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Friday, March 31, 2006

Court slams official for delaying medical reimbursement

From http://www.thehindu.com/2006/03/31/stories/2006033107710400.htm

Court slams official for delaying medical reimbursement

Special Correspondent

Orders immediate payment with 9 per cent interest


  • Special Commissioner returned the claim four times
  • "Claim of a deserving person was unjustly prolonged"
  • "Denial of benefit despite sanction order is illegal"

    CHENNAI: Rapping the Special Commissioner for Treasuries and Accounts for delaying medical reimbursement due to a schoolteacher, the Madras High Court has ordered immediate payment with nine per cent interest.

    Justice N.Paul Vasanthakumar, passing orders on a writ petition filed by the teacher, K.Subramanian, said it was open for the Government to recover the interest from the salary of erring official(s). "The Government need not suffer any financial loss due to the indifferent attitude of the officer/officers concerned."

    Heart surgery

    The matter relates to the medical reimbursement claim of Mr.Subramanian for the heart operation of his wife S.Kalaiselvi under the Tamil Nadu Government Employees Health Fund Scheme. In May 2003, the petitioner furnished a claim for Rs.1.03 lakh towards surgery, treatment and medical expenses. The Chief Educational Officer of Coimbatore sanctioned Rs.67,985, 75 per cent of the expenditure. However, the Special Commissioner for Treasuries and Accounts returned the claim four times seeking clarifications.

    With a view to satisfying the queries, the patient was subjected to examination before a medical board. The Joint Director of Health Services and the Director of Medicine and Rural Health Services certified it was an emergency surgery and that Ms.Kalaiselvi was covered by the scheme. The treatment was obtained from a Government approved hospital. Though the queries were clarified, the Special Commissioner did not clear the bill.

    Criticising the indifferent attitude of the official, Mr.Justice Paul Vasanthakumar said: "The claim of a deserving person has been unjustly prolonged. This has to be treated as vexatious." The "unnecessary and repeated queries" were "unauthorised and uncalled for," and "denial of the benefit despite the sanction order is totally erroneous and illegal."

  • Yet Another Use of DocuPen

    From http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1471673,curpg-1.cms

    In Munnabhai MBBS, Sanjay Dutt coerced a top-notch doctor to write the medical entrance exam for him. The doctors who cheated their way through the All-India Post Graduate Medical Entrance Examination conducted by AIIMS took a considerably more tech-savvy route. Not for them strong-arm methods, they used a lightweight gadget for their under-handed operations.

    The gadget in question is DocuPen, a small, extremely powerful pen-size scanner, which was used to leak the question papers. Though CBI sleuths have so far zeroed in on only 28 doctors who allegedly used the scanners, they don’t rule out the involvement of others.

    Explaining the modus operandi, a CBI official said the accused doctors had scanned the entire question paper with the help of DocuPens. Though the device is small enough to be easily smuggled in, it is also powerful enough to scan a full page in just four seconds, making it ideal for the task.

    The accused then transferred the scanned data to their mobile phones using Bluetooth technology, and sent out the paper to their 'contacts' through multimedia messaging.

    The contacts, sitting in Pondicherry and Madurai, immediately solved the questions and sent the answers to candidates taking the exam at the Chennai and Delhi centres through SMS.

    Mobile phones were not allowed in the exam hall, but the accused managed to bring them in. Interestingly, the phones also remained unnoticed throughout the examination.

    The investigating agency came to know of this innovative method while questioning the four alleged kingpins (all doctors) of the paper leak case on Thursday. All four were arrested by the CBI following raids at their residences. While two of them — P Satish Kumar and Vijay Kannan — are doing their post-graduation from Madurai Medical College and JIPMER, Pondicherry respectively — the remaining two — Ravi Kannan and N Bhasker — have completed their post-graduation from JIPMER.

    CBI officials alleged that the four arrested doctors were the masterminds behind the paper leak racket, though others may also be involved. They are also probing whether the examination papers were leaked in previous years as well. Meanwhile, exam authorities have their work cut out to ensure there are no copycat crimes.

    Thursday, March 30, 2006

    4 Doctors Arrested

    From

    CHENNAI ONLINE


    Four doctors, two of them pursuing their post-graduate medical studies, were arrested in connection with the alleged malpractices in the All India Post-Graduate Medical Entrance Examination-2006, a senior CBI officer said.

    They were the organisers behind the scam, DIG, CBI's Anti-Corruption Bureau, N R K Reddy, said here.

    The four were arrested under Sections 120B (conspiracy) read with 420 of the IPC (cheating) and 13(1) of the Prevention of Corruption Act and would be remanded tomorrow, he said.

    The names of the arrested were given as Dr P Sathish Kumar (26), Dr Vijay Kannan (25), both pursuing PG courses, Dr Ravi Kannan (28) and Dr N Bhaskar (30), both completed their PG from JIPMER in Pondicherry.

    Yesterday, the CBI had raided the houses of 35 doctors in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry, including seven in Chennai, in connection with the case.

    Investigations revealed that a group of doctors organised the whole thing for cash ranging from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 10 lakh and provided the answers to about 300 objective type questions through SMS to the candidates, who were carrying mobile phones in the examination centres.

    Overview of CBI Raids in AIIMS Conducted PG Exam Leak Case

    The raids were carried out in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Chennai and cases against 22 doctors were registered in Chennai and 6 cases were registered in Delhi.

    From http://www.rxpgnews.com/medicalnews/professionals/doctors/article_3840.shtml

    By IANS & RxPG Staff Reporter,
    Sleuths of the Central Bureau of Investigations (CBI) Wednesday raided clinics and residences of several doctors at 35 places across the country for their alleged involvement in the leakage of medical examination question papers in All India Post Graduate Medical Entrance Examination (AIPGMEE) conducted by the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi for the year 2006. It claims to have cracked the case of question paper leak and other malpractices committed within two days of registering the case. The investigating agency which initially registered two cases in this connection on the basis of a complaint received from the Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Govt. of India, today conducted searches at more than 30 places spread over the States of Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Delhi. The searches and subsequent examination of the suspected doctors has revealed that two doctors of Pondicherry and one from Madurai were the kingpins of this scam and they had collected amounts of up to Rs. 10 lakh from each of the candidates.

    The raids were carried out in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Chennai and cases against 22 doctors were registered in Chennai and 6 cases were registered in Delhi. Officials said initial investigation had suggested a possibility of a scam and therefore raids were carried out by the agency. They said some doctors who were questioned during the raids confessed to receiving Rs.1 million for leaking the question paper and helping students answer the questions. They said the doctors had helped the aspirants by sending them text messages on their mobile phones. Question papers were taken out of the examination halls and then answers were sent through SMSs.

    According to the CBI, when results of the All India Post Graduate Medical Entrance Examination (AIPGE) were declared, it was found that 424 aspirants, who cleared the exam for 1,006 seats, were from Chennai. The entrance exam was held in January this year. Officials said among the top 100 students, 37 were from the Tamil Nadu capital. Investigations were carried out after several aspirants complained about malpractices adopted by some students during the exam.

    The modus-operandi of the racket was that the question papers from the examination hall were taken out and answers were provided by a group of people which were sent through SMS to the doctors appearing for the entrance test. CBI during investigation found evidence of money changing hands and receipts taken from doctors who had organised the entire operation. CBI found that the candidates had also arranged cell phones on the day of the examination for receiving the answer keys through SMS on the cell phones.

    The Union Health and Family Welfare Ministry was concerned about malpractices in such a prestigious examination had promptly handed over the case to CBI for investigation. During the preliminary enquiry by CBI, it was revealed that out of 1006 seats, 424 candidates had been selected from Chennai Centre alone and in the list of first 100 candidates, 37 candidates figured from Chennai Centre. The analysis of the answer sheets revealed that they had used unfair means to get selected. The enquiry concluded that there was a strong possibility of a large scale scam involving a number of doctors of Chennai and Tamil Nadu, who would have indulged in illegal acts in getting selected for this All India Post Graduate Medical Entrance Test.

    CBI registered the two cases on 27.3.2006 under different sections of IPC for cheating, forgery and under the Prevention of Corruption Act against 28 doctors who were suspected to have connived with unknown public servants for illegal means to pass the entrance test. Out of the two cases, one case was registered in Chennai against 22 doctors and unknown public servants and searches were conducted in Chennai, Erode, Madurai, Dindigul, Cuddalore, Kanyakumari, Salem, Villupuram, Perambalur, Pudukottai, Namakkal, Tuticorin and Pondicherry. The other case was registered in Delhi against six doctors (who were candidates in the entrance test) and unknown public servants and others. In this connection, searches were conducted in six places in Delhi.

    CBI is going to further investigate into all aspects of the case and will try to bring the guilty persons to book at the earliest. More raids are expected.

    It may be recalled that CBI had successfully investigated the AIPGMEE-2000 paper leak case and charge sheets have been filed against the accused. Besides, CBI has cracked the CAT-2004 paper leak case, Railway Recruitment paper leak case and recently the CET-2005 Delhi engineering entrance test paper leak case.

    Facts that emerged today:

    1. 35 places were raided in Chennai, Erode, Madurai, Dindigul, Cuddalore, Kanyakumari, Salem, Villupuram, Perambalur, Pudukottai, Namakkal, Tuticorin and Pondicherry, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi (Six Raids). These places included doctors residences and clinics.

    2. Out of the three kingpins, two were from Pondicherry and One from Madurai. Each collected upto one million rupees per candidate for the leak.

    3. Answer keys were sent to the candidates inside examination hall on SMS messages.

    4. 424 people were selected from Chennai center amongst top 1006 cadidates (whooping 42%).

    5. 37% candidates in top 100 were from Chennai center.

    6. The answer sheets were analysed by CBI to establish use of unfair means. (good precedent for future)

    7. 28 cases against involved candidates have been registered today under Prevention of Corruption act. Out of them 20 are registered in Chennai and 6 cases in Delhi.

    - Indo-Asian News Service

    Tuesday, March 28, 2006

    A register for .....

    As per
    NDTV

    A hostel in Madurai has been forcing students to maintain a public register of their menstrual cycle.

    This is to prevent premarital sex and to ensure that teenage girls do not go astray.

    The invasion of privacy has been taking place for years at the government hostel for poor and backward class students in Tamil Nadu's Madurai district.

    The register has columns for the exact dates of their cycle. Even slightly irregular dates invite snide remarks and harsh reprimands by the hostel warden.

    "Making them write down their menstrual cycle dates creates mental torture. They are not even able to tell their parents about these things. It is creating a lot of tension," said Jeeva, Regional Convenor, TN Child Rights Protection Network.

    Defending the outrageous measure, the hostel warden says it is the best way to keep the girls under check and prevent possible premarital sex.

    "I've only been continuing what my predecessors started. I am doing it with students' interest at heart," said Selvarani, warden, Adi Dravidar Students Hostel.

    Sanitation woes

    The girls revealed that the policing is done by the cook under the overall supervision of the warden.

    But while their records may be strictly monitored, their sanitation is not.

    The girls claim their hostel has just one bathroom but that is exclusively for the warden. The girls can enter it but only to clean it and not use it.

    Ironically the moral brigade is unconcerned about the fact that the girls have to bathe out in the open after dusk.

    From hounding an actress for airing her views on pre marital sex to banning jeans and t-shirts on college campuses to monitoring the menstrual cycle of teenage hostel girls, primitive mindsets, it seems, are there to stay in Tamil Nadu.

    My Comments : This cannot prevent Premarital sex, but only Premarital pregnancy.

    Friday, March 24, 2006

    Sonia and Sacrifice

    From http://gauravsabnis.blogspot.com/2006/03/sonias-done-it-again.html

    I have always said that folks who claim they are not interested in politics because it is "boring" are missing a lot of entertainment. The twists and turns in the plotlines of politics can rival any soap opera.

    Once again we see a series of events unravelling like a well-crafted narrative in Indian politics. Once again, the BJP was set up for a telling blow by Sonia Gandhi, and they swallowed the bait hook, line and sinker.

    This is how it all started. Jaya Bachchan was disqualified from the Rajya Sabha by the Election Commission for holding an "office of profit". It is widely believed that elements within the Congress orchestrated this removal with the dual purpose of targeting the Samajwadi Party, to which Bachchan belongs, and to please Sonia Gandhi, who has been leading a silent feud against the Bachchan family. It is also alleged that Sonia Gandhi herself masterminded this removal.

    The SP cried blue murder, led by Amar Singh, but to no avail. It was rumoured that Amar Singh too may lose his seat in the parliament due to the same rule.

    Out of nowhere, the BJP springs into action. As we know, the BJP has been lying dormant for a while. They completely failed to extract any mileage out of the Varanasi blasts. In this twist feud between two of their enemies, they saw an opportunity to win some crucial points.

    They said that Sonia Gandhi too, technically holds an "office of profit" as Chairperson of the National Advisory Council. Now whether NAC Chairpersonship is an "office of profit" or not, is very grey. In Jaya Bachchan's case, it was quite open and shut since the post, by definition, had a salary. Her defence that she never took the salary cheques hence didn't hold any water.

    In case of the NAC however, apparently the post by definition has no salary associated with it. The NAC itself is a new creature, created by the UPA Government, so there is no precedent as such.

