Monthly Archives: January 2022

Kodagu to get an international cricket stadium

Sports enthusiasts have expressed their joy as ‘bhumi puja’ was performed on the 12.70 acres of land dedicated to the stadium.

Representative image. Credit: Unsplash Photo

The dream of having an international cricket stadium in Kodagu will be fulfilled, as the bottleneck regarding the crematorium land has been solved.

Sports enthusiasts have expressed their joy as ‘bhumi puja’ was performed on the 12.70 acres of land dedicated to the stadium in Palemadu near Hoddur.

Even as Kodagu has been acclaimed as the sports district, there has always been a dearth of facilities for sports, such as the state-of-the-art stadiums. Even though there are stadiums, there are no facilities.

Budding sports persons and sports lovers often complain about the lack of amenities at the turf hockey ground.

The State Cricket Association has initiated work towards the construction of the cricket stadium. Association district convener Prithvi Devaiah said that the stadium, equipped with modern facilities, will encourage the budding cricketers in the district.

The association had planned to construct the stadium in 2015. However, the villagers of Palemadu posed objection as the proposed land was the crematorium. The villagers said that the tombs of their ancestors lie in the land and the stadium cannot be constructed on that.

Despite holding several meetings, the stakeholders were unable to arrive at a common conclusion, and the work remained stagnant after levelling of the land.

However, the issue was resolved amicably during mediation talks initiated by Deputy Commissioner Dr B C Sateesha.

The district administration has assured that a one-acre land from the existing crematorium and another acre land near Palemadu village, a total of two acres, will be sanctioned to the villagers. Also, the State Cricket Association has assured of adopting a village for the development. Only local labourers will be deployed for the construction work of the stadium.

Nirnanappa, who has been representing Palemadu villagers in their fights towards the crematorium land, said that some officials who had come to conduct the survey of the land, have created confusion by stating that the villagers are entitled to get only one-acre land while it was told during the mediation talks that a villager will be getting two acres of land for the crematorium.

Severe fights will be carried out if the assurance is not fulfilled, he said.

The Bhumi Puja, towards the cricket stadium, was held in the presence of the DC, Superintendent of Police Kshama Mishra, Assistant Commissioner Ishwar Kumar Kandoo, State Cricket Association Managing Committee member Shanti Swaroop and district convener Prithvi Devaiah.

The budget for building the stadium is Rs 50 crore and will comprise an indoor stadium, restaurant, swimming pool, gymnasium and air conditioned rooms and gallery.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Karnataka Districts / by Adithya K A, DHNS, Madikeri / January 11th, 2022

If you are a coffee lover, you must visit these places in India.

If you are fond of roaming and live in India, you can visit many of the best places in India. If you are a coffee lover, today we are going to tell you about places in India where you will enjoy visiting and you would love to go there again and again.

* Wayanad is a beautiful place in Kerala. People often go for a walk here. However, apart from romance, this place is one of the coffee places in India. You can enjoy the lush green coffee plantations here if you want.

* Coorg is considered to be the pride of Karnataka, although it is home to many coffee gardens that produce Arabica and Robusta. In that case, if you are planning to visit here, the month of November will be the best. Well, everyone must go here once.

* Chikmagalur in Karnataka is the best place. It is famous among tourists for its beautiful views. Coffee was first introduced in India during the British Raj, situated a few hours away from Kurdish. There are a variety of coffee gardens.

* Arku is a beautiful place in Andhra Pradesh which is also excellent for sightseeing. Thousands of tribals here depend on coffee cultivation. If you are ever going to Arku, be sure to taste the organic coffee grown by the locals here.

