Sunday, August 7, 2016

Bidar government hospital to hire temporary staff




Source: The Hindu



The government will allow the district hospital to appointment some temporary staff to strengthen its obstetrics and gynaecology wing, said Eshwar Khandre, district in-charge Minister, in Bidar on Saturday.

Over a hundred women are admitted to the wing everyday, but the facilities are just adequate to help around 60 women deliver. We need to strengthen the department by deploying additional staff, he said.

At a meeting with senior officials, the minister also allowed the district surgeon to employ additional security guards. The government has released Rs. 80 lakh for providing facilities and equipments like bio-metric attendance recorders, the minister said.

The number of dialysis machines will be increased.

He asked the doctors not to go on leave and not to leave the head quarters till the spread of gastroenteritis and cholera was under control. He asked officials not to refer patients to hospitals in Hyderabad unless it was absolutely necessary.

Mr. Khandre asked Assistant Commissioner Venkat Raja to submit a detailed report on the needs of the hospital after a thorough inspection. Anurag Tewari, Deputy Commissioner, C. Channanna, director, Bidar Institute of Medical Sciences, M.A. Jabbar, District Health and Family Welfare officer and others were present.


Source:http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/bidar-government-hospital-to-hire-temporary-staff/article8955773.ece




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C.N.R. Rao to interact with students in Bidar

Source: The Hindu



Scientist and Bharat Ratna awardee C.N.R. Rao will interact with pre-university students to orient them towards research in basic sciences in the Rang Mandir in Bidar on Saturday at 11 a.m.
Prof. Rao, who is the chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, will inaugurate the Internet of Things (IoT) laboratory and Centre of Excellence at the Bheemanna Khandre Institute of Technology in Bhalki remotely from the Akka Mahadevi College for Women in Bidar. He will also lay the foundation stone for Makkala Mahamane, a hostel for poor meritorious students, to be built by the Kalyan Karnataka Pratishtana at Mamankeri on the outskirts of Bidar.
Channabasappa Halahalli, president of District Development Forum, said Prof. Rao would speak on the need to motivate more students to take up research in basic science and how research and academics can be promising careers.
The Karnataka Rajya Vigyan Parishat, Karnataka Rashtriya Education Society, Shaheen Education Society, BKIT and K.K. Pratishtana are jointly organising the programmes.


Source : http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/cnr-rao-to-interact-with-preuniversity-students-in-bidar/article8948078.ece


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Bidar gurdwara to do its bit to protect a legendary spring



Source: The Hindu.


The Amrut Kund, believed to have been created by Guru Nanak, in Bidar.


The stream, born in the laterite mountains along Manjra valley, comes out as ‘Amrut Kund’ in the gurdwara premises.

Bidar-based Gurudwara Guru Nanak Jhira, a pilgrimage centre for Sikhs all over the world, plans to take up afforestation and rainwater harvesting to protect the eponymous mountain stream that runs through it.

The stream born in the laterite mountains along Manjra valley comes out as ‘Amrut Kund’ in the Gurudwara premises. A beautiful temple of white stone and marble has been built at the point where the water comes out. Devotees queue up at the mouth of the Amrut Kund to collect the water, which is considered holy.

Legend has it that the founder of the faith Guru Nanak miraculously created the spring. Returning from his tour of Dakshina Patha or southern sojourn, he stopped in Bidar in the summer of 1512. Residents of the town complained that they were suffering from a severe drought and asked the prophet to help. He moved a stone with his leg and water gushed out from a hole in the ground. Amrut Kund was thus created, believers say. They also believed it never stopped yielding water in the last five centuries. Several households in Bidar collected drinking water from the Gurudwara for daily use till a few years ago.

However, the unprecedented heat wave of 2016 dried up tanks and ponds and sucked out water from wells and bore holes all over the district. The three tanks and seven springs surrounding Bidar city went dry. The Gurudwara spring was no exception. The eternal spring began yielding less and less water every month.

Cutting of trees in the mountain behind the Gurudwara and shaving off of laterite bunds to make way for new buildings also seemed to have contributed to the phenomenon.

Water flow in the spring was so alarmingly reduced that the Gurudwara authorities rationed water to visitors. Two steel tanks that quenched the thirst of tourists at the Amrut Kund were removed.

However, the Gurudwara committee now wants to find long-term solutions to the problem. They are consulting experts in ground water management. On Thursday, faculty members from the Guru Nanak Dev Engineering College, run by the committee, have held meetings with Govindan Kutty, a professor from Kerala University, who first mapped the Surang Bavi or underground water canals of Bidar in 2010.

“On the advice of Mr. Kutty and Damian Singh, of the Sikh Heritage Foundation, we are taking several measures to protect and preserve the environment around the Gudurwara,” Balbir Singh, president, Gurudwara managing committee, told The Hindu.

“The first step has been to ban bore wells in areas like Guru Nagar that are situated on the elevated plateau above the Gurudwara. This decision was taken several years ago. That is because we foresaw the damage to the spring and the surrounding areas,” explains Mr. Singh. He said that in the next phase, high density plantation would be taken up in areas surrounding the Gurudwara. According to Mr. Singh, rainwater harvesting will be encouraged in all houses in Guru Nagar and surrounding areas. Watershed development structures like bunds, Krishi Hondas and curved linings will be built in gardens and other public places, he said.

“The Bidar Gurudwara is nestled in the lap of the beautiful Manjra valley. With a little effort, its pristine beauty and greenery can be preserved,” said Mr. Kutty. Saving rainwater and greening will not only reinvigorate the spring, but also recharge groundwater level in the surrounding areas, he said. He also called for protecting traditional water bodies like open wells and streams. Mr. Kutty has suggested that they choose trees of such varieties that retain the top soil and don’t damage deep aquifers. “Plants with surface roots like Amla and Bamboo should be chosen. Plants like Eucalyptus and quick stick (Gliricidia) should be avoided,” Mr Kutty said.


Source:http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/gurudwara-in-bidar-to-do-its-bit-to-protect-a-legendary-spring/article8955723.ece

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