    This whole issue of "office of profit" is rather murky, since MPs across party lines are holding such offices and are thus vulnerable to disqualification. One had expected that all political parties would agree to a constitutional amendment of sorts which will clear the whole issue up. The only reason the Congress stalled a similar move by Mualayam Singh in UP was to score brownie points with Sonia by causing Bachchan's disqualification.

    However the BJP, still obsessed with Sonia Gandhi, saw an opportunity to embarass her again using this excuse. They started clamouring for Sonia's disqualification. What was a universal problem was suddenly turned into an anti-Sonia measure by the BJP. The planned ordinance/bill was said to be drafted with solely Soinia in mind.

    The BJP no doubt felt very proud of themselves. Finally they had managed to get the slippery Sonia in a tight spot. So intoxicated was the BJP that good ole Vajpayee announced that if the government came out with such an ordinance, "the government will go". Ermmm...Atalji, how exactly will it go? Vote of confidence etc? Let us not raise such trifle questions with Atalji.

    The government then did something rather bizarre. In face of the Sonia-bashing by the BJP and the SP, the parliament was adjourned "sine die" with the reason being stated as "completion of all financial business(this was the budget session, remember?) and no matters pending". The opposition and media yelled like never before. The charges of wanting to save Sonia were again raised, as was the allegation that the adjournment was done only to allow the said ordinance to be passed (since ordinances cant be passed when parliament is in session).

    What happened today leads me to believe that the adjournment was nothing but a bait that the Congress threw to the opposition, which swallowed it hook, line and sinker. The BJP further increased focus on Sonia and tried to invoke memories of 1975 when Emergency was declared just to save Indira gandhi's post.

    And Sonia Gandhi did it again. She resigned freom Lok Sabha as well as from the NAC. Again, she has seemingly taken the "high moral ground" saying she isn't interested in posts and is hurt at the suggestion that all this drama was done just to protect her posts. Here, she doesn't care about the posts.

    The BJP as well as the SP are now in quandry. The media has already whipped up the whole "sacrifice" drama again. An SMS-poll on CNN-IBN shows that 60% believe that it is indeed an "act of sacrifice". Now keep in mind that english-channel-watching classes have traditionally been the biggest Sonia-haters. If even among them, 60% feel it is an act of sacrifice, you can imagine how it will be perceived by the general populace.

    Again, several birds have been killed by this one stone. The BJP has been made to look stupid for the umpteenth time. The SP is baffled too. The worst trapped is the Left which so far was safely on the sidelines. Nine of their MPs hold these purported offices of profit. They can't follow Sonia's lead, because...well,. it's already been done. They also know that this "2nd coming of the sacrifice" will be exploited fully in the forthcoming elections in WB and Kerala.

    Sonia Gandhi and her supporters have shown themselves to be by far the wiliest folks in Indian politics. I don't believe this "sacrifice" nonsense, but I have to doff my hat at the tactical brilliance of this decision.

    The BJP leaders who refuse to learn from their mistakes need to ask themselves - have they really come to terms with the changed rules of the game? Do they realise that they are fighting, not Indira Gandhi who was power-hungry and quasi-dictatorial and thus easy to make a public villain out of, but a prima donna named Sonia Gandhi who knows that she need not hold posts to pull strings. A woman who is brilliant at impression management and knows the value of a "moral high ground" in as emotional an electorate as ours.

    The BJP leaders are on TV now, making hollow triumphant voices, saying the resignation is a vindication of their stand. Just like the resignation in 2004. But one hopes they know better. Or do they? Will they continue to repeat these blunders? If they do then Election 2009 is going to be easy pickings for the Congress.

    From http://tigerburningbright.blogspot.com/2006/03/that-act-again.html

    Sonia's political strategy is simple: Don't let them take the initiative. And outlive your enemy.

    First she refused to become PM, and then she asked Natwar to resign; now she has quit her MP seat. Any of these instances could have been used to rock the country - but she didn't let it happen.

    To a large extent this strategy has paid off very well. By taking the wind out of opposition, she has indirectly managed to destabilize her political enemies. Most importantly BJP top brass, who found themselves in wilderness after years of intoxicating power, are finding it harder and harder to hold on to their own prestige. The only thing which could have kept BJP busy & united would have been relentless attacks on the Govt, which she has repeatedly denied.

    What makes this situation more amusing is, this one really started with a very petty issue. A quest to destroy Amar Singh has boomeranged. Clearly the 'strategist' behind this quest has a long way to go before he can feel secure enough for not to resort to spying.

    Regardless Sonia's shrewdness has one "moral example" for Indian polity, a long forgotton virtue: If accused in high office - Resign.

    Her shrewdness shouldn't surprise anyone. Was it all a mere coincidence that Ottavio is Italian, and Bofors happened during her husband's rule?

    Thursday, March 23, 2006

    Outsourcing phone sex from call centers in India!

    From http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/01-29b-05.asp

    Some Call Centers in Bangalore and Mumbai have received some bizarre requests from the Western countries. Some call center operators have secretly set up phone sex operations in India.

    Callers from America or Europe or any other part of the world can dial a toll free number that gets routed through a western nation into call centers in India after the caller pays in dollars or euros. Then the callers get connected to some Indian lady who provide the phone sex service.


    The practice is totally illegal in India while somewhat legal in Western countries. The business is brisk and revenue flow is very heavy. The Indian operators running these call centers normally have a legitimate normal call center in the front and then phone sex center in the back end.

    Girls are paid very heavy and plenty of young models are working in these underground centers. Central Bureau of Investigation and local police try their best to catch these illegal operators but all they can do is to unveil a legitimate call center operations for normal businesses.

    According to sources, Interpol and Indian authorities are working together to tap the phones and nab these culprits based on the exact location of the phone.

    But now call forwarding is creating another problem. The girls are being connected from the Western countries directly to their cell phones at their home. Many of these girls have claimed that they are talking to their fiancé and boyfriends in America and Western countries.

    According to Indian authorities this is very difficult to control. The greed for easy money and material luxury is so high in modern India that the educated girls are jumping into the phone sex profession knowing very well they will not be infected with sexual disease or HIV!

    Call Centres and Sex

    More about Call Centres in

    The Call of the Call Centre Part 1 at http://youthcurry.blogspot.com/2005/01/call-of-call-centre-part-1.html

    The Call of the Call Centre Part 2 at
    http://youthcurry.blogspot.com/2005/01/call-of-call-centre-part-2.html

    India call centre staff in sex romp shocker

    From http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/06/29/call_centre_shocker/

    Any reader who has ever wondered what Indian call centre operatives get up to between harassing angry BT punters about overdue bills and then selling their personal details to the highest bidder may be surprised to learn that they do not actually fill their spare time with watching old episodes of Eastenders in order to hone their English skills ("Good afternoon sir, your British Telecom bill is 11 minutes overdue, would you like to pay now by credit card or am I gonna havter get on the bleedin' blower every ten minutes for the next munf til you cough up the wonga, lawks a-mercy luv a duck?"), but rather blow any call-free moments indulging in torrid rumpy-pumpy with follow headset jockeys.

    That, at least, is according to a revealing report on India Times, which cites the steamy case of 24-year-old "senior process associate" Mandakini Sandhu and squeeze Ashish Gupta.

    The India Times explains: "For many BPO [business process outsourcing] employees like Sandhu and Gupta, the office space is not just a professional domain. Instead, it symbolises one's personal space, thanks to long hours being spent in office. From making friends to cultivating relationships, BPO units are slowly becoming hubs where inter-personal bonding takes place. And it comes as little surprise that many also give vent to their sexual urges in the office space."

    Crikey. Sandhu apparently spends 12-13 hours a day interfacing with the public, so her office is "the only place that allows her to snatch a few cozy moments with her boyfriend". She elaborates: "For us, the office is practically everything. Weird working hours means that most friendships happen usually within the office and in similar working set ups. And in such a situation, intimacy is a foregone conclusion."

    For those who like their details in sort-of plain English, Sandhu admits she has gone to "fourth base" with her hormonally-charged colleague, but claims she has "refrained from having a quickie in the workplace as it's quite a risky proposition".

    We're not quite sure what "fourth base" means here, since Indians clearly have a different base system to that understood in the UK. Brits - working on a simplified two-base system - understand anything after first base (complete failure to get down and dirty) as full-blown beast-with-two-backs action. To Middle England, therefore, fourth base would involve something seen only in Swedish DVDs and certainly illegal in the United Kingdom.

    But we digress. The India Times continues:

    If the recent visual footage acquired from strategically placed cameras in a leading Mumbai-based business process outsourcing (BPO) unit showing a couple having sex in an office cubicle is anything to go by, workplace sex is no longer an aberration for most couples working in India's sunrise sector. With work schedules stretching into long hours, and bonding happening between emotionally lonely employees, sex is just a manifestation for physical needs as two individuals try and seek a connection.

    And what do the clients make of this? Well, According to BPO hotshot Prakash Toppo: "Since most of our customers are influential, they want cameras as they are dealing with a lot of sensitive information. For the couple caught in a sexually compromising situation, the one question that arises is why were they doing what they were doing in the office premises."

    We can answer that one for you Prakash: You spend 12-13 hours a day sitting in a room attempting to seek a connection with irate BT customers. After a while, your emotionally loneliness kicks in and you decide to seek a connection closer to home. Suddenly, in walks Ashish Gupta with a "let's go to fourth base you call centre minx" look in his eye...

    Anyone reading this who has recently outsourced his or her call centre operation to Mumbai should not, however, imagine that the BPO management is going to take this rampant promiscuity lying down. J Kalyanaraman, Human Resources supremo at HCL Comnet, asserts: "Filming is essential as it is in tune with keeping the faith of employees. It's not a breach of employee privacy as there is a huge amount of customer-sensitive information involved, so it makes good sense to impose surveillance. First instances of compromising behaviour (kissing, smooching in the office premises) are let off with a stern warning as such kind of behaviour is similar to misuse of facilities given by the organisation and is therefore liable for punishment."

    Quite what this punishment is, we do not know, but it likely involves being locked into a secure cubicle for a month and put on conservatory sales cold-calling duty. Or worse - three months on the BT overdue bill roster. Cor blimey.

    India’s call-centre staff tune in to decadence

    from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2093209,00.html

    THEY are the young faces and polite voices of India’s economic boom but the country’s growing number of call centre staff handling British and American customer inquiries have a guilty secret.

    According to senior police officers and pollsters they are also leading a social revolution against traditional Indian values by having extramarital affairs and taking party drugs.

    A survey found that one in five of those questioned had had a workplace affair and that the majority of those were married. In another recent poll one in four call centre staff said they regularly had casual affairs.

    The figures present a serious challenge to traditional social conservatism. The revolution is unfolding in India’s high-tech cities, including Delhi, Bangalore, Madras and Chandigarh, where young well paid graduates and newlyweds work long night shifts.

    More than 30 large British companies, including Lloyds TSB and Norwich Union, use Indian call centres to handle customer inquiries.

    According to insiders the centres are generating a work-hard, play-hard culture where liberal attitudes to sex and club drugs are thriving. The staff work under high pressure and are rewarded with “team-building” parties.

    One of India’s most senior police officers said the western companies behind the call centres were causing a breakdown in the fabric of Indian family life.

    “The companies should insist on certain standards,” said Shankar Rao, deputy commissioner of Delhi police. “I want to make sure these call centres do not become dens of evil.

    “There should be counselling available to make sure the staff live in conformity with society, and not indulging in drugs and sex. They should make sure they do not work more than three nights a week. It’s causing mischief.”

    Adultery is not restricted to BPOs only, say experts

    Adultery is not restricted to BPOs only, say experts

    from http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1460412.cms

    The word ‘call’ in call centres suddenly sounds like an insinuation. BPO workers and their associations are taking strong exception to the allegation that Indian call centres are breeding grounds for adultery and vice.

    A report dated March 19 in The Times , London, says one in five Indian call centre workers has had an extramarital affair in the office, and that one in four regularly had casual affairs.

    BPO majors IBM Daksh and Intelenet did not comment, but the Call Centre Association of India has called the report another attempt to malign India’s flourishing BPO industry. Individuals working at call centres also say the report targets their profession in an unfair manner.

    Health professionals in Mumbai do not deny that instances of inappropriate sexual behaviour are emerging from call centres. But they do not believe this phenomenon is typical of, or limited to, the BPO sector

    Gynaecologist Anita Soni works with Hiranandani Hospital in Powai, which has call centres in the vicinity. “I would say the number of women who are sexually active without being married is much higher now than it was 10 years ago. But this phenomenon is not peculiar to the call centre industry, although the graveyard shift, the newfound freedom and easy money may contribute to the trend,’’ she says.

    A day-night drugstore near a suburban call centre witnesses young employees walk in after midnight asking for emergency contraception. But the youngsters know little about birth control, and given that every method of contraception has a failure rate, unwanted pregnancies do occur.

    In such cases, the girls do the rounds of medical clinics, often with the colleague who is responsible for the pregnancy. “They claim to be cousins, but we find out they have not known each other long,’’ reports another doctor. Such couples rarely display worry or guilt when they are exposed.

    The CCAI puts it down to a “lack of life experience’ ’ while others point to easy money at an early age. The starting salary in a call centre is much higher than those that doctors or lawyers receive

    "An MBBS doctor starts off earning around Rs 5,000 per month as an RMO,’’ says clinical psychologist Narendra Kinger.