* Yarcaud is in Tamil Nadu and is called the jewel of South India. In fact, there are many coffee gardens, so if you ever visit here, you must take advantage of the coffee garden once. It is also said to be home to MSP coffee, the first Indian owned coffee plantation ever.

source: http://www.english.newstracklive.com / News Track / Home / by Arpit Birtharia / January 13th, 2022

TATA Coffee Grand celebrates the unique sounds of the harvest festivity this Pongal along with its ‘Shik Shik Shik’ campaign

TATA Coffee Grand celebrates the unique sounds of the harvest festivity this Pongal along with its ‘Shik Shik Shik’ campaign

Coimbatore :

TATA Coffee Grand, the coffee brand from the house of Tata Consumer Products continues its celebration of bringing out the emotions and excitement associated with coffee in Tamil Nadu. In line with this, the brand has released a festive film celebrating the various sounds that reflect the unique spirit of Pongal with the ‘Sounds of Tamil Nadu’ campaign of Tata Coffee Grand.

The vibrant film is a montage of various visuals and sounds that are associated with the Pongal festival; the crunch of sugarcane, the clink of children’s anklets, and the musical echoes of the ‘kulavai’ among others. Replete with sumptuous Pongal delicacies, family gatherings, and a splash of rich hues that the Tamil culture is well-known for, the film concludes with the thought, ‘How can any festive meal be complete without coffee and the emotions associated with it?’

Talking about the film, Puneet Das, President – Packaged Beverages (India and South Asia), Tata Consumer Products said, “Our campaign of Tata Coffee Grand launched last year, synonymizes the word ‘Coffee’ with the sound i.e. Shik-Shik-Shik – which represents the sound heard when the Tata Coffee Grand jar or pack is shaken! We have gone a step ahead this year and have extended the ‘shik shik shik’ proposition to the sound of the Pongal festivities, to capture the excitement of the festival along with the emotions of drinking coffee. These festivities are not just reflected in the visuals but also in the unique sounds that reverberate throughout the harvest season. In highlighting this, we are happy to launch our new film which doubles up as a feast to the senses and has a distinct sound design that celebrates the festive taste of Tamil Nadu”.

Commenting on the campaign idea, Sonali Khanna, Executive Director and Branch Head, Lowe Lintas South said, “Pongal is a festival that the people of Tamil Nadu hold very close to their hearts, resulting in a joyous tapestry of celebratory sights and sounds. What’s striking is that many of the authentic sounds of Pongal are expressed as triplets. This is exactly the same aural mnemonic we have used to bring our product USP to life: the ‘Shik Shik Shik’ of the packet representing the Tata Coffee Grand crystals. The wonderful interplay of musical triplets, the rich festive hues, and the catchy sound of the pack, all come together seamlessly. To create a film that is as aurally arresting as it is visually resplendent.”

source: http://www.covaipost.com / The Covai Post / Home / by Covai Post Network / January 14th, 2022

AGM Of Ramakrishnanagar I Block Kodava Welfare Association Held

Mysore/Mysuru:

The Annual General Body Meeting (AGM)of Ramakrishnanagar I Block Kodava Welfare Association and adjoining residents was held on Jan.2 at Shree Ganapathy Temple in Ramakrishnanagar.

Association President Kattera A. Nanaiah presided.

On the occasion, Kenjangada Suchetha Cariappa – Gold Medal in M. Tech, Kadiyamada Nisha Cariappa – B.Sc. and Nayakanda Kishtij Cariappa -10th CBSE, were felicitated with cash prizes for securing highest marks.

Maletira Ganesh, Secretary, presented the annual report while the financial report for 2020-21 was presented by the Treasurer.

Kotrangada Manan Mandanna rendered the invocation. Poodrimada Somaiah, Vice-President, welcomed. Kenja-ngada Cariappa, Joint Secretary, proposed a vote of thanks. Kotrangada Shruthy Poonacha compered.

About 50 Kodava families of Ramakrishnanagar I Block and adjoining areas were present  at the meeting.

The following are the new office-bearers of the Association for the next three-year term:

Kodandera Pushpa Machaiah –   Chairperson;  Maletira Ganapathy – Vice-President; Kenjangada Cariappa – Secretary; Codanda Swagath  –  Joint Secretary/ Treasurer; Mallangada Vinoda     – Joint Secretary.      

