Cops in Mangaluru, Udupi wake up after Kundapur crash; check school vehicles

[email protected] (CD Network | Photos by Chakravarthi)
June 22, 2016

Mangaluru, Jun 22: A day after a ghastly road mishap claimed lives of eight school children and injured a dozen others at Trasi in Kundapur taluk, police units in Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts conducted surprise checking of vehicles ferrying school children in the morning and evening.

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Mangaluru City Police Commissioner M Chandra Sekhar, Dakshina Kannada SP Bhushan Gulabrao Borase and Udupi SP Annamalai K have held discussions with their subordinates to implement the school vehicle regulations strictly and immediately.

The action began on Wednesday morning with traffic police catching many motorists unaware with their checks at prime traffic junctions here to ensure safe drive to school.

In Mangaluru city, teams of traffic police were posted at the Navabharat Circle, St. Agnes College Circle and in Surathakal to check the school vans, cars and two-wheelers in which children were being taken to school. The exercise was coordinated by Assistant Commissioner of Police Uday Nayak, who stationed himself at Navabharat Circle at 8 a.m.

The Navarbharat Circle is an imporatant junction in the city and close to six primary and secondary schools. School vans of other schools also pass through this prime traffic junction.

The police were checking of the school vans were following the norms, such as carrying only permitted number of students, presence of a lady helper in the vehicle, and ensuring that children are not transported to schools in either private vehicles or autorickshaws. The police also insisted that the pillions on two-wheelers wear helmets.

At the Navabharat Circle, several motorists were booked for violating traffic norms. There were a good number of commercial vans and private vans carrying more than 10 children. Several school vans were found carrying students more than the permitted number. Many schools vans did not have the mandatory woman helper. There were a number of two-wheeler riders who taking children, who were not wearing helmets, to school. The police actually found it hard to stop the violators and book cases against them.

Similar was the scene at the St. Agnes College Circle. To avoid being booked by police, van drivers were seen dropping children 100 meters before the circle and making students walk down to their schools.

The DK district police created awareness among the drivers and urged them to reduce the number of students in the vehicle at Belthangady, Bantwal, Puttur and at Sullia. Puttur ASP C B Ryshyanth, Additional SP Dr Vedamurthy also led the team in checking the school vehicles at a few locations.

SP Annamalai said that he would take stringent action to completely avoid the reoccurrence of such incidents. The department would henceforth monitor strictly the violations. The vehicles carrying the school children will also be scrutinized stringently and alert actions would be taken in the days to come, he added.

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Comments

A. Mangalore
 - 
Thursday, 23 Jun 2016

Well done. But not for only 4 days ; after everything will be normal.

HARIS AHMED
 - 
Thursday, 23 Jun 2016

Good initiatives taken by concerned authorities.

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News Network
May 3,2024

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Mangaluru: The passenger vessel service between Lakshadweep and Mangaluru has recommenced operations with the arrival of Parali, a high-speed craft, at the Old Mangaluru Port on Thursday, May 2 

With 160 passengers on board, along with a pilot, a ship engineer, an assistant, and eight labourers, the arrival of the vessel brings hopes of reinstating this vital transportation link.

The passengers were welcomed by Congress brass. The vessels that used to arrive before the Covid-19 pandemic took 13 hours to reach Mangaluru from Lakshadweep. However, the introduction of the high-speed craft, Parali, has reduced the travel time to approximately seven hours, said Abubakar Ashraf Bengre.

Bengre is part of a team that has been instrumental in liaising with the authorities of both Lakshadweep and Karnataka to facilitate the revival of this service. He told reporters that the service would bring better economic activity to Mangaluru. 

Over recent months, discussions have been held with Hamdullah Sayeed, president, Lakshadweep Congress Committee, as well as Karnataka Speaker UT Khader and district minister Dinesh Gundu Rao, to garner support for the reintroduction of the service.

The passengers who arrived mostly sought medical treatment, went shopping or met relatives here. They said that they traveled for Rs 450. Former MLA J R Lobo said that they will urge the government to ensure regular vessel services continue.

The passenger service was discontinued due to a lack of demand, it is learnt. In the year 2018-19, 4,955 passengers embarked and 7,422 disembarked from the Old Mangaluru Port. Subsequently, the figures declined to 3,779 (embarked) and 2,294 (disembarked) in 2019-20. The numbers further plummeted to 561 (embarked) and 19 (disembarked) in 2020-21, leading to the suspension of the service.

At present, the administration of the Union Territory of Lakshadweep has released a schedule for high-speed craft movement from April 29 to May 5.

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News Network
May 2,2024

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Mangaluru: This year too, the Mangaluru International Airport has missed being designated as an embarkation point for the annual hajj pilgrimage. 

According to the Haj Committee of India, not many are choosing Mangaluru as an embarkation point. Last year, although Mangaluru was notified as one of the embarkation points, the Union government removed it from the list at the last minute.

Several associations and organisations submitted memorandums to the Haj Committee of India, requesting the reinstatement of Mangaluru as one of the embarkation points, but their efforts have not materialised this year either.

The use of Mangaluru Airport as an embarkation point for the haj began in 2010. In 2019, 1,400 haj pilgrims flew from MIA to Saudi Arabia.

“When the number is less, it is difficult to consider it. It was the same issue as last year,” reacted AP Abdullakutty, chairman of the Haj Committee of India.
Mangaluru as an embarkation point served people from undivided Dakshina Kannada, Kodagu, Shivamogga, Uttara Kannada, and Chikkamagaluru districts.
Last year, the Muslim Central Committee of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts submitted a memorandum to Abdullakutty. They expressed their disappointment with Abdullakutty and stated that Mangaluru had a good number of applicants ever since it was identified as an embarkation point. 
Now, they have to travel to Bengaluru. 

UT Khader, speaker of the Karnataka legislative assembly, pointed out that several Union ministries are involved in the process of designating embarkation points for the haj.

“We are not sure why MIA as an embarkation point was removed. Is it because of fewer applications, or are airlines not willing to bid for MIA as an embarkation point? Is it only an issue with MIA as an embarkation point, or are there other airports in the country facing similar issues? We will try to find out and seek answers. Meanwhile, we will also start working at the earliest so that MIA is considered as an embarkation point for hajj next year,” said Khader.

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News Network
May 4,2024

Mangaluru, May 4: The Mangaluru International Airport was besieged with a harrowing message of terror recently, when an email, purportedly from malevolent elements, menacingly declared the planting of bombs within the airport premises. 

Addressed to the office of the airport authority, the missive, steeped in ominous overtones, bore the ominous signature of a terrorist faction, ominously named 'Terrorizers 111'.

The communication, disseminated in English, ominously detailed the clandestine emplacement of explosives in areas eluding facile detection, accompanied by a chilling warning of their imminent detonation. The threat, ominously looming over not only the infrastructure but also the airborne vessels, portended a catastrophic deluge of bloodshed and loss.

In response to this dire communiqué, airport authorities swiftly engaged the apparatus of law enforcement, dispatching urgent alerts to the vigilant guardians of public safety. Acting upon the dictates of higher echelons, a formal dossier of this menacing correspondence was meticulously compiled, cloaked in the veil of confidentiality to thwart any premature dissemination.

Mangaluru International Airport found itself in grim camaraderie with more than 30 counterparts under the aegis of the Airport Authority of India (AAI) and private domains, all recipients of this chilling electronic diatribe. A comprehensive net of precautionary measures was swiftly cast, fortifying the bastions of security in anticipation of any nefarious designs lurking within the shadows.

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