    According to CCAI figures, a young, inexperienced worker at a call centre earns Rs 12,000, and this figure rises by upto 12% per annum.

    Kinger explains, “Money translates into power. The fact that BPO kids at times may earn more than their parents can also tilt the power relationships at home. They may decide to live on their own, or may use the income on gambling, sex, or drinking. They feel since they have earned the money, they have a right to spend it the way they see fit.’’

    Like CCAI, Kinger says the call centre is as good or bad a workplace as any. “Starting work at 18 or 19 makes teenagers more responsible. It teaches them values, ethics and social behaviour, as well as learning to associate between performance and reward. However, youngsters choose call centres as a starting point because they do not require much training, and kids can pursue their studies too.’’

    He disagrees that call centres are dens of vice, because job-related stress can either make an individual mature and responsible, or see him go haywire and splurge on lifestyle goods. It is a question of making the right choice.

    Wednesday, March 22, 2006

    Is this 21st Century

    From http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/22/stories/2006032215280400.htm

    Krishnagiri: Maheswari, a 26-year-old mother of four, lost her husband in an accident two years ago. Her family found it hard to make ends meet until she was appointed on compassionate grounds as a cook in the Mottur panchayat primary school in Kaveripattinam union. She joined work on March 2 and things seemed to be looking up for her.

    But to Maheswari's dismay, 88 students of the school refused to eat food cooked by her, as she was a dalit. Their parents too objected and insisted their wards would not touch the food. They requested officials to transfer Maheswari and appoint a "caste Hindu" woman in her place.

    Food wasted

    The children reportedly refused to eat the food cooked by Maheswari for three days. It was thrown away. Revenue officials held talks with parents and villagers of Mottur panchayat, but they bluntly said their wards would not eat food cooked by Maheswari.

    "Former panchayat president Madan and village gounder Madesh abused me and said the children would not consume food cooked by me. The Revenue officials asked me to accept a transfer and work in the Arasampatti primary school if I wanted to continue in my job," says Maheswari.

    The Barur police have registered cases against Madan and Madesh under Section 4(3) of the Protection of Civil Rights Act.

    "The Government should bring the guilty to book. The National SC/ST Commission should visit the village and investigate the matter. Barring a few, the children bring food from home and refuse to eat the food cooked by Maheswari," says Kathir, executive director of Evidence, a human rights organisation that looked into the incident.

    http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/22/stories/2006032203240300.htm

    SALEM: A group of people allegedly beat up a Dalit youth who protested the discriminatory practice of serving `prasatham' (sweet rice) in his palms instead of on plantain leaf at an annual temple function here.

    Mathesh (30) went to the temple at Ponnammapet here on Monday where the annual festival was being held. The people at the temple served sweet rice to the devotees on plantain leaves.

    When Mathesh and a few of his neighbours from Arunthathiyar colony asked the prasatham, the distributors attempted to serve the rice in their palms. When Mathesh requested them to serve the hot rice on leaves, they allegedly refused.

    This led to an altercation between Mathesh and a group of people at the temple. Suddenly, some unidentified persons allegedly started attacking him with sickles and rods. He was rushed to the Salem Government Hospital where he received eight stitches on his head, chest and face.

    At the hospital, Mathesh told The Hindu that he had just asked the temple authorities to serve the rice on leaves as they did to others. "They know that we are Dalits. Hence they refused to serve the `prasatham' to us on leaves. In fact, we could have accepted the rice in our palms had it not been hot," he said.

    Councillor P. Rajagopal, who had taken up Mathesh's cause, said that caste discrimination was prevailing right in the heart of the city itself. He alleged that despite a complaint, the Ammapet police did not inquire into the matter. He and the relatives of the victim submitted a petition to the Police Commissioner in this regard.

    At 9:19 AM, shivaprasad said…

    Dr Bruno,
    It is not the only incident which happens in this country.
    Well to do over the centuries have taken advantage of the deprived and created a caste of high and low. The sufferers have never risen to the occasion and fought back. The things will never change in the history of India until the backward class people rise. There is no religion in this country. The educated class has made up over the centuries and kept the underprivileged in dark. Over hundreads of years people have accepted different religions to escape this. This is not the solution. fight and fight for equality and in their platform with education is the solution. Who will lead them. Are their leaders of the backward class. No there are not, There will never be. People are taking advantage of the underprivileged even now in a different way. I feel people should modernise over their culture and fight instead of escapism. That is what is happening in this country.

    I think I should stop here

    Saturday, March 18, 2006

    SOS - Danger to Mother Tongue

    The Hindu writes in http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/18/stories/2006031807401300.htm

    Queen's English? How do you spell that?

    Hasan Suroor

    CLEVER PARTY jokes about Indian and Chinese English may soon become a thing of the past thanks to a new generation of native British university students who struggle to write correct English. Let alone grammar, they are said to have difficulty getting basic spellings and punctuation right and, according to a new study, many are "incapable" of composing simple sentences in English without mistakes.

    The study, which reads like a dispatch from the educational backwaters of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, is based on a nationwide survey of British undergraduates by more than 100 professional writers who teach in universities under a scheme of the Royal Literary Fund.

    In their report, leaked to The Sunday Telegraph, the writers say they were "astonished" at the scale of the problem and blame it on modern methods of teaching — or what they call the "tick box" approach that undermines writing skills.

    The result, they argue, is that even literature students in good universities lack the "basic ability to express themselves in writing."

    "The recurrent theme is the confusion, embarrassment and fear endured by students who find themselves confronted with written assignments they don't understand and can't begin to tackle. The writers' scheme [which sponsored the survey] has exposed a public catastrophe," Hilary Spurling, winner of this year's Whitbread literary prize and an official of the Royal Literary Fund, is reported as saying.

    Fall in teaching standards

    It is the latest in a series of studies that point to an alarming decline in English-language teaching standards in Britain. This despite the fact that the number of students passing their school-leaving examinations with high marks is rising every year, thanks largely to an educational system that, according to the report, encourages spoon-feeding and puts too much emphasis on "displaying bits of knowledge" at the expense of developing analytical and communication abilities.

    Employers have repeatedly voiced concern over the growing lack of even elementary writing and numeracy skills among new graduates, many of whom are "unemployable," according to them.

    The problem of finding suitable candidates for jobs that require a certain level of writing abilities is forcing companies to move such jobs out of Britain. Recently, Amazon — the online bookstore — decided to move its European customer services to Ireland because it was not able to find staff with necessary skills in Britain.

    "Amazon isn't a manufacturing company that is leaving Britain for the familiar reason that it can pay its work force far less in the Far East. The company is leaving Britain for one reason only: it can't find workers here with the level of education required — and that is very worrying," said Bernard Lamb, a reader at Imperial College, and chairman of the London branch of the Queen's English Society.

    In an article bemoaning the "depressing decline in the standards of British students," he said: "The most fundamental problem is an inability to write English accurately: to use words and punctuation correctly so that sentences state the ideas the students are trying to express. The most shaming fact revealed by my surveys of my undergraduates' performance is that foreign students — whose first language isn't English — make fewer mistakes than native-speakers."

    Here are a few samples from the report:

    "In an essay about female employment in the 19th century, most of the sentences read like gobbledegook. Her tutor said the student was enthusiastic and articulate but her written work was difficult to decipher," says Helen Lamb, a short story writer commenting on the work of a student of Edinburgh University.

    Novelist Jonathan Buckley on a dissertation submitted by a final- year international relations student at Sussex University: "The draft was so incoherent that it was difficult to discern what argument was being furthered and her sentences were so garbled as to be incomprehensible at times."

    Crime writer Jo Hines, commenting on an essay by a student of St. Mary's UniversityCollege, Twickenham, says it "had no introduction, poor punctuation and consisted almost entirely of regurgitated and partially understood chunks of text."

    Correspondence columns of newspapers routinely carry letters from angry academics and employers lamenting the state of British education.

    One former teacher, tracing the decline in standards to the early 1970s, said he remembered receiving a letter from a student who wrote: "I am in my third year at Collidge." In "third year" and not able to spell College correctly! he exclaimed.

    Most critics have blamed schools for the present crisis, but standards in universities also are said to be falling. "The terrible truth is that in Britain, the worst barbarians are in the universities," said one letter-writer, approvingly recalling V.S. Naipaul's comment that "the language of the universities has become coarser and the degrees have steadily lost their value."

    Remember the apocryphal Englishman who, lost in the cacophony of foreign accents in the touristy Piccadilly Circus, screamed: "Does anyone here speak English please?"

    Well, soon it might be the turn of foreign students in British universities to ask: "Does anyone here write English please?" Does anyone?


    I am sure that the state of Tamil is pretty much the same in TamilNadu. There are many people who do not know even to write a leave letter in Tamil. It is high time we do something to make (at least) Tamilians speak and write proper Tamil. Though there can be a lot of suggestions, my foremost suggestion is to BAN ALL THE PHONE-IN SHOWS (example Ungal Choice) in satellite TV and FM Radios where they stab English and suffocate Tamil. Horrible language is being used in those shows, which usually proceed as follows

    Caller : Hello...... Ungal Choice (or some damned Program) ah ??
    Video Jockey (VJ) : Amanga.... good evening .... sollunga
    Caller : Neenga romba alaga irukkinga....
    VJ : Thanks (Valichal)... Unga voice romba sweeta irukku
    Caller : Romba Naala try paaninaen.. innaiku than line kidaichuthu... [Rascal... he does not have any work, other than ringing to the station]
    VJ : He He He... Sollunga.. What song you want ......
    ..
    ..
    ..
    ..
    As a matter of fact, the actual pronounciation will be worse than what I have given above

    Friday, March 17, 2006

    Grace Marks in Physics

    As per http://www.dinakaran.com/epaper/2006/mar/16/1.html the authorities have decided to award 30 marks to all the students who wrote the Physics paper os SSLC exam this March in Tamil Nadu.

    The paper was tough and so they give grace marks. You may be wondering as to what is the mistake.

    You must know that the government has already told that it is going to admit students in Medical colleges and Anna University taking into consideratuion the Plus 2 marks only and not the entrance marks.

    Now this test has suddenly become a ranking test.

    You can add grace marks in a Qualifying test (to test whether the candidate has "passed" or "failed")

    But how can you justify adding Grace Marks in a qualifying Exam

    Let me give an example

    Take two students, Mariano and Anto

    Mariano Scores 195 in Physics, 190 in Chemistry
    Anto scores 190 in Physics and 195 in Chemistry

    Right now both candidates are on a tie with 192.5 marks

    But what happens when you add 30 marks as grace marks. Both get 200 in Physics and Anto with a mark of 197.5 overtakes Mariano with 195.

    In other words, the extra marks Mariano Earned in one subject are of no use. And if the present report is to be considered, the government is going to tell that a student who scored 170 in Physics is equal to the one who scored 198 in Physics and both are at equal chance to get a medical seat, and they will be deciding it with the date of birth (and if both are born on the same date, by toss)

    This is exactly the reason, why I had been a vehement supporter of Entrance.

    AIIMS like Institutes

    Rediff reported on http://us.rediff.com/money/2004/feb/03bud20.htm

    Six hospitals on the pattern of the Delhi-based prestigious All India Institute of Medical Sciences will be set up in the country, Finance Minister Jaswant Singh announced in Lok Sabha on Tuesday.

    A hospital each will be established in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttaranchal under the Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana, he said.

    The yojana, unveiled by Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Independence Day, also envisages the upgradation of one medical college to the level of AIIMS in each of the six states of Andhra Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. Singh said a provision of Rs 60 crore (Rs 600 million) has been made in the Interim Budget itself for both these schemes.


    Now that meant that there will be a medical institute in Tamil Nadu which will be on par with AIIMS.

    But the latest news at http://rediff.com/money/2006/mar/16aiims.htm is
    The government on Thursday night decided to set up six AIIMS-like institutions in 'under-served' states of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttaranchal at a total capital cost of Rs 1,992 crore (Rs 19.92 billion).

    An approval to this effect was given at a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in New Delhi.

    Each of these institutions would consist of 850-bedded hospitals providing medical treatment in 39 speciality and super-speciality disciplines, Finance Minister P Chidambaram told reporters.

    "A Group of Ministers would be set up to look into how best to fund and manage these institutions to make them truly equivalent to AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences)," he said, adding that here should not be any further delay in establishing these institutes.

    "Construction will start in 2006-07 itself," he said, adding that the scheme was likely to be implemented in three years time.

    The state governments concerned would provide 100 acres of developed land free of cost and other infrastructural facilities like water, power, road connectivity for setting up and running these institutions, Chidambaram said.

    The institutes would also provide undergraduate medical education with 100 intake capacity per year and PG/doctoral courses as per the norms of the Medical Council of India.

    This means that the hospitals which was to be setup in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttaranchal will also have a medical college.

    In short, there is no chance for a tertiary care institute on par with AIIMS in Tamil Nadu.

    There could be only two possibilities. One is that the news report has been misquoted. This is of 10 % probability. The other possibility which has 90 % probability is Vachi-tang-aya App-poo

    Sunday, March 12, 2006

    Am I dreaming ???

    I think I am dreaming.... or that the monitor is misbehaving ... or that rediff is hacked...... or that few people with names of Lee, Boucher and Gibbs are playing a game other than cricket......... if not how can I account for the following score card.