Committee Members are: Bachamada Vasanth, Kelapanda Vinod Bopaiah, Mookalamada Shanthi Ramesh, Patrapanda Chengappa, Kumbera Ganesh Pemmaiah,  Adengada Santhosh, Nayakanda Kamala Mandanna, Kodira Devaih, Neravanda Suresh, Chappanda Erappa.                          

Advisory Committee Members are: Dr. Kodira A. Kushalappa, Kattera A. Nanaiah and Poodrimada Somaiah.   

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> News / January 14th, 2022

Daisy Bopanna beats Covid-19, tests negative

Actress Daisy Bopanna had contracted coronavirus recently and has fully recovered now! Daisy was asymptomatic and isolated herself immediately upon knowing.

She says, “I isolated and informed everyone that I had been in contact with. The worst aspect of contracting the Covid-19 is the absolute mental pressure to restrain the virus from spreading further. After quarantining for 10 days thankfully it has now been confirmed that I am Covid negative.”

Daisy stayed positive throughout the ordeal. She said, “There was also a silver lining too. I got to spend a lot of time self-actualising and introspecting.”

When asked how she spent her time in the quarantine she said watching shows and movies online was rather fun. She added, “I read quite a few books as well. To be honest, I was always an avid reader and self-isolation gave me the time to read a few books that were on my wish-list.”

source: http://www.tribuneindia.com / The Tribune / Home> Lifestyle / January 15th, 2022

Hurdles in greenfield highway to Madikeri reviewed

Officials directed to secure clearances to expedite the project

Pratap Simha, MP, G.T.Deve Gowda, MLA, and officials from various departments reviewing the issues related to Mysuru-Madikeri highway project, on Saturday. | Photo Credit: M.A. SRIRAM

A review meeting to identify major hurdles in expediting the greenfield highway to Madikeri branching off from Paschimavahini near Srirangapatna, was held here on Saturday

The greenfield project – which is parallel to the existing highway from Mysuru to Kushalnagar – is being implemented by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) at a cost of nearly ₹3,823 crore and has a new alignment bypassing major towns.

The review meeting was attended by Mysuru MP Pratap Simha, Chamundeshwari MLA G.T. Deve Gowda and others and Mr. Simha said that the lessons learnt in the ongoing works of Bengaluru-Mysuru Expressway have come inhandy to avoid certain pitfalls.

He said even if the tenders for the project are awarded, the works cannot commence until 80 per cent of the land acquisition process is complete. Though the acquisition process was underway and compensation was also being disbursed, there were certain permits and clearances required from different agencies besides shifting of civic amenities that lie in the alignment of the proposed highway. The issue of paying compensation to land awarded as grants to Scheduled Tribes, also needs to be settled.

The meeting was attended by Deputy Commissioner of Mysuru Bagadi Goutham and revenue officials from Mysuru, Hunsur and Periyapatana taluks, Deputy Directors of Land Records etc. Mr. Goutham instructed the officials to obtain the clearance from CESC, Irrigation Department, Forest Department, KPTCL etc., and comply with the requirements for the highway construction within a month.

The telephone and power poles have to be shifted while suitable compensation has to be fixed for land acquired from farmers. High tension wire which criss-cross the highway alignment have to be shifted for which both CESC and KPTCL has to be brought into the loop, said Mr. Simha.

‘’The clearances from various departments have to be obtained within a month and such review meetings will take place periodically to assess the progress’’, he added.

The project has been divided into three packages and under the first package, the road starts at Madikeri from General Thimmaiah Circle and ends at the beginning of the Kushalnagar bypass after Anekadu forest. The total length of this package is 22.70 km.

The second package commences from Guddeshosur after Anekadu forest and ends at the junction of State Highway 86 Ramanathapura-Terkanambhi Road. The total length of the second package is 45.4 km.

The third package starts at Ramanathapura-Terakanambi Road Junction and ends near Paschimavahini and the total length of the package is 46.935 km. It bypasses Hunsur, Bilikere, Elavala and Mysuru before ending at Paschimavahini.

