the award. He said that farmers who recognise, conserve, and cultivate crops that are beneficial to biodiversity have been given this honour. Furthermore, He received the prize for his research, conservation, and promotion of the ‘Adi Pepper,’ an indigenous kind of pepper mainly grown across the natural habitat of Garvale village borders in Kodagu, India.
He further explained that Adi Pepper crops can be discovered all around the Garvale region in their natural habitat. They undertook the responsibility at the research centre to obtain this species of pepper registered under PPFRI, and in 2015, this high-quality pepper was recognised as a farmer’s variety pepper. This is the only pepper species that has passed biochemical testing, and it is regarded the best of the seven pepper species growing in Kodagu.
Since that particular form of pepper was once known as forest pepper and was mainly used for domestic reasons by the people, it has recently reached a brand value of Rs 3500 per kilo, generating more than six times the earnings of the other black pepper species sold in the district.
source: http://www.thehansindia.com / The Hans India / Home> News> State> Karnataka / by Susmita Modak / by Hans News Service / November 19th, 2021
The Management of Kodava Samaja, Mysuru, has decided to celebrate Puthari Namme (harvest festival) on Nov.20 in the premises of Kodava Samaja in Vijayanagar I Stage. Earlier it had been decided to celebrate the festival in the premises of Sree Cauvery Educational Institutions in Kuvempunagar.
Now due to incessant rains since a week and also keeping in mind the forecast of rains for 4 more days, the Samaja has decided to change the venue. The celebrations will commence at 5 pm at the Samaja premises. All traditional Kodava dances will be performed on the occasion by both the men’s and women’s teams.
Arrangements have been made to distribute Kadh (new paddy crop) on that day. All the members are requested to note the change of venue and cooperate in the celebrations, according to a press release from Malachira M. Ponnappa, Honorary Secretary, Kodava Samaja.
source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Briefs /November 19th, 2021
Coffee Board CEO and Secretary K.G. Jagadeesha, on Tuesday, visited the rain-hit coffee estates of Mudigere taluk and interacted with the coffee planters about the problems they had been facing in recent days.
Heavy rains in parts of Chikkamagaluru and Hassan districts have impacted the yield. The growers have not been able to harvest the yield. Those, who have harvested the crop, are finding it difficult to dry coffee beans.
The officer visited an estate at Balur, owned by B.R.Balakrsihna, president of Mudigere taluk of Coffee Growers’ Association. The growers also submitted a memorandum to the officer.
Karnataka Growers’ Federation president H.T.Mohan Kumar, former presidents D.B. Subbe Gowda, B.S. Jairam and others were present.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindi / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Hassan – November 16th, 2021
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