    Australia 434-4 (50) Runs Balls 4s 6s SR
    A Gilchrist c Hall b Telemachus 55 44 9 0 125.00
    S Katich c Telemachus b Ntini 79 90 9 1 87.78
    *R Ponting c Dippenaar b Telemachus 164 105 13 9 156.19
    M Hussey c Ntini b Hall 81 51 9 3 158.82
    A Symonds not out 27 13 3 1 207.69
    B Lee not out 9 7 0 0 128.57
    D Martyn
    M Clarke
    N Bracken
    S Clark
    M Lewis
    B Hogg(SS)
    Extras: 19 ( b:0 lb:4 nb:10 w:5)
    Total: 434-4 (50) | Curr. RR: 8.68
    FOW: A Gilchrist (97-1, 15.2), S Katich (216-2, 30.3), M Hussey (374-3, 46.1), *R Ponting (407-4, 47.4)
    South Africa O M R W Nb Wd RPO
    M Ntini 9 0 80 1 0 1 8.89
    A Hall 10 0 80 1 2 0 8.00
    J Wath 10 0 76 0 1 1 7.60
    R Telemachus 10 1 87 2 7 3 8.70
    *G Smith 4 0 29 0 0 0 7.25
    J Kallis 6 0 70 0 0 0 11.67
    J Kemp 1 0 8 0 0 0 8.00

    South Africa team: M Ntini, A Hall , J Wath, R Telemachus, *G Smith, J Kallis, J Kemp , B Dippenaar , A Villiers, H Gibbs, M Boucher, J Peterson(SS)

    Powerplay 1: 1-10 ovs, 2: 11-15 ovs, 3: 16-20 ovs


    South Africa 438-9 (49.5) Runs Balls 4s 6s SR
    *G Smith c Hussey b Clarke 90 55 13 2 163.64
    B Dippenaar b Bracken 1 7 0 0 14.29
    H Gibbs c Lee b Symonds 175 111 21 7 157.66
    A Villiers c Clarke b Bracken 14 20 1 0 70.00
    J Kallis c and b Symonds 20 21 1 0 95.24
    M Boucher not out 50 43 4 0 116.28
    J Kemp c Martyn b Bracken 13 17 0 0 76.47
    J Wath c Ponting b Bracken 35 18 1 3 194.44
    R Telemachus c Hussey b Bracken 12 6 2 0 200.00
    A Hall c Clarke b Lee 7 4 1 0 175.00
    M Ntini not out 1 1 0 0 100.00
    J Peterson(SS)
    Extras: 20 ( b:4 lb:8 nb:4 w:4)
    Total: 438-9 (49.5) | Curr. RR: 8.79
    FOW: B Dippenaar (3-1, 1.2), *G Smith (190-2, 22.1), A Villiers (284-3, 30.5), H Gibbs (299-4, 31.5), J Kallis (327-5, 37.4), J Kemp (355-6, 42.1), J Wath (399-7, 46.3), R Telemachus (423-8, 48.2), A Hall (433-9, 49.3)
    Australia O M R W Nb Wd RPO
    B Lee 7.5 0 68 1 3 1 8.68
    N Bracken 10 0 67 5 0 0 6.70
    S Clark 6 0 54 0 0 0 9.00
    M Lewis 10 0 113 0 1 1 11.30
    A Symonds 9 0 75 2 0 0 8.33
    M Clarke 7 0 49 1 0 0 7.00

    Australia team: B Lee, N Bracken, S Clark, M Lewis, A Symonds, M Clarke, B Hogg(SS), D Martyn, M Hussey, S Katich, A Gilchrist, *R Ponting

    Powerplay 1: 1-10 ovs, 2: 11-15 ovs, 3: 24-28 ovs

    Super sub: SA won by 1 wkt.

    Entrance Case on March 27th

    As per Hindu in http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/09/stories/2006030920780800.htm

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday decided to hear on March 27, the Tamil Nadu Government's special leave petition challenging a Madras High Court judgment quashing the legislation scrapping the Common Entrance Test for admission to undergraduate professional courses for 2006-2007.

    Appearing for the State before a Bench of Justice B.N. Agrawal and Justice A.K. Mathur, senior counsel Mukul Rohatgi sought early listing of the petition, saying the appeal required examination as the Act scrapping the CET had been struck down by the High Court. Three weeks' time was required to hold the CET and the matter might be listed for hearing on March 10.

    The Bench declined early listing and said: "Let it come in the normal course for hearing on March 27."

    Senior counsel Nalini Chidambaram and K.M. Vijayan, who had appeared in the High Court for the petitioners, were present in the court ready to oppose if the matter was taken up on Wednesday.

    Move justified


    Assailing the judgment, the petition stated that Tamil Nadu Regulation of Admission in Professional Courses Act, 2006 dispensing with the CET for State Board students, was enacted under Article 15 (5) of the Constitution.

    Considering the representations from the public, the Government enacted the law under which State Board students need not appear for the CET.

    Instead, students from other Boards such as the CBSE needed to take a CET to bring them on a par with the State Board students.

    The High Court had erred in holding that the legislation impinged on the field occupied by the Central law, i.e. MCI and AICTE Regulations.

    Further, it failed to appreciate that to establish that the rural students were socially and economically backward, a high-level committee was constituted and found that urban students had advantage in the CET over rural students.

    Minuscule section


    It must be noted that in Tamil Nadu, only one per cent of the students who appeared for the CET belonged to non-State Board and 99 per cent of the students belonged to the State Board.

    Therefore, the High Court ought to have seen that to achieve status on a par with State Board students, it would be possible to conduct a CET for other Board students.

    Contending that important questions of law of public importance were involved, the petition sought quashing of the judgment and an interim stay on its operation.

    Saturday, March 11, 2006

    Achievements of Dravidian Movements

    Tharanipathi Kumar in his post "Achievements of Dravidian Movements" at http://tharanis.blogspot.com/2005/12/achievements-of-dravidian-movements.html writes

    He begins with an introductions

    There are quite a few numb, eccentric, jerk, bum, goof-off and jokester persons like Cho and Subramaniyam Swamy are always blabbering about the failures of Dravidian movements for any damn thing and blame the Dravidian parties even if the north east monsoon fails in Tamilnadu.

    Some section of media and intelligentsia never flunked to utilize any opportunity to write, talk and float the idea of bringing in the alternatives to Dravidian parties in Tamilnadu politics and accuse the Dravidian parties as if they dug and buried the fortunes of Tamilnadu. This mania intrudes into the minds of section of educated backward caste people joining in the very same queue who are all got the social acceptance only because of Dravidian movements.

    Apparently there exists a flattened feeling in the society that what the Dravidian movements achieved except the anti God and even after the vigorous anti God propaganda have they rationalized the whole state?


    And then to the main point
    There should be qualitative analysis instead of the quantitative analysis when evaluating the anti-God movement which brought the renaissance in the state. The religious faith or spirituality is always spread in the society with the attached fear components like Karma, previous birth, fate etc which eventually dampened the human brain to think and question.


    About the impact
    This movement opened the doors of questioning and reasoning and enabled the people to use their rationale faculty even for their religious fervors. Though the movement has not completely eliminated the religious faith from the people, but it has totally wiped off the fear factors associated with it. Religious institutions of any kind cannot exploit or fool the people as easily as they did before the movement started here. This is knowledge revolution and the battle was fought in human minds with the intellectual armory.


    The improvement in the eduction

    The knowledge of Sanskrit was essential to enter into any professional college in Madras province which deeply hampers the students from oppressed section to become Doctors and Engineers. The Justice Party after regaining the power felt this criterion was ridiculous and removed this eligibility which carved the path for the downtrodden students to enter into professional colleges.

    This academic year medical college admissions witnessed the BC, MBC and SC students got the larger chunk of open competition seats. This noteworthy achievement has been made possible because of the radical change done 60-70 years back. Tamilnadu is the only state which has the larger pool of Doctors, Engineers and Lawyers from oppressed section then the other states in India and in some states still the professional courses are eternal to the same section.

    Social reforms
    Periyar's contribution to the success of the Vaikom Satyagraha is outstanding. It was the first notable social struggle on a large scale in India. Justice party implemented Government Orders giving reservation in education and job opportunities, passed the Hindu Religious Endowment and Charitable Trusts Act to regulate the management of the secular activities of religious places, abolished by law the system of Devadasi (divine prostitute), threw open all public places - schools, roads, tanks etc. - to the depressed classes, refused to issue or renew licenses to the bus companies that refused to carry `untouchables'.

    Dravidian parties scrupulously adopt the necessary measures, including constitutional amendments, to promote and safeguard the policy of reservation meant for the advancement and adequate representation of the socially and educationally backward classes. They encourage the education of women, inter-caste marriages and widow marriages, and have lawfully provided for an equal share for women in the property of the parents. The governments formed by the Dravidian parties did not lag behind others in bringing about economic development and implementing welfare and socialist measures.

    As Tamil soil is cultivated by great Dravidian leaders for a long time and the essence of the movement is deeply penetrated in to the people minds, the state always remains as a decorated example of secularism and escorts the true meaning of secular credentials. Most of the states in the country were in turmoil after heinous demolition of Babri masjid, but Tamilnadu remained calm because of the secular seeds sowed in by its leaders which never allowed any communal violence to go out of proportion.

    All possible painstaking efforts taken by the communal parties like BJP to have a stronghold here went vain and unproductive because of the strong roots of this movement. Even during the recent Sankaracharya arrest, the state hadn’t exhibited any religious fanaticism in fact it celebrated it by firing crackers and reinstated that it is the birth place of Thandhai Periyar and Aringer Anna.

    Dravidian movement is the pioneer in launching the struggle against social injustice and stood as a role model for the whole nation to fight for social justice. Ms.Mayawati celebrated Periyar mela in a grand way in Uttar Pradesh is the evidence that this movement inspired the rise of backward community leaders in northern India.

    Wherever men claim equality and whenever all human beings seek equal rights, the spirit of the Dravidian movement will live there. In their struggle to gain human rights and dignity, and to safeguard cultural identity and linguistic equality, to eliminate caste discrimination and uphold social justice, the leaders, cadres and members of the Dravidian movement have undergone sufferings, incurred losses and made sacrifices that are monumental and memorable.

    What I liked most is the last para
    P.S: Dravidian Movement includes the Justice party, Self Respect Movement, Dravidar Kazhakam, Political parties branched out from Dravidar Kazhakam and the Congress rule under Mr.K.Kamaraj


    It was Kamarajar, who brought every child to the school and it is the main reason of the upliftment of the society. Read about that in my ohter posts on Reservation and Merit List. (Just search the terms in the open at the top)

    At 7:31 AM, siva4u said…

    I completely agree that dravidian movement played an important role in relieving the opppressed class from the shackles of upperclass dominion. Its true that Tamil nadu has high non brahmin doctors and engineers.
    Eventhough the status of BC and MBC has improved the status of SC class didnot improve much. Especially in down south of tirunelveli and region under Vanniyar dominion in north. SC are still being dominated by the BC and MBC class. THere should be another movement in near future to uplift them. Lets see!!!

    At 8:27 AM, Doctor Bruno said…

    See here
    http://bruno.penandscale.com/2006/01/reservation-and-upliftment.html

    http://bruno.penandscale.com/2005/07/merit-list-that-shows-merit.html

    You will see that the SCs have shown a tremendous improvement. They will be on par with Other candidates in another 10 to 15 years.

    Friday, March 10, 2006

    Child Abuse in Tamil Nadu

    As per Hindu in http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/10/stories/2006031008560100.htm,
    42 per cent of the 2211 children, mostly adolescents, surveyed have been abused.
    Of the 1,364 girls and 847 boys, around 48 per cent of the boys reported abuse as compared to the 39 per cent of girls who did so.
    Around 15 per cent of children reported severe forms of abuse. Family members, acquaintances and people well known to the child formed the larger percentage of those who perpetrated severe forms of abuse. `Stranger danger' was not found to be significant.

    The first comprehensive local study on child sexual abuse was conducted and presented by Tulir — Centre for the Prevention & Treatment of Sexual Abuse, at a seminar here on Thursday.

    The study has found that 42 per cent of the 2211 children, mostly adolescents, surveyed have been abused. The data, collected by self-reporting anonymous questionnaires filled mainly by class eleven students in schools within the Chennai Corporation zone limits, shatters several myths about abuse.

    The proportion of children abused in the higher income groups was found to be marginally higher than the proportion among children from families with income below Rs. 6,000. It was slightly higher among joint families than nuclear families.

    Of the 1,364 girls and 847 boys, around 48 per cent of the boys reported abuse as compared to the 39 per cent of girls who did so.

    The most commonly reported forms of abuse were abusers touching children's private parts, exhibitionism and forcing or tricking children into watching pornography.

    Around 15 per cent of children reported severe forms of abuse. Family members, acquaintances and people well known to the child formed the larger percentage of those who perpetrated severe forms of abuse. `Stranger danger' was not found to be significant.

    Around 62 per cent of children told no one for a variety of reasons. A significant number requested information on personal safety.

    A personal safety handbook that helps children to express emotions and suggests alternatives to putting up silently with abuse was also released.

    The report will be circulated among policy makers to strengthen an initiative to bring about a comprehensive law addressing child sexual abuse.

    Tulir can be reached at 26207269 or 26632026.

    TNPSC Results not now

    As per http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/10/stories/2006031007920400.htm

    He said following a communication from the Election Commission to the State Government, orders, including the one on setting up a panel to go into the question of providing reservation for minorities, had been kept in abeyance.