The project envisages the new highway to be linked with the ongoing Bengaluru-Mysuru Expressway near Srirangapatna and will provide a four-lane connectivity to Madikeri. Cities and towns including Mysuru, Hunsur, Periyapatna, Kushalnagar and Suntikoppa will be bypassed and will reduce the traveling time from Bengaluru to Madikeri besides providing for greater safety as the tolled road will be four-laned with paved shoulder and divider, according to NHAI.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Mysuru – January 29th, 2022

Captivating Kushalanagar

Surrounded by the thick foliage of bamboo groves, sandalwood and teak trees, Nisargadhama is an island formed by the river Cauvery near Kushalnagar, writes Suryakumar.

Madikeri, our holiday destination, turned out to be rather disappointing. Its fort and adjoining museum were closed, as they are every Monday. They remained shut the following day, which happened to be a government holiday. For the same reason, the residence of late General Thimayya (maintained as a memorial to his military achievements) proved elusive. As for the famed sunset at Raja’s Seat, since the sun was barely visible it could hardly disappear in a blaze of glory.

Archway at Nisargadhama. PHOTOS BY AUTHOR

Despite these setbacks, our trip to Kodagu was not a failure. There was much to enjoy at Kushalanagar, about 30 km from Madikeri. The highlight was Nisargadhama, a scenic nature resort on an island in the River Cauvery. Negotiating the hanging rope bridge that spans the water was an interesting experience. When we kept walking, it seemed steady, but if we stopped suddenly we were aware of a swaying sensation.

Once across, we found ourselves in a vast green expanse of bamboo groves and teak and sandalwood trees. There were stone seats, matching the artistically crafted archways, but tempting though it was to sit and soak in the ambience, we kept going.

We paused now and then to admire the realistic sculptures of men and women in Kodava costumes, performing traditional dances. These images are safely within enclosures, to protect them from over-enthusiastic selfie-seekers. Moving on, we came to an amazing aviary. Colourful parakeets perched on our palms, helping themselves to the birdseed provided by the person in charge.

The children among us were a bit nervous, but so gently did our feathered friends feed that we felt not the slightest discomfort. What did make us uneasy at Nisargadhama was the large number of people who were thronging the shops at the entrance, with total disregard for social distancing.

Crowds were also a problem at Harangi Dam. By contrast, Chiklihole Dam, (a small reservoir, about 15 km from Kushalanagar) was refreshing. We drove unhindered to the top (not easily accessible at other similar sites) and found it free of unmasked tourists. Not that we could entirely escape Covid! It dashed our hopes of visiting the Golden Temple at nearby Bylakuppe. The Namdroling Monastery, home to a community of monks and nuns, was barred to outsiders because of the pandemic.

St Sebastian’s Church

Fortunately, we managed to see another significant place of worship. Constructed a few years ago, St Sebastian’s Church stands on a hill from which one gets a panoramic view of Kushalanagar. There was scarcely anyone around, but a boy playing on the premises kindly opened a side door for us. Beautiful statues adorn the interior and exterior of this splendid edifice.

Figurines of a different sort caught our attention at a wayside stall. Each time we passed BM Road, we were fascinated by colourful life-size replicas of animals that seemed to be staring straight at us. Made of cement, and evidently intended for and evidently intended for parks and gardens, they were among the several spectacular sights of Kushalanagar.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Sunday Herald> Sunday Herald Melange / by Suryakumar Dennison / January 30th, 2022

From specialist to generalist, a doctor’s journey

During my career, I have tried to learn broad-based skills rather than restrict myself to surgery alone, says Dr Kavery Nambisan

Dr Kavery Nambisan at her health clinic. Credit: DH Photo

I wound up my surgical career of 36 years in 2015 and all I wished for was to hang up my white coat and stay in the dream home that me and my husband Vijay were building in a village near Ponnampet in Kodagu, Karnataka. A house with a freshwater well, enough space for a garden, a few beautiful old trees; and a high-tiled roof that has leaked faithfully during the rains.

But secretly, secretly, I knew it was not finished. I found myself dreaming of operations (visualising them step by step), of hospital wards, a nurse’s shout, of stretchers screeching between my ears, the irascible phone bullying me out of bed.

