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Municipality chairman held for cheating

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The Times of India       18.03.2011

Municipality chairman held for cheating

CHENNAI: The chairman of a municipality in the suburbs has been arrested on charges of cheating three persons with promises of getting them land. A hunt has been launched for his associate for the same offence.

Valasaravakkam municipality chairman EC Sekar (47), was headed to Sathyamurthy Bhavan on Wednesday to file an application for a ticket to contest the coming elections on behalf of the Congress, was nabbed by the police on the basis of a complaint from Premalatha of Ramavaram.

Sekar, a native of Tuticorin, and Somasundaram ran Thirumalai Enterprises, a real estate agency, near Kesavardhini at Valasaravakkam, the police said. "The two had promised to register separate plots of land measuring 1,200 sq ft each in the names of Premalatha (33), her sister Devi (30) and brother Senthil Kumar (28) in Nandambakkam near Kundrathur but failed to comply with the promise," a central crime branch (CCB) police officer said.

Premalatha paid Rs 59,405 while Devi and Senthil Kumar paid Rs 44,000 each, he added. Sekar was booked under IPC Sections 406 (criminal breach of trust) and 420 (cheating) and produced before a magistrate's court in the city before being remanded in judicial custody.

According to the police, in 2005, Premalatha came to know about an instalment scheme of Seven Hills Real Estate agency, then tun by Sekar and Somasundaram in Ramavaram, through her neighbour Raman, a tailor. After the introduction, the two showed Premalatha pamphlets of the new scheme. According to it, subscribers could pay the required sum through easy instalments for 30 months and get a plot measuring 1,200 sqft at Nandambakkam village near Kundrathur in Kancheepuram district registered in their names. Impressed, Premalatha roped in her sister and her brother and the three joined the scheme in August 2005. They were promised a formal agreement after the entire amount was paid.

They paid all the instalments without fail till December 2007 but Sekar and Somasundaram failed to register the property in their names, Premalatha said in her complaint.

"Meanwhile, the value of land in the area increased manifold and Sekar and Somasundaram began dodging the victims. They claimed that that there was a dispute with the previous owner of the said property and that it could take some more time before it was settled. They also suggested that the three register some other property of same measurements in their names. But Premalatha and her family members refused to accept their offer and approached the city police commissioner T Rajendran and lodged a formal complaint," a CCB police officer said.

Premalatha then verified with the revenue officials concerned and found that the property was still in the name of Somasundaram. Sekar and Somasundaram had told her it was not in any one of their names. The health of Premalatha's mother deteriorated after this problem cropped up and she suffered a nervous breakdown, the police said.

The police have arrested one of the accused but the fate of the said property in Kundrathur is still uncertain.
 

Regularisation of illegal water connections flayed

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The Hindu          16.03.2011

Regularisation of illegal water connections flayed

Staff Reporter

The Coimbatore Consumer Cause has come down heavily on the way local bodies regularising illegal water connections.

In a release, the organisation's secretary, K. Kathirmathiyon, has said the State Government by issuing Government Order (MS) 65, dated April 12, 2010, had permitted all town panchayats, municipalities and corporations to regularise unauthorised water collections by collecting two times the deposit amount as penalty.

This was most unfortunate as the Government should have taken strong action against such connections. It had instead provided amnesty for a paltry amount.

Earlier, in 2002, the GO (MS) 81, dated June 21, 2002, had permitted town panchayats and municipalities to regularise all illegal connections by accepting a penalty of Rs. 3,000 for each domestic connection and Rs. 5,000 for others.

Then it had stated that “severe action should be taken against those responsible for the illegal connections.” If any action, even though not severe, had been taken how could have the illegal connections existed from 2002 to 2010, Mr. Kathirmathiyon has asked.

The Government had already regularised illegal layouts, illegal constructions and now illegal water connections.

 

Ettimadai likely to be home for Coimbatore Zoo animals

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The Hindu       11.03.2011

Ettimadai likely to be home for Coimbatore Zoo animals

    V.S. Palaniappan
    Karthik Madhavan

The Central Zoological Authority gave the nod a few days ago

In all probability, the Coimbatore Corporation Zoo will be established on an expansive place at Ettimadai, near the city. At present, it is situated at a congested place near the VOC Park. The Central Zoological Authority (CZA) gave the nod a few days ago to shift the zoo to the 68.4-acre site at Ettimadai. The Coimbatore Corporation Zoo was set up in 1965 on a 4.61-acre site, even before the Wildlife Protection Act was legislated.

Problems cropped up in 2003 when the CZA said that the zoo needed to be moved to a spacious location for accommodating the varieties of species it housed. The CZA asked the Corporation to identify land for providing better captive breeding conditions to the animals and also ordered shifting of four solitary animals _ for biological ventilation _ to the Arignar Anna Zoological Park in Vandalur near Chennai.

The zoo has 26 reptiles, 85 mammals, 219 birds, including 11 pea hens and eight Rosy Pelicans. The animals in the zoo include 11 deer, 26 Bonnet Macaques, six foxes, six large and eight small crocodiles, 11 snakes and three camels. In December 2003, a lion (Raja, aged 22), a tigress (Rani, aged 21), Himalayan Black Bear (Pandian, aged 26) and Pig-tailed Macaque (aged 16) were shifted to the zoological park in Vandalur. Thereafter, the Corporation began its marathon efforts to identify a suitable land to shift the zoo.

The authorities first identified a land belonging to the Corporation at Kavundampalayam, a closed compost yard spread over 36 acres.

The Corporation also identified alternative lands, so that the CZA could approve one of those.

The other lands identified were a 26-acre plot at Vellanaipatti, near Kalapatty, a 26-acre plot at Othakkal Mandapam, off Pollachi Road - both belonging to the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments.

The civic body also identified another 68.4 acres at Ettimadai belonging to the Revenue Department, closer to the Coimbatore - Palakkad National Highway.

 


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