    Letters would be sent to the Tamil Nadu Public Service Commission directing it not to release any result of examinations conducted for recruiting candidates to various positions, including that of doctors.

    Results of such examinations should be published only after the completion of the election process.



    So, the guys and gals who have written TNPSC have to keep their fingers crossed, at least for the next two monbths......

    Poor Guys.... They had three option this year and the doors seems to be closed on all 3, at least for the time being

    1. AIPG (All India PG) - CBI is investigating and the counselling has been post poned

    2. TNPG (Tamil Nadu PG) - It seems that a lot of people are going to file a case

    3. TNPSC - Results kept in abeyance till elections

    Strong Medicine

    This is the letter I wrote to Rashmi Bansal http://youthcurry.blogspot.com , editor of JAMMAG for here column in http://sify.com/news/columns/fullstory.php?id=14159870&page=1 and http://sify.com/news/columns/fullstory.php?id=14159870&page=2 The column is given below after my letter

    Dear Mate,

    I am a doctor from Tamil Nadu and a regular reader of your blog.

    This mail is with reference to your column http://sify.com/news/columns/fullstory.php?id=14159870&page=2

    WHile you have potrayed the situation very well, I differ from your column on one POINT.

    Yes, the government does subsidise medical education, but that is also the case with IITs or government engineering colleges. In those cases, the ‘pound of flesh’ theory does not seem to apply!

    The above line is CORRECT. But the subsidy is for the MBBS (undergraduate part) only.

    Let me explain.

    An engineering college, has many departrments and an administrative office. The administrative office deals with the pay and other functions.
    The departments include, Mechanical, Engineering etc in an engineering college and Maths, English etc in an Arts college ( I have no idea about IIM)

    The staff include
    1. Professors
    2. Lecturers
    3. Lab Workers
    4. Sweepers and Drivers
    5. Principal etc

    What is the purpose of all these staff... To teach the students......
    Suppose students do not join for 5 years........ How much work do these people do..... (You can calculate)

    Now come to the budget of the college.
    The expenses are the costs involved in
    1. Salary
    2. Maintenance of the building
    3. Papers / Lab articles etc

    Now come to the income
    1. Fees paid by the students.

    Take IIT, IIM or even a government school. Obviously the fees paid is negligible and is about the 5 % of the expenses and the government spends 95 % as a subsidy.

    Now come to an UNDERGRADUATE COURSE in a Medical College.

    Medical College,as you may know is never a college alone (This is where we differ from the americal system of medical school).

    By default, it is attached to a Hospital.

    A medical college, should have the following departments
    1. Anatomy
    2. Physiology
    3. Biochemistry
    4. Pharmacology
    5. Pathology
    6. Microbniology
    7. FM
    8. SPM
    9. ENT
    10. Ophthal
    11. Medicine
    12. Surgery
    13. Paediatrics
    14. Ortho
    15. OG
    16. Radiology
    17. Radiotherapy
    18. Anaesthesia
    19. Dermatology
    20 Psychiatry

    These 20 departments are must for a medical college. in addition you can have any number of more departments like Urology, Cardiology etc.

    All these departments have
    1. Professor
    2. Assistant Professors
    3. Staff Nurse
    4. Pharmacist
    5. Ward boy
    6 Sweeper

    in addition the college also has an administrative office. concerned with maintenance of hospital, DRUGS, Equipments etc

    Now you see how the budget is used
    Expenses
    1. Salary
    2. Drugs
    3. Equipments
    4. Maintenance
    5. Stationery

    Income
    1. Fees.
    2. Subsidy by the government.

    Now comes the important point.

    Of the 20 departments, I mentioned, only 3 - Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology are exclusively for Students.

    ALL OTHER DEPARTMENTS are for TREATING PATIENTS

    Of the expenses invloved, the expenses that are invovlved towards educating AN MBBS STUDENT is the expense of the salary of the staff of the above 3 departments (out of the 20) and the stationery.

    ALL OTHER EXPENSES are for treating PATIENTS

    In short, government is subsidising, NO DOUBT, but 98 % of the subsidy is for HEALTH and less than 1.5 % is for Education.

    But what will you hear. They will calculate the annual expenses and divide it by the number of students and tell that we are spending 22 lakhs for each doctor.

    The truth is that EVEN IF A MEDICAL COLLEGE DOES NOT ADMIT MBBS STUDETNS, it will still have 98 % of its expenses for TREATING PATIENTS.

    Now come to the Post Graduates..... The government does not even spend that 1.5 % (except for the PGs in the 3 departments I have mentioned).

    In other words.....

    Let me ask these simple question.

    1. What will be the workload of a professor in IIM when students are on strike. Will it increase or decrease
    2. What about when a Post Graduate Resident is on strike.

    If there are NO STUDENTS JOINING in a course, will you run the course or shut it down. you will shut it down and bring the expenses to ZERO

    If you are going to shut down KEM just becasue the PGs are on strike, will the patients allow you.

    In other words, is the subsidy the government, WRONGLY AND INTENTIONALLY says that it is giving for Medical Education, a subsidy for educating students or for treating patients.

    Treating the patient free or for money is not the theme of this article. I have written this to tell you that the subsidy which we are supposed to get is not for us doctors....... but for the patients

    With regards

    Original Article : Strong medicine By Rashmi Bansal
    It's rare indeed when the word strike and the word 'justified' come up in the same sentence. At least in my dictionary.

    BMC workers lay down their brooms. Bank employees lay down their pens. Airport workers lay down at the entrance. You wish someone would fire them from their jobs to teach them a lesson. But no, generally the government buckles under and grants them a Diwali bonus.

    The strike by resident doctors in Maharashtra, currently into its 12th day, is different. For once, I feel the cause is justified, that the method adopted was the last one available.

    What are the doctors on strike asking for? The right to some basic human dignities—as one doctor eloquently described the situation. (http://www.mard.org.in/featuredart2.html)

    “You work 24 hours a day… no fixed working hours, no fixed meal timings, less than four-five hours of sleep, emergency duties, five-six people staying in one small room, inadequate sanitary conditions, unhygienic food, constant stress, too many patients and too few equipment and facilities, inefficient supporting staff…”

    The pressure from patients at the few government run hospitals is so high that it is not unusual for 2 doctors to see 300-400 patients in morning OPD, then look after ward patients and then go back to casualty filled with patients.

    And although they may have cursed the system in private, residents continued fulfilling their duties, until the day that relatives of a patient who died beat up a doctor.

    It was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s already strained back. The match that lit the simmering discontent.

    And now there is a raging fire.

    A fire to not just get a few demands met, but to see some change in the system of medical education and public health as a whole.

    Despite the boom in private medical colleges, it is an undisputed fact that government colleges attached to public hospitals attract the best brains and offer the best training. Students know that they will benefit from the exposure to a variety of cases that no private hospital can hope to attract.

    The problems begin at the PG level, where the seats for specialisation are very limited. After a great deal of struggle, the MBBS graduates who get posts as ‘residents’ find that they bear the burden of the entire hospital’s functioning. Hospitals which attract hundreds of patients everyday not only from the city, but distant villages and talukas where there are no primary health care centers—let alone decent hospitals.

    Yet the resident doctors take up the challenge, carry out their duties. For this they get paid, in Maharashtra, a sum of a little over Rs 8,000 per month. Which is around Rs 2,000 less than what is being earned by unskilled "Class IV" workers of the BMC (ward boys and sweepers).

    Yes, the government does subsidise medical education, but that is also the case with IITs or government engineering colleges. In those cases, the ‘pound of flesh’ theory does not seem to apply!

    A job well done needs to be rewarded with an adequate, if not lucrative stipend. Earning Rs 8,000 per month for a job that stretches 12-14 hrs a day is not adequate. Especially when you are in your late 20s!

    Conditions cannot be so trying that people are turned off the profession of medicine. Which, if you ask me, is exactly what is slowly starting to happen.

    The future of medicine

    Medicine should not become a 'family business'—attractive only to those whose parents are already in the profession. It must continue to attract bright and idealistic young people. People who want to find a cure for cancer or rid humanity of its suffering. Sure, most of them will get hardened and cynical someday. But they need not get disillusioned too early.

    In the past schemes wherein doctors were sent on ‘compulsory rural service’ failed. The trick is not to make such service a compulsion. If the government/ NGOs can provide basic infrastructure, medicines and some moral support, there are young doctors who will come forward to take up the challenge—at least on a short-term basis.

    The current strike is sending quite the opposite signal to young doctors and even those contemplating a career in medicine. It is sending the signal that the system does not care about us, so why should we care about the system?

    Yes, gradually you find more doctors opting for MBAs, for jobs in hospital administration and pharmaceutical companies. More doctors willing to give GRE and take up research instead of clinical jobs because it’s far easier to get a visa that way.

    But speak to any of these doctors and there is a twinge of regret. The acknowledgement that ‘this is not what we slogged for’. The feeling that the word doctor minus the word patient is incomplete. Yes, we did the ‘practical’ thing, but in our heart we know it’s like cheating.

    So rest assured that doctors are aware of the suffering being caused to patients. No doctor enjoys going on strike. The wounds must be deep for them to have taken this drastic action.

    The bottom line is that the BMC can spend a little less on painting and repainting road dividers, or on repairing the mayor’s bungalow. Pay resident docs a little more money and a lot more respect. For a change, the healers need our healing touch.

    Rashmi is an IIM Ahmedabad graduate and founder-editor of youth magazine JAM (www.jammag.com). She can be reached at rashmi@jammag.com

    Thursday, March 09, 2006

    Why hit a doctor ????

    Kuch Kaha, Kya? Random Relationship Rantings blogs about the MARD Strike in his blog at http://o3.indiatimes.com/anant_rulz/archive/2006/03/06/520790.aspx

    What caught my attention is the last few lines which I want to share with you

    BTW, can you imagine hitting a water/electricity, Municipal corporation, Income Tax, Sales Tax, Police employee or any other govt servant?

    Why hit a doctor?

    Just because you can?

    State/Institute wise comparison of stipend and tuition fee#

    # Data compiled by MARD http://mard-strike.blogspot.com/, confirmed by personal contact of the residents of the Individual states.

    *NA – not available.
    Second Highest Fees - Tamil Nadu
    Lowest Stipend of Rs 5000 - Tamil Nadu (it is rumoured to have been rised to 8500)
    Highest Fees to Stipend Ratio - Tamil Nadu

    State/Institute wise comparison of stipend and tuition fee#

    Institute/state

    Stipend

    Tution fees

    Allowances

    1

    AIIMS

    21800

    250

    2000 book, 5000 thesis

    2

    Delhi

    21000

    6000

    3

    JIPMER Pondicherry

    18000

    1000

    3000 books, 6000 thesis

    4

    NIMHANS

    17700

    750

    5

    BHU

    17000

    1500

    6

    Haryana

    15500

    35,000

    7

    Jammu Kashmir

    15400

    1,200

    8

    Bihar

    15000

    30000

    9

    Punjab

    14800

    30,000

    10

    Uttar Pradesh

    14500

    16,000

    11

    Madhya Pradesh

    14,000

    35,000

    12

    Chhattisgadh

    11800

    0

    13

    Rajasthan

    10500

    2000

    14

    Kerala

    10000

    18500

    15

    Goa

    9625

    4600

    16

    Maharashtra

    8340

    18000

    17

    West Bengal

    8250

    12000

    18

    Orissa

    7500

    6000

    19

    Gujrat

    7000

    7000

    20

    Assam

    6950

    2500

    21

    Andhra Pradesh

    6400

    1500

    22

    Karnataka

    6230

    10000

    23

    Tamilnadu

    5000

    30000

    24

    Jharkhand

    NA*

    NA

    25

    Himachal Pradesh

    NA

    NA

    # Data compiled by MARD, confirmed by personal contact of the residents of the Individual states.

    *NA – not available.


    State/Institute wise comparison of stipend and tuition fee#

    Institute/state

    Stipend

    Tution fees

    Allowances

    1

    Haryana

    15500

    35,000

    2

    Madhya Pradesh

    14,000

    35,000

    3

    Tamilnadu

    9000

    30000

    4

    Bihar

    15000

    30000

    5

    Punjab

    14800

    30,000

    6

    Kerala

    10000

    18500

    7

    Maharashtra

    8340

    18000

    8

    Uttar Pradesh

    14500

    16,000

    9

    West Bengal

    8250

    12000

    10

    Karnataka

    6230

    10000

    11

    Gujrat

    7000

    7000

    12

    Delhi

    21000

    6000

    13

    Orissa

    7500

    6000

    14

    Goa

    9625

    4600

    15

    Assam

    6950

    2500

    16

    Rajasthan

    10500

    2000

    17

    BHU

    17000

    1500

    18

    Andhra Pradesh

    6400

    1500

    19

    Jammu Kashmir

    15400

    1,200

    20

    JIPMER Pondicherry

    18000

    1000

    3000 books, 6000 thesis

    21

    NIMHANS

    17700

    750

    22

    AIIMS

    21800

    250

    2000 book, 5000 thesis

    23

    Chhattisgadh

    11800

    0

    24

    Jharkhand

    NA*

    NA

    25

    Himachal Pradesh

    NA

    NA

    # Data compiled by MARD, confirmed by personal contact of the residents of the Individual states.

    *NA – not available.