Surgery is a bold and often risky venture. Risky because your work is a hair’s breadth away from life throbbing inside minute channels within flesh and bone; your fingers move in a disciplined trance and if you are a fraction of a millimetre off your target, you might nick life itself.

Patients line up outside her clinic. They mostly come in the morning hours from distance of up to 20 km

A month later there I was, with my rented room nestling between two barber shops. “Any professional doubts you might have, you can seek their advice,” teased Vijay as we drove back home. “Righto. When you come to me as a patient, I’ll borrow their instruments.”

Unobtrusively, I made the switch from the scalpel to the stethoscope. During my career, I have tried to learn broad-based skills rather than restrict myself to surgery alone. I worked in various departments of bigger hospitals and in teaching institutions. . It helped me enormously. As a general practitioner too, I am asked to attend to a wide variety of cases. I try to keep abreast of my medical knowledge by reading, and interacting with colleagues.

In cities, the medical profession is compartmentalised into specialities but in a small rural town, most people do not have the means to hop between doctors. My clinic is open in the morning hours only, so patients started to come home. They were the daily wage-earners who live near us and neighbours on ‘friendly visits’ who inveigle you into checking blood pressure or treating migraine or a skin rash. We partitioned off a portion of the veranda and I stocked up essential medicines and, injections, bandages and splints. Rural cordiality ensures that patients are willing to wait while I finish bathing, boiling the milk, burning chapatis or finishing a call. The telephone, especially the ‘mobile’ pins down the user in more ways than one. We doctors have it hard. “Dactre, are you at the aaspathre? No? My son has earache. I’ll bring him to your house right away.”

Some of the privileged classes are put off by the equalizer effect of my scruffy clinic. “You should discourage these labourers. They spread all sorts of diseases. And how can you trust them? They will observe everything, then come back and rob,” says a neighbour. Never mind that there has been no such incident in the village. The fish-seller stops by late in the evening. He has had no time to go home for a bath before coming to the clinic and is apologetic about the odours that waft in with him. A woman I am treating for her arthritic pains regularly requests me to ‘hide’ a few hundred rupees for her, safe from her husband. I think the man knows, or do I imagine the scowl on his face when he meets me?

Excitement is always round the corner. Patients come in with the warning signals of a ‘heart attack’, with epileptic seizures, dog bites and injuries following drunken brawls.

Between patients, I have time to reflect. I can help patients by treating them when they fall sick but the real need is to prevent them from falling sick. The irony is that my surgical career is almost all about cure and not prevention. You have a lump? I’ll cut it out. A blockage? I can unblock it. Broken bone? I’ll fix it. The results are immediate and patients, grateful. The great bulk of medical thought, medical progress and medical expenditure goes into curing patients after they fall sick. In comparison, a negligible amount is spent on prevention of disease. In medical colleges, the learning of Preventive Medicine (and Community Health) gets low priority and is somehow made to seem dull and uninspiring. It is a huge mistake.

The average citizen is led to believe that the entire responsibility for his malady rests with the doctor. Not so. It is important to understand how the body functions and to learn about your illness by asking the doctor. I like explaining to patients and those that listen find it far easier to overcome their illness because it encourages them to take charge of their own bodies.

The first step is for the patient to understand the why of his or her ailment and then the how of treatment. The main causative factors of illness are heredity; environment; diet; stress; and lack of physical activity. If every citizen is provided with clean surroundings, uncontaminated water, simple nutritious food and the amenities for physical exercise, and if mental wellbeing is ensured, many of us can live beyond a hundred years, in good health.

We live because of it, (and at times for it) but we cannot live without it: Food. Nearly half the world’s population survives on less than the required amount; the rest of us eat way too much. We worry about the waistline but care little about wastage. Sixty percent of the patients who visit my clinic are well on their way to weakened hearts, afflicted livers and the degeneration of other organs all brought on by ill-considered eating. Diseases that were once the privilege of the upper class now punish all of society. Awareness about healthy food reaches the educated first. A person moving from poverty to relative wealth goes for fried snacks, bakery goods and fizzy drinks.

