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Public Health / Sanitation

Waste dumping dominates Calangute comunidade meet

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The Times of India  23.08.2012

Waste dumping dominates Calangute comunidade meet

CALANGUTE: The dumping of garbage on comunidade land atop the Calangute hill figured prominently at an extraordinary meeting of the comunidade of Calangute held recently.

Besides this, issues of encroachment by vendors on land at the weekly Saturday market, illegal constructions on comunidade land and fields, and non-cultivation of agricultural land by tenants, also figured at the meeting.

Calangute comunidade attorney Antonio D'Souza, speaking to ToI, said that the meeting resolved to sort out the issue of dumping of garbage atop the Calangute hill by the Calangute panchayat in an amicable manner.

"They're dumping the garbage there on land belonging to the comunidade for the last 10 years without paying any compensation. We're not saying, stop it, but let us enter into a lease agreement so that the share-holders of the comunidade can benefit. Now the panchayat is saying that the state government has asked them to acquire the land to build a garbage treatment plant. We've resolved to take an appointment with the panchayat and the sarpanch to resolve the issue amicably," he said.

The issue of the weekly Saturday market near the church on comunidade land also featured at the meeting. Members pointed out that while the land is meant to be used temporarily by the vendors on Saturdays, some of them have set up permanent residences there, thereby depriving vendors of space at the market and also inconveniencing the public. They alleged that this is nothing but vote-bank politics.

Says Antonio D'Souza, "When we try to remove them with the help of the authorities, they go to the courts and the matter drags on for years. There are so many illegal constructions on comunidade land here, that I call it day-light robbery."

The issue of farmer tenants on comunidade land failing to cultivate the agricultural fields also figured at the meeting. It was pointed out that this is being done because of sky-rocketing prices of land in Calangute.

D'Souza also referred to a large number of huge resorts in the village which have encroached on comunidade land, giving the example of one resort which has built soak-pits in a nullah-pathway belonging to the comunidade.

"We're saying, pay us some compensation and do it. Whenever people in need have asked us for land, we've given them. We've given land for the community's needs, we've given land for an overhead tank, PWD offices and electricity office. We're there for the community's needs, but this daylight robbery has to stop," he said.

Last Updated on Thursday, 23 August 2012 06:08
 

‘Include Mangalore in urban malaria scheme’

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The Hindu    23.08.2012

‘Include Mangalore in urban malaria scheme’

Staff Correspondent

Congress leader P.V. Mohan has asked Union Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad to include Mangalore in the list of towns covered under the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme’s Urban Malaria Scheme.

In a letter to Mr. Azad, Mr. Mohan said Mangalore had the highest number of malaria cases among the urban areas in the country. Though nearly 600 malaria cases were detected annually, only about three per cent of them were being reported to the authorities. Malaria infections and deaths in the city were going unreported because of the fear of recrimination or reprisal, he said.

Mr. Mohan said measures taken to tackle malaria in the city were not enough. Mangalore should be included in the list of urban areas covered under the urban malaria scheme. Presently, the scheme covered 131 towns in 19 States and a Union Territory. He asked the Union Minister to send a team of experts for evaluation of malaria cases in the city and also find lapses in the malaria control programme. He expressed the need for a Technical Nodal Office of the National Vector Borne Diseases Control Programme (NVBDCP).

Last Updated on Thursday, 23 August 2012 04:59
 

Civic body trains AYUSH doctors to administer

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The Indian Express   22.08.2012

Civic body trains AYUSH doctors to administer

The debate over ayurvedic and homoeopathic doctors being allowed to prescribe allopathic medicines notwithstanding, the BMC has trained 1,925 alternative medicine practitioners to administer medicines to tuberculosis patients here. These doctors will provide medicines as per the Directly Observed Treatment Short (DOTS) course.

“As part of our organisational strengthening plan, we have trained BMC medical doctors, private practitioners as well as doctors registered under the Ayurveda, Yoga , Unani, Siddha and Naturopathy (AYUSH) to help in management of the disease,” said additional municipal commissioner Manisha Mhaiskar.

A team from the Central TB division from the Union Health Ministry will be in the city for the next three days to review the TB status, following which the BMC will will kick off the second phase of its anti-TB programme. After doctors at P D Hinduja Hospital reported 12 cases of Extremely Extensive Drug Resistant TB (XXDR-TB) in January, the civic body started its campaign of diagnosing and treating all TB cases. In the first phase, which saw BMC officials go door-to-door to survey families in 10b wards, 458 fresh cases of TB were detected. “Of these cases, 452 persons are already on treatment,” said Mhaiskar. “We have also appointed a TB officer in each ward and a chief district-level officer,” she added.

In the second phase, Sewri TB hospital will be provided additional staff. “This is the only hospital in the state where surgeries for TB are carried out. We are planning to develop it into a Centre Of Excellence,” Mhaiskar said.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 22 August 2012 11:31
 


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