    State/Institute wise comparison of stipend and tuition fee#

    Institute/state

    Stipend

    Tution fees

    Yearly Stipend

    Fees to Stipend Ratio

    Allowances

    1

    Tamilnadu

    9000

    30000

    108000

    0.277778

    2

    Madhya Pradesh

    14,000

    35,000

    168000

    0.208333

    3

    Haryana

    15500

    35,000

    186000

    0.188172

    4

    Maharashtra

    8340

    18000

    100080

    0.179856

    5

    Punjab

    14800

    30,000

    177600

    0.168919

    6

    Bihar

    15000

    30000

    180000

    0.166667

    7

    Kerala

    10000

    18500

    120000

    0.154167

    8

    Karnataka

    6230

    10000

    74760

    0.133761

    9

    West Bengal

    8250

    12000

    99000

    0.121212

    10

    Uttar Pradesh

    14500

    16,000

    174000

    0.091954

    11

    Gujrat

    7000

    7000

    84000

    0.083333

    12

    Orissa

    7500

    6000

    90000

    0.066667

    13

    Goa

    9625

    4600

    115500

    0.039827

    14

    Assam

    6950

    2500

    83400

    0.029976

    15

    Delhi

    21000

    6000

    252000

    0.02381

    16

    Andhra Pradesh

    6400

    1500

    76800

    0.019531

    17

    Rajasthan

    10500

    2000

    126000

    0.015873

    18

    BHU

    17000

    1500

    204000

    0.007353

    19

    Jammu Kashmir

    15400

    1,200

    184800

    0.006494

    20

    JIPMER Pondicherry

    18000

    1000

    216000

    0.00463

    3000 books, 6000 thesis

    21

    NIMHANS

    17700

    750

    212400

    0.003531

    22

    AIIMS

    21800

    250

    261600

    0.000956

    2000 book, 5000 thesis

    23

    Chhattisgadh

    11800

    0

    141600

    0

    24

    Jharkhand

    NA*

    NA

    25

    Himachal Pradesh

    NA

    NA

    # Data compiled by MARD, confirmed by personal contact of the residents of the Individual states.

    *NA – not available.

    Story of the most intense love

    If you want to know more about the Magi who visited Jesus, please see my post Christmas Special - The Gift of Magi

    THE GIFT OF THE MAGI
    by O. Henry
    One dollar and eighty-seven cents. That was all. And sixty cents of it was in pennies. Pennies saved one and two at a time by bulldozing the grocer and the vegetable man and the butcher until one's cheeks burned with the silent imputation of parsimony that such close dealing implied. Three times Della counted it. One dollar and eighty- seven cents. And the next day would be Christmas.

    There was clearly nothing to do but flop down on the shabby little couch and howl. So Della did it. Which instigates the moral reflection that life is made up of sobs, sniffles, and smiles, with sniffles predominating.

    While the mistress of the home is gradually subsiding from the first stage to the second, take a look at the home. A furnished flat at $8 per week. It did not exactly beggar description, but it certainly had that word on the lookout for the mendicancy squad.

    In the vestibule below was a letter-box into which no letter would go, and an electric button from which no mortal finger could coax a ring. Also appertaining thereunto was a card bearing the name "Mr. James Dillingham Young."

    The "Dillingham" had been flung to the breeze during a former period of prosperity when its possessor was being paid $30 per week. Now, when the income was shrunk to $20, though, they were thinking seriously of contracting to a modest and unassuming D. But whenever Mr. James Dillingham Young came home and reached his flat above he was called "Jim" and greatly hugged by Mrs. James Dillingham Young, already introduced to you as Della. Which is all very good.

    Della finished her cry and attended to her cheeks with the powder rag. She stood by the window and looked out dully at a gray cat walking a gray fence in a gray backyard. Tomorrow would be Christmas Day, and she had only $1.87 with which to buy Jim a present. She had been saving every penny she could for months, with this result. Twenty dollars a week doesn't go far. Expenses had been greater than she had calculated. They always are. Only $1.87 to buy a present for Jim. Her Jim. Many a happy hour she had spent planning for something nice for him. Something fine and rare and sterling--something just a little bit near to being worthy of the honor of being owned by Jim.

    There was a pier-glass between the windows of the room. Perhaps you have seen a pier-glass in an $8 flat. A very thin and very agile person may, by observing his reflection in a rapid sequence of longitudinal strips, obtain a fairly accurate conception of his looks. Della, being slender, had mastered the art.

    Suddenly she whirled from the window and stood before the glass. her eyes were shining brilliantly, but her face had lost its color within twenty seconds. Rapidly she pulled down her hair and let it fall to its full length.

    Now, there were two possessions of the James Dillingham Youngs in which they both took a mighty pride. One was Jim's gold watch that had been his father's and his grandfather's. The other was Della's hair. Had the queen of Sheba lived in the flat across the airshaft, Della would have let her hair hang out the window some day to dry just to depreciate Her Majesty's jewels and gifts. Had King Solomon been the janitor, with all his treasures piled up in the basement, Jim would have pulled out his watch every time he passed, just to see him pluck at his beard from envy.

    So now Della's beautiful hair fell about her rippling and shining like a cascade of brown waters. It reached below her knee and made itself almost a garment for her. And then she did it up again nervously and quickly. Once she faltered for a minute and stood still while a tear or two splashed on the worn red carpet.

    On went her old brown jacket; on went her old brown hat. With a whirl of skirts and with the brilliant sparkle still in her eyes, she fluttered out the door and down the stairs to the street.

    Where she stopped the sign read: "Mne. Sofronie. Hair Goods of All Kinds." One flight up Della ran, and collected herself, panting. Madame, large, too white, chilly, hardly looked the "Sofronie."

    "Will you buy my hair?" asked Della.

    "I buy hair," said Madame. "Take yer hat off and let's have a sight at the looks of it."

    Down rippled the brown cascade.

    "Twenty dollars," said Madame, lifting the mass with a practised hand.

    "Give it to me quick," said Della.

    Oh, and the next two hours tripped by on rosy wings. Forget the hashed metaphor. She was ransacking the stores for Jim's present.

    She found it at last. It surely had been made for Jim and no one else. There was no other like it in any of the stores, and she had turned all of them inside out. It was a platinum fob chain simple and chaste in design, properly proclaiming its value by substance alone and not by meretricious ornamentation--as all good things should do. It was even worthy of The Watch. As soon as she saw it she knew that it must be Jim's. It was like him. Quietness and value--the description applied to both. Twenty-one dollars they took from her for it, and she hurried home with the 87 cents. With that chain on his watch Jim might be properly anxious about the time in any company. Grand as the watch was, he sometimes looked at it on the sly on account of the old leather strap that he used in place of a chain.

    When Della reached home her intoxication gave way a little to prudence and reason. She got out her curling irons and lighted the gas and went to work repairing the ravages made by generosity added to love. Which is always a tremendous task, dear friends--a mammoth task.

    Within forty minutes her head was covered with tiny, close-lying curls that made her look wonderfully like a truant schoolboy. She looked at her reflection in the mirror long, carefully, and critically.

    "If Jim doesn't kill me," she said to herself, "before he takes a second look at me, he'll say I look like a Coney Island chorus girl. But what could I do--oh! what could I do with a dollar and eighty- seven cents?"

    At 7 o'clock the coffee was made and the frying-pan was on the back of the stove hot and ready to cook the chops.

    Jim was never late. Della doubled the fob chain in her hand and sat on the corner of the table near the door that he always entered. Then she heard his step on the stair away down on the first flight, and she turned white for just a moment. She had a habit for saying little silent prayer about the simplest everyday things, and now she whispered: "Please God, make him think I am still pretty."

    The door opened and Jim stepped in and closed it. He looked thin and very serious. Poor fellow, he was only twenty-two--and to be burdened with a family! He needed a new overcoat and he was without gloves.

    Jim stopped inside the door, as immovable as a setter at the scent of quail. His eyes were fixed upon Della, and there was an expression in them that she could not read, and it terrified her. It was not anger, nor surprise, nor disapproval, nor horror, nor any of the sentiments that she had been prepared for. He simply stared at her fixedly with that peculiar expression on his face.

    Della wriggled off the table and went for him.

    "Jim, darling," she cried, "don't look at me that way. I had my hair cut off and sold because I couldn't have lived through Christmas without giving you a present. It'll grow out again--you won't mind, will you? I just had to do it. My hair grows awfully fast. Say `Merry Christmas!' Jim, and let's be happy. You don't know what a nice-- what a beautiful, nice gift I've got for you."

    "You've cut off your hair?" asked Jim, laboriously, as if he had not arrived at that patent fact yet even after the hardest mental labor.

    "Cut it off and sold it," said Della. "Don't you like me just as well, anyhow? I'm me without my hair, ain't I?"

    Jim looked about the room curiously.

    "You say your hair is gone?" he said, with an air almost of idiocy.

    "You needn't look for it," said Della. "It's sold, I tell you--sold and gone, too. It's Christmas Eve, boy. Be good to me, for it went for you. Maybe the hairs of my head were numbered," she went on with sudden serious sweetness, "but nobody could ever count my love for you. Shall I put the chops on, Jim?"

    Out of his trance Jim seemed quickly to wake. He enfolded his Della. For ten seconds let us regard with discreet scrutiny some inconsequential object in the other direction. Eight dollars a week or a million a year--what is the difference? A mathematician or a wit would give you the wrong answer. The magi brought valuable gifts, but that was not among them. This dark assertion will be illuminated later on.

    Jim drew a package from his overcoat pocket and threw it upon the table.

    "Don't make any mistake, Dell," he said, "about me. I don't think there's anything in the way of a haircut or a shave or a shampoo that could make me like my girl any less. But if you'll unwrap that package you may see why you had me going a while at first."

    White fingers and nimble tore at the string and paper. And then an ecstatic scream of joy; and then, alas! a quick feminine change to hysterical tears and wails, necessitating the immediate employment of all the comforting powers of the lord of the flat.

    For there lay The Combs--the set of combs, side and back, that Della had worshipped long in a Broadway window. Beautiful combs, pure tortoise shell, with jewelled rims--just the shade to wear in the beautiful vanished hair. They were expensive combs, she knew, and her heart had simply craved and yearned over them without the least hope of possession. And now, they were hers, but the tresses that should have adorned the coveted adornments were gone.

    But she hugged them to her bosom, and at length she was able to look up with dim eyes and a smile and say: "My hair grows so fast, Jim!"

    And them Della leaped up like a little singed cat and cried, "Oh, oh!"

    Jim had not yet seen his beautiful present. She held it out to him eagerly upon her open palm. The dull precious metal seemed to flash with a reflection of her bright and ardent spirit.

    "Isn't it a dandy, Jim? I hunted all over town to find it. You'll have to look at the time a hundred times a day now. Give me your watch. I want to see how it looks on it."

    Instead of obeying, Jim tumbled down on the couch and put his hands under the back of his head and smiled.

    "Dell," said he, "let's put our Christmas presents away and keep 'em a while. They're too nice to use just at present. I sold the watch to get the money to buy your combs. And now suppose you put the chops on."

    The magi, as you know, were wise men--wonderfully wise men--who brought gifts to the Babe in the manger. They invented the art of giving Christmas presents. Being wise, their gifts were no doubt wise ones, possibly bearing the privilege of exchange in case of duplication. And here I have lamely related to you the uneventful chronicle of two foolish children in a flat who most unwisely sacrificed for each other the greatest treasures of their house. But in a last word to the wise of these days let it be said that of all who give gifts these two were the wisest. O all who give and receive gifts, such as they are wisest. Everywhere they are wisest. They are the magi.