The director of a company that produces a popular brand of biscuits said in an interview that Indian mothers are ‘aware’ of the health benefits of biscuits. They use it as the first solid food given to babies. The power of advertising! A young woman who works as a domestic help told me that she never cooks breakfast. Her family of four starts the day with tea and glucose biscuits. India will definitely need more dentists to take care of a generation with early dental caries. The media supplies misinformation in the form of advertisements tangled with facts. Unhealthy high-end pap is shamelessly lauded by celebrities who will not touch them. The more expensive the goods being sold, the more treacherously untrue the superlative qualities extolled.

Mental wellbeing is an ill-understood term. The mind must be able to function in a smooth and happy manner for the individual to get the best out of life. Emotional grace provides us with the ability to understand and act towards the collective betterment of people everywhere, without the prejudice of narrow divisive factors. Even in our (seemingly) tranquil rural setting where I work, stress is a constant factor. Nothing is more worrisome than hunger, homelessness, unemployment and a lack of dignity.

Many ailments are triggered or aggravated by the occupation one pursues (see box). Almost always, patients are surprised when you tell them such facts. Some of them make the effort to address the problem.

Lessons from the pandemic

The Covid pandemic taught me many things. The one fact that came back to me strongly during these two years is that the pandemic itself would not have happened if the world was more tuned to prevention of infectious disease.

An infection is when another living organism (bacteria, virus, or parasites) invades some part of the human body, multiplies and destroys the equilibrium. A simple example is when there is a cut injury to the skin which gets ‘infected’ and pours out pus; as also a common cold, where a virus enters the nose, throat and lungs, causing various respiratory symptoms like nasal congestion, throat pain, cough and fever. The defence mechanism of the body called the immune system tries to fight the invader by sending an army of white blood cells to the breached zone. If the body immunity manages to win, it stops the virus from multiplying. The cut injury heals fast, the cold is cured with ease. If immunity is weak, the virus gains easy entry through the skin and soft tissues or rampages through the throat and lungs causing serious problems.

The mechanism is no different in Covid patients. A person who has a strong immune system can fight the virus and thus avoid infection or get away with a mild attack. Those with weakened immunity, (diabetics, hypertensives and patients with kidney disease or malignancy) are more prone to serious disease.

With hindsight, it is easy enough to point out that the first ‘lockdown’ in March 2020 was botched because of the abrupt manner in which it was introduced. Our Prime Minister announced it a mere four hours earlier, giving no time whatsoever for those employed in various jobs and industries to make any plans for the fallow period that followed. (South Africa announced its lockdown four days early; Bangladesh gave a week’s notice before shutting down.) The plight of millions of our migrant workers suddenly rendered homeless and foodless, trudging back to their villages in inclement weather, their suffering and deaths cannot be forgotten. We had just one positive case of Covid infection in our district of nearly six lakh people. For several months afterwards, the lockdown was our problem. With no public transport, patients who suffered from chronic and acute ailments were unable to seek medical help. 

Based on the experience of doctors in other parts of our country and abroad, I started using Ivermectin in early cases and referred only the more severe cases to the Madikeri hospital. I also used the drug as preventive medicine in a once-a-week dose for family members of infected persons and in all frontline workers in society, like the police, traffic inspectors, autorickshaw and taxi drivers, shopkeepers, vendors — all those who have to go out on work. It is best supplemented with immunity-enhancing vitamins and minerals — Vitamin C, Zinc and Vitamin D3, B complex and iron. I have been taking weekly Ivermectin through this entire period.

During the course of two years, the above method (along with simple antibiotics and cough medications) has been used in several European, Asian, African and South American countries. In Australia and the US, it is used by private practitioners but not advocated by the government. India has done a flip-flop, chiefly because of the confusing signals put out by the WHO. It is difficult to understand why the above simple measures to combat the virus have not been checked more vigorously; and why, when there are over sixty peer-reviewed trials that prove the efficacy of Ivermectin in humans, it is dismissed as “horse medicine”. WHO only needs to check its own statistical records which clearly states that over three billion doses of Ivermectin have been used worldwide since its discovery in 1976. If it were indeed ‘horse medicine’, how come we are not seeing serious side-effects or deaths due to its use?