    1947 - A love story

    TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA by A.J. Cronin

    1 As we drove through the foothills of the Alps two small boys stopped us on
    the outskirts of Verona. They were selling wild strawberries.
    2 “Don’t buy,” warned Luigi, our cautious1 driver. “You will get fruit much
    better in Verona. Besides, these boys.....” He shrugged2 his shoulders to convey his disapproval of their shabby3 appearance.
    3 One boy had on a worn4 jersey and cut-off khaki pants; the other a shortened
    army tunic5 gathered in loose folds about his skinny frame. Yet, gazing at the two
    little figures, with their brown skins, tangled hair and dark earnest eyes, we
    felt ourselves strangely attracted. My companion spoke to the boys, discovered
    that they were brothers. Nicola, the elder, was 13; Jacopo, who barely came up to
    the door handle of the car, was nearly 12. We bought their biggest basket, then set
    off toward town.
    4 Next morning, coming out of our hotel, we saw our friends bent over shoeshine boxes beside the fountain in the public square, doing a brisk6 business.
    5 We watched for a few moments; then as trade slackened7 we went over. They
    greeted us with friendly faces. “I thought you picked fruit for a living,” I said.
    “We do many things, sir,” Nicola answered seriously. He glanced at us hopefully. “Often we show visitors through the town ... to Juliet’s tomb... and other places of interest.” “All right,” I smiled. “You take us along.”
    6 As we made the rounds, my interest was again provoked8 by their remarkable
    demeanour9. They were childish enough, and in many ways quite artless. Jacopo
    was lively as a squirrel. Nicola’s smile was steady and engaging. Yet in both these boyish faces there was a seriousness which was far beyond their years.
    7 In the week which followed we saw them frequently, for they proved extremely useful to us. If we wanted a pack of American cigarettes, or seats for the opera or the name of a good restaurant, Nicola and Jacopo could be relied upon to satisfy our needs.
    8 What struck one most was their willingness to work. During these summer days, under the hot sun, they shined shoes, sold fruit, hawked newspapers, conducted tourists round the town, and ran errands10.
    9 One night, we came upon them in the windy and deserted11 square, resting on the stone pavement12 beneath the lights. Nicola sat upright, tired. A bundle of unsold newspapers lay at his feet. Jacopo, his head resting upon his brother’s shoulder was asleep. It was nearly midnight.
    “Why are you out so late, Nicola?”
    “Waiting for the last bus from Padua. We shall sell all our papers when it comes
    in.”
    “Must you work so hard? You both look rather tired.”
    “We are not complaining, sir.”
    10 But next morning, when I went over to the fountain to have my shoes shined,
    I said, “Nicola, the way you and Jacopo work, you must earn quite a bit. You spend nothing on clothes. You eat little enough --- when I see you have a meal it’s usually black bread and figs. Tell me, what do you do with your money?”
    11 He coloured13 deeply under his sunburn, then grew pale. He looked to the
    ground. “You must be saving up to emigrate14 to America,” I suggested. He looked at me sideways, spoke with an effort. “We should greatly like to go to the
    States. But here, at present, we have other plans.”
    “What plans?”
    He smiled uncomfortably.
    “Just plans, sir,” he answered in a low voice.
    “Well,” I said, “we’re leaving on Monday. Is there anything I can do for
    you before we go?”
    12 Nicola shook his head, but suddenly Jacopo said, “Sir,” he burst out, “every
    Sunday we make a visit to the country, to Poleta, 30 kilometres from here. Usually
    we hire bicycles. But tomorrow, since you are so kind, you might send us in your car.”
    13 I had already told Luigi he might have the Sunday off. However, I answered, “ I’ll drive you out myself.” There was a pause. Nicola was glaring15 at his young brother in vexation16. “We could not think of troubling you, sir.”
    “It won’t be any trouble.” He bit his lip, then, in a rather put out17 tone, he said, “Very well.”
    14 The following afternoon we drove to the tiny village set high upon the hillside.
    I imagined that our destinations18 would be some humble dwellings19’. But,
    directed by Jacopo, we drew up20 at a large red-roofed villa, surrounded by a
    high stone wall. I could scarcely believe my eyes and before I could recover breath
    my two passengers had leaped from the car.
    15 “We shall not be long, sir. Perhaps only an hour. May be you’d like to go to
    the cafe in the village for a drink?” They disappeared beyond the corner of the
    wall. After a few minutes I followed. I found a grilled side-entrance and, determinedly, rang the bell. A pleasant-looking woman with steelrimmed spectacles appeared. I blinked21 as I saw that she was dressed in the white uniform of a trained nurse. “I just brought two small boys here.”
    “Ah, yes.” Her face lit up; she opened the door to admit me. “Nicola and
    Jacopo. I will take you up.” 16 She led me through a cool, tiled vestibule into the hospital --- for hospital the villa had become. At the door of a little cubicle the nurse paused, put her finger to her lips, and with a smile bade me look through the glass partition.
    17 The two boys were seated at the bedside of a girl of about twenty who, propped up on pillows, wearing a pretty lace jacket, was listening to their chatter22, her eyes soft and tender. One could see at a glance her resemblance23 to her brothers. A vase of wild flowers stood on her table, beside a dish of fruit and several books.
    18 “Won’t you go in?” the nurse murmured24. “Lucia will be pleased to see you.”
    I shook my head and turned away. I felt I could not bear to intrude25 upon this
    happy family party. But at the foot of the staircase I drew up and begged her to tell me all she knew about these boys.
    19 She was eager to do so. They were, she explained, quite alone in the world,
    except for this sister, Lucia. Their father, a widower, a well-known singer, had
    been killed in the early part of the war. Shortly afterward a bomb had destroyed
    their home and thrown the three children into the streets. They had always known
    a comfortable and cultured life --- Lucia had herself been training as a singer ---
    and they had suffered horribly from near starvation and exposure to the cold winter.
    20 For months they had barely kept themselves alive in a sort of shelter they built with their own hands amidst the rubble. Then for three years the Germans ruled the city. The boys grew to hate the Germans. When the resistance movement began secretly to form they were among the first to join.
    21 When the war was over, and we had peace at last, they came back to their beloved sister. And they found her ...... suffering from tuberculosis of the spine. She paused, took a quick breath.
    22 “Did they give up? I do not have to answer that question. They brought her here, persuaded us to take her into the hospital. In the twelve months she has been our patient she has made good progress. There is every hope that one day she will walk - and sing - again. “Of course, everything is so difficult now, food so scarce and dear, we could not keep going unless we charged a fee. But every week, Lucia’s brothers have made their payment.” She added simply, “I don’t know what they do, I do not ask. Work is scarce in Verona. But whatever it is, I know they do it well.” “Yes,” I agreed. “They couldn’t do it better.”
    23 I waited outside until the boys rejoined me, then drove them back to the city. They sat beside me, not speaking. For my part, I did not say a word --- I knew they would prefer to feel that they had safely kept their secret. Yet their devotion had touched me deeply. War had not broken their spirit. Their selfless action brought a new nobility to human life, gave promise of a greater hope for human society.
    (slightly simplified)
    About the author
    A.J. Cronin (1896-1974) was a doctor by training. He practised medicine in Wales and in London. It was while recovering from a breakdown in health that he wrote his first novel Hatter’s Castle. It was a huge success. Cronin gave up practising medicine and took to writing as a career. He wrote a number of novels and short stories. Among his best-known novels are The Citadel, The Key of the Kingdom, and The Spanish Gardener. Some of his novels have been made into successful films. The title of the story is that of one of the early plays of Shakespeare. The story recounts the hard life chosen by two young boys so that they could pay for the treatment of their sister afflicted with tuberculosis. The boys’ sacrifice, their sincerity and devotion to the cause and the maturity they display in their actions gives a new hope for humanity.

    POST SCRIPT :

    1. The Title is apt, (though not what you expected) because the story takes place few years after World War II

    2. TB was treated by Rest and Hospitalisation in Sanatoriums few decades ago. Right now we have a very efficient scheme called 'DOTS'

    3. This title is not related to 2042 - A lollu Story 2042 - A Lollu Story

    Wednesday, March 08, 2006

    Study finds girls molest young boys

    Before proceeding further, i urge you to visit http://blanknoiseproject.blogspot.com/

    Now the following passages from http://www.canadiancrc.com/articles/The_Press_Study_girls_molest_boys_01JUL04.htm
    will be interesting to you

    Researchers into sexual abuse by girls say female sexual offending is chronically under-reported and specialised rehabilitation programmes are urgently needed.

    Findings released yesterday from New Zealand's first study into adolescent female sexual offending reported a "culture of denial" about female sexual offending, which allowed adolescent female abusers to molest young, usually male, victims without repercussion.

    If not rehabilitated, female abusers would most likely continue to offend and eventually pose a threat to their own children.

    The survey of 400 health, mental health and related professionals identified eight young women in Christchurch currently aged between 12 and 19 who had sexually abused. It identified other female
    abusers older than 19, who were excluded from the results.

    Lead researcher Nikki Evans, from the University of Canterbury's social work department, said there was "an enormous amount of minimisation" surrounding sexual abuse by females, which meant it was usually not reported by victims, families or health professionals.

    "People find it really difficult to perceive young women engaging in sexually abusive behaviours; it goes against the idea of women as nurturers," she said.

    Research showed many people, including mental health professionals, perceived female sexual offending as not abusive or harmful.

    "If a young girl abuses a 12-year-old boy it's seen as an initiation and a positive thing, rather than something traumatic," Evans said.

    Researcher Don Mortensen, manager of the STOP Trust, which runs rehabilitation programmes for adult, adolescent and child sexual abusers, said society had been slow to acknowledge that sexual abuse by females was equally as destructive as that perpetrated by men.

    STOP commissioned the research as a feasibility study into establishing the country's first rehabilitation programme for adolescent female abusers.

    In nearly all of the eight Christchurch cases, the girls' victims were well known to them. Most were siblings or foster siblings. Peers at school and other neighbourhood children they were babysitting were also abused.

    "They're abusing within the context of a relationship. We know that sort of abuse is the most difficult context (for the victim)," Evans said.

    Their victims were always younger, and typically male. Three abused children aged between one and five years old.

    The number of victims for each girl ranged between one and five, although Evans said the true numbers may be higher due to under-reporting.

    The girls' average age was now 16 but several had been pre-teens when they started abusing.

    None were reported to the youth justice system or referred to specialist treatment programmes.

    "That suggests their offending was not prioritised, which reflects the general view in the community," Evans said.

    There was a pressing need to treat adolescent female offenders because females who had been sexually abused were more likely to become teenage mothers, she said.


    More at http://www.canadiancrc.com/The_Invisible_Boy_Report.htm

    Read http://www.malesurvivor.org/Prevention%20&%20Education/Articles/pban.htm to know some shocking facts.

    Now again read http://blanknoiseproject.blogspot.com/


    WHo said that All Men are from Mars and Women from Venus. Obviously there seems to be few men from Venus and few Women from Mars

    Best Blonde joke

    This has to be the Best Blonde joke ever

    Readers of Sujatha may think about the Mexican salavaikari Joke (சுஜாதா வின் மெக்ஸிகன் சலவைக்காரி ஜோக் / Mexican Washerwoman Joke), after clicking the Best Blonde Joke link !!!!

    MARD Strike - Reality Analysis by Man from Matunga

    Damned if You Do, Damned if You Don't (A Point of View on the Resident Doctors' Strike)

    From http://www.manfrommatunga.com/damned.htm by Man from Matunga

    The resident doctors are again going on an indefinite strike from Monday, 22 November. History as usual repeating itself.

    Since the early-80s, there have been at least five strikes by the resident doctors, at a consistent rate of one strike, every three-four years. The issues are always the same: more money, better working conditions and better accommodation. Only one strike was for another issue - a protest against the setting up of capitation-fee medical colleges - and, that strike failed, miserably.

    As have all the strikes. Each time, every time.

    The bottom-line is this. To succeed, a strike needs to affect people who matter or those who can make a noise. For example, a strike by the Municipal Mazdoor Union gets resolved within a day or two, because no one wants their garbage not to be picked up or other essential services, like water, affected. Strikes by the electricity or railway employees also get resolved within days if not hours. A resident doctors' strike however, does not affect routine, middle-class public life, does not affect the rich and powerful and does not particularly affect the economy. Ergo, the authorities care a damn. And so eventually, the strike fails.

    Who are these resident doctors?

    They are the ones who are training for their specialty MD and MS degrees in the various University colleges in the country, after having finished their basic MBBS and internship. These colleges are affiliated to various hospitals, which invariably are large public hospitals, run by the government. In proper Mumbai, for example, J J Hospital is run by the state government, whereas the other three, KEM, Nair and Sion are run by the BMC (Bombay Municipal Corporation). These hospitals are responsible for the health-care of more than 50% of the city's population (7 million people). This health-care is provided virtually free of cost or at negligible cost, in most instances, to whoever comes to these hospitals - even establishing a Mumbai domicile is not necessary, to get treatment. The residents, as part of their training, are required to work in these hospitals to get practical knowledge - in reality, these public hospitals function mainly because of the resident doctors, who do most of the work, most of the time. These doctors are supervised and trained by lecturers (Ls), assistant professors (APs) and professors (Ps), who are usually full-time employees of the BMC or the state government. The amount of work put in by the Ls, APs and Ps, on a daily basis, is usually inversely proportional to their seniority.

    When the resident doctors go on strike, these hospitals virtually stop functioning. The Ls, APs and Ps are too few in number to be able to shoulder the burden. Along with these hospitals, the so-called peripheral hospitals such as Kasturba (opposite the Arthur Road jail), Rajawadi (in Ghatkopar), Bhagwati (in Borivli), etc, also stop functioning, because they depend on residents posted in rotation from the central hospitals. In effect, more than 50% of the city's population is suddenly deprived of basic and essential medical services.

    You would think this would be enough reason to make the authorities negotiate with the doctors to resolve the strike.

    But think again.

    Who are the people affected? It is those people who cannot afford private doctors and hospitals, those who earn less than sustenance level and those who live in slums or on the roads or wherever.

    The authorities do not care, since these poor people affected by the strike don't really matter.The lower middle-class, which might have mattered and does use these public hospitals at times, however, has the private sector to turn to. Moreover, the resident doctors are eventually doctors, who after a few years are going to be in the top 10% income bracket in the country - the authorities know that with this background, public and press sympathy, even if forthcoming will be muted and transient. So they wait, wearing down the patience and enthusiasm of the resident doctors, who after all are doctors and not politicians or bureaucrats used to pushing files and giving excuses. At the end of a month or 40 days (the usual length of a residents' strike), the strike ends, the residents accepting whatever few sops the authorities are willing to give. And the authorities magnanimously tell the striking doctors that they will not penalize them for not having worked for one month and will allow them to keep terms - one of the worst fears resident doctors have, is of losing a six-month term. Threaten them with this loss and half of them start thinking of capitulating.

    Why don't the residents learn from the past? Because, every three years, a new crop of residents is in place. And the lessons of the past are forgotten.