In India, we have reputed doctors in cities and villages who have consistently used the drug to treat early Covid infections. Several state governments (UP, Odisha and Goa among them) have quietly added it to the medicine kits given to health care workers who treat quarantined Covid patients. The number of Indians treated so far would run into lakhs.

It is possible that with early and judicious use of Ivermectin, we could have avoided most of the hospital admissions, the use of antiviral drugs of doubtful efficacy, non-essential CT scans, oxygen dependence, ICU care and even death. It is puzzling and downright appalling that the WHO should continue to undermine its efficacy and safety, quoting a single hastily conducted clinical trial as the reason for its disbelief and ignoring all the other successful trials done the world over.

Effective vaccination for all, physical distancing and hygiene and early detection with treatment will curtail suffering and deaths. Our vaccination drive must pick up more speed and reach everyone. Many countries having vaccinated only a minuscule number of people, the danger of a prolonged Covid War which affects all countries might become a reality. We in India cannot afford to have another deadly surge. Malnutrition and undernutrition have increased by nearly 20% as compared to 2019.

The aftermath of the Covid years will shape the course of our nation and define the quality of life we leave for the younger generations. One can only hope that we will have learnt something from our failure. The most important lesson I have learnt is that the scales which are heavily tilted in favour of curative medicine must tilt in favour of preventive measures. And when a cure is necessary, we must try to opt for the most basic method or drug that will do the work. 

I have used up a great deal of space to state a single, most obvious truth: Keep it simple.

(Kavery Nambisan is a surgeon and novelist. Her latest work ‘A Luxury Called Health’, published by Speaking Tiger, is now available online and on the stands. She can be reached at kavery.nambisan@gmail.com) 

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Special Features / by Kavery Nambisan / January 29th, 2022

Field Marshal Cariappa’s 123rd birth anniversary observed with reverence across Kodagu

The contribution of the first Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army was recalled with pride in the district

The Field Marshal KM Cariappa Circle in Madikeri (Photo | Express)

Madikeri :

The 123rd birth anniversary of Field Marshal KM Cariappa was observed with reverence across Kodagu on Friday. The contribution of the first Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army was recalled with pride in the district.

A floral tribute to the statue of FMKM Cariappa was offered at his namesake circle in Madikeri. Kodagu DC BC Sateesha, MLAs Appachu Ranjan and KG Bopaiah, former MLC MC Nanaiah, Retired Major Nanda Nanjappa and others were present during the ceremony.

A tribute to the leader was also offered at the family house of Roshanara in Madikeri. Gonikoppal Cauvery College students paid homage to FMKM Cariappa’s statue at the college premises.

Meanwhile, addressing the media after offering a floral tribute, FMKM Cariappa’s son Retired Air Marshal KC Cariappa said, “My father always taught me that my priorities are my duty to God, to my country and family. He taught me that the colour of blood that flows in my veins is the same irrespective of my religion. There is no difference in terms of caste, colour or religion in the Army. However, we are losing sight of this in India today. There are too many walls that are being created due to religious divide. I hope that we mature as a country and respect everyone’s religion and beliefs.” 

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Karnataka / by Express News Service / January 28th, 2022

Four From Kodagu Bag Armed Forces Awards

Four Defence personnel from Kodagu have bagged Armed Forces awards on the occasion of Army Day 2022 and Republic Day 2022.

They are: Major Maletira Muthappa, who has been awarded Chief of Army Staff Commendation Card, Colonel Pandanda Bheemaiah, Sena Medal Bar – Awarded Mention-in-Dispatch, Commander Battianda K. Ponnappa (Indian Navy) – awarded NM (Distinguished Service) and Rear Admiral Iychettira Uthaiah Belliappa, VSM – awarded  AVSM (Athi Vishisht Seva Medal).

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Briefs / January 27th, 2022