    The anatomy of the strike, thus remains the same.
    First week - enthusiasm, rallies, hunger strikes, street plays
    Second week - some of the less enthusiastic residents go home, some default, some start studying for their exams on the sly
    Third week - government threatens loss of term. Enthusiasm dips.
    Fourth week - most residents want to get back to work.
    Fifth week - strike is over

    With each successive strike, the press has been giving more and more coverage to the plight of the residents. But it is always the same story. They are supportive in the first two weeks. Then, some journalists start posting horror stories of patients who have died because they were denied treatment - the tone of the articles suggests that the reason is the intransigence of the residents. The sympathy sours and by the fourth week, public and press sympathy is gone.

    This year, the senior doctors have decided to support them. Maybe they are sympathetic and mean well, but by supporting the strike and insisting that they will look after only very dire emergencies, the Ls, APs and Ps are also making sure that they will not have to do much donkey-work.

    Should the residents strike?

    Think about living, four to a 150sq feet room, with bed-bugs, poor ventilation, terrible food, unclean water, a 24-hours a day, seven-day a week schedule and the constant threat of work-related diseases such as tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis B. For around Rs. 4000/month (<100$). When doctors with similar backgrounds get Rs 17,000 in Delhi and Aligarh, which is more than what a professor earns in Mumbai.

    Now think how you would feel if the resident doctor were you, or your son or your daughter.

    Are the residents morally justified in striking, considering the problems it creates for the patients? I don't know, but I do know that most residents have trouble wrestling with this demon. Many however eventually justify this action by transferring accountability onto the government, which they consider to be the cause of the strike, in the first place.

    The funny and tragic part is yet to come. After all this, even if an agreement is finally struck, the state government does not always fulfil the terms of the agreement. Follow-up by MARD (Maharashtra Association of Medical Doctors), after a strike, is extremely poor due to two reasons; the doctors are busy working and learning and they are extremely mobile - on an average, the maximum, one resident would be in any one place, is around three years. The government knows this and can play around with the terms and conditions any way it wants until the ground is laid for the next strike about three years later. The second problem is that in Mumbai, the major employer is the BMC, not the state government. The negotiations are held however with the state government, since this is an all-Maharashtra strike. The BMC is supposed to be a party to the negotiations, but invariably there is a large gap between promises made and kept. Thus the majority of Mumbai's resident doctors still get screwed.

    Is there a better way out? I don't know. Everything has been tried, nothing works. If the government however was proactive and tried to solve the residents' problems in time, things would not come to this. Expecting this to happen however, is obviously a pipe dream. Maybe, the residents could go to court, and file a public interest litigation. But from where will the resident doctors get the time, energy and money, required to fight a court case on a daily basis? Obviously, it is much easier for them to go on strike, for which there is at least some concerted and determined effort, manpower and time, if not money, available.

    Damned if you do, damned if you don't.

    Should doctors strike work?

    Should doctors strike work? by Yash Lokhandwala at Indian Journal of Medical Ethics
    Apr-Jun1996-4(2) http://www.issuesinmedicalethics.org/042ed047.html

    Strike is a legitimate form of collective protest in a democracy. At the same time, the guiding principle of medicine is the alleviation of suffering. Thus the issue of whether doctors should ever strike work is contentious. Some have preached from an ivory tower and advocated against this form of protest (1) . Opinions have been expressed that the suffering caused by a strike of doctors violates the ‘raison d’etre’ of the medical profession.

    Of course one cannot deny that patient care suffers during a strike by doctors. The scale of harm caused depends upon the role played by doctors in that particular health set- up, the type of cases under treatment, and, of course, the duration of the strike.

    Issues prompting strike
    It is important to analyse the issues at stake which prompt a strike if one is to make a ‘cost- benefit’ assessment. For if a strike, in the long run, is to result in better health for a large section of the people, the inconvenience caused to a few during the strike may be justifiable.

    Let us consider a scenario where the medical profession is forced to become a passive or active accomplice of a tyrannical political system as when doctors are forced to participate in state torture of revolutionaries. Doctors may be made to examine the victims before torture, help decide the best means and degree of torture appropriate for each victim (2). In extreme cases, they may even be asked to participate in the torture process itself. The role played by senior German doctors in the torture and experimentation of Jews and communists in Nazi Germany is well documented. Even today, in some South American, African and Asian countries, when doctors were ordered to play such a role by the state against its political opponents, several doctors refused, at much personal risk. Individually, these doctors were hounded and persecuted

    In other countries such as Pakistan the medical associations protested and even went on strike to highlight the issue. Obviously such a strike would be supported by all right- thinking people. Thus to say that it is unethical for doctors to strike work as a blanket statement is completely unrealistic.

    Let us now consider a less extreme instance. In 1984, as a member of the Maharashtra Association of Resident Doctors (MARD), I was a participant in a month- long strike against the proposed setting- up of private capitation- fee medical colleges in Maharashtra. We held that these colleges would serve as a backdoor route of entry for the academically less- deserving rich into the medical profession. This would lead to rampant commercialisation of medicine by half- baked doctors sprouting forth from these colleges, out to recover their lakhs of rupees of investment at the expense of an unsuspecting public. Pleas in 1983- 84 by many, including MARD, to government and university authorities to refrain from permitting (and encouraging) private medical colleges (charging exorbitant fees) to start, fell on deaf ears. We had then pleaded that, if we really needed more doctors, more public medical colleges be started.

    Each of these proposed private medical college trusts enjoyed strong political patronage. The colleges were to be used to enrich their patrons and enhance their political power. It is not surprising that MARD’s pleas were brushed aside. Left with no other option, MARD declared a strike, which unfortunately failed in preventing the setting up of these commercial colleges. The strike did succeed in getting guidelines established for maintaining academic standards in these colleges and also for reserving a portion of the seats for meritorious poor students. Over the years these guidelines were side-tracked and many more tinpot medical colleges have sprung up. Today, 12 years down the road, we are experiencing the disastrous consequences of this shameful policy. Poorly trained ‘doctors’ emerge from these colleges, their first objective being the recovery of hundreds of thousands of rupees that their parents have spent in educating them. Now these same armchair philosophers who lament the present morass, criticise efforts such as a strike (even if this is the only possibly effective means) to prevent a foreseen Greek tragedy.

    MARD strike justified
    Finally let us consider the most mundane, yet commonest reason for a doctors’ strike. Yes, I’m referring to strikes for economic demands, brought into focus by the recent MARD strike of resident doctors in public hospitals for pay rise and better living conditions. One need not go into the miserable conditions that resident doctors work under, since these have been repeatedly described in the lay press. Suffice it to say that their living and working conditions, coupled with a meagre salary, made it impossible for them to work efficiently and to live with dignity. Directly or indirectly, sooner or later, such oppressive working conditions are bound to result in suboptimal work quality and output. Numerous representations over the years to the authorities for provision of decent accommodation and realistic salaries have gone unheeded. Except for 1989, the state Government has never increased the salaries of resident doctors without a strike action by MARD.

    If the recent predictable MARD strike had not occurred, the situation would have kept deteriorating towards a total system failure, i. e. a foreseeable breakdown of efficient patient care due to the inability of resident doctors to function properly. In fact, we frequently read about the shortage of faculty members in public hospitals due to poor salaries . It may not be alarmist to say that a breakdown of public health services is imminent. Yet our preachers from the pulpit would say, ‘Let things collapse but do not strike work. ’

    References
    1. Pandya SK: Letter from Bombay. Strikes in hospitals. British Medical Journal 1988; 297: 1278.
    2. Jesani A: Supreme court judgement violates medical ethics. Medical Ethics 1995; 3: 38.
    3. Amnesty International Report, 1986.
    4. Jain K: Medical colleges face faculty shortage. Times of India 3 March 1996 page 7. 48

    Yash Lokhandwala ,Member, Executive Committee, Maharashtra Medical Council, Member, Central Advisory Board of Education (New Delhi), Ex-member, Medical Council of India

    Increase the number of Paramedicals

    Govt of maharashtra plans to recruit PHC doctors for the municipality to counter strike. See more details at http://mard-strike.blogspot.com/

    If you analyse, One of the demands of the PGs is that there should be increase in UNREGISTERED POSTS....... So that the work load is shared..... So What the government indents to do ON A SHORT TERM BASIS, can be done on a long term basis... Employ more doctors......

    BUT IN MY PERSONAL OPINION - THAT IS "NOT" THE SOLUTION.......

    You need not increase the Number of Doctors..... you have to increase the Number of PARAMEDICALS to give the residents breathing place.... Residents should be spared from works such as carrying the samples to lab and paper work etc....

    At present the CRRIS are doing the work of staff nurse / MNA and the PGs are doing the work of CRRI

    What is the problem in increasing the Number of Doctors.......

    If this happens, Again there will be bitter rivalry between the two groups, especially in surgical fields regarding the "chances".. Even in medicine and paediatric, a lumbar puncture or a intra osseous infusion is going to make sparks fly....

    Hope you all know the Corporate Pyramid. There should be more workers at the lower rungs and less at the higher rungs

    Saturday, March 04, 2006

    Sila Nerangalil sila manithargal

    As per http://rediff.com/news/2006/mar/04tn.htm Vaiko ditches DMK, takes 35 seats from Jaya

    After a 45-minute meeting between the two, Jayalalithaa told reporters that all other matters like the Prevention of Terrorism Act issue were things of the past. (Vaiko was detained under POTA for over a year by her government).

    "We are here on a positive note, on a positive matter and we will be making only positive statements," she said.

    Vaiko said the AIADMK-led alliance would "sweep" the polls. "This is the finest hour in the political history of Tamil Nadu. The alliance is a formidable one".

    In Tiruchirappalli, DMK president Karunanidhi reacted with a cryptic 'Nothing to say' when asked about Vaiko's decision to align with the AIADMK. Asked whether Vaiko's decision was due to his offer of fewer seats, he told reporters: 'I don't know.'

    Friday, March 03, 2006

    WOUND HEALERS to WOUNDED HEALERS

    From http://mard-strike.blogspot.com/2006/03/wound-healers-to-wounded-healers.html

    WOUND HEALERS to WOUNDED HEALERS

    26/2/6, 6.30 PM – Resident doctor assaulted by patient’s relatives for informing about a mandatory post-mortem
    27/2/6, 8.00 pm – Resident doctor manhandled by relatives on being asked to keep their chappals out of delivery room
    27/2/6, 11.30 pm – Resident doctors abused and threatened for life for denying an unindicated politically motivated admission to ward

    Year 2005, 260 doctors admitted in their own hospitals with hepatitis, malaria, dengue & leptospirosis over a year.

    ‘Are doctors justified in going on strike?’ is a common question doing rounds these days. The most obvious response from everyone seems to be ‘Of course not, they must save patient’s lives!’

    But there is a 25 year old who stays on call 24X7, works 20 hours a day returns to a 10X10 room, shared amongst six other equally tired doctors, all fighting for the coveted two beds, the unlucky ones having to sleep on stretchers in the ward for want of space.

    The unmarried ones are lucky; they fight for themselves, the married ones become gladiators for their families.

    Here is a 30 year old who doesn’t dare to marry for want of space, privacy, financial stability and time with extended duties reaching upto 36 hours at a stretch. He has no life beyond the confined of the hospital, stuck for months together in intensive care, not having seen daylight.

    Nothing seems to be enough. Not that he has buried his face in his books since 10 years of age till date; not that he has passed from the best schools and colleges; not even the fact he has graduated from the top medical colleges to work in the best hospitals in India, away from the cozy comforts of his home.

    He is told that he is the cream of the literate society. And here is the cream of your society being slapped on the face for working hard in a place where tempers fly high and emotions cross all limits; with inefficient security in the form of few guards who reach the scene after the harm is done.

    We doctors, aren’t on strike to let our patient die; in fact we are on strike so that we can get protection for our life; a right which is the basis of democracy.

    So here we are, having put everything in our lives at stake for the society and are now forced to put down our only asset – ‘our dignity’.

    We are simply asking the authorities to make manhandling of medical professionals on duty a non-bailable offence

    We are not looking for sympathy, we demand empathy for our cause. Can the society justify that these doctors, who save their lives, be taken by their collars by the mob?

    We are literally wounding our souls to heal others, meanwhile being stripped of our dignity.

    Just give us back our dignity to safeguard this special journey called life.


    Resident doctors of MARD
    Maharshtra Association of Resident Doctors

    Thursday, March 02, 2006

    MESMA against Doctors

    Doctors in Maharastra are on Strike http://mard-strike.blogspot.com/

    Govt threatens with MESMA

    And this is what the rules say

    As per the directives of the Honourable Supreme Court in its judgement dated,25.9.87, in writ petition No. 348-352 of 1985, all the State Governments, Medical Institutions and Universities are required to amend their rules and regulations to introduce a uniform residency scheme by 1993.
    In this connection Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of India has sent directive to all states & U.T. administrations vide letter No. S-11014/3/91/ME (P) dated 05 June, 1992.
    The Medical council of India has also stated that “all candidates joining post graduate training programme must work as full time residents during the whole period of their training programme. The post graduate students shall be paid adequate remuneration irrespective of the status of the institution whether Government/Private/Autonomous”.

    Wednesday, March 01, 2006

    Publishing the "first" edition

    Read some interesting stuff at http://www.thinnai.com/pl0224064.html

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