Darshan within 90 minutes during Dasara
The Hindu
Special Chief Secretary (Endowments) Karikal Valaven and other officials inspected the arrangements being made for the Dasara festival atop Indrakeeladri IN Vijayawada on Tuesday.
Special Chief Secretary (Endowments) Karikal Valaven and other officials inspected the arrangements being made for the Dasara festival atop Indrakeeladri, here on Tuesday.
Mr. Valaven said that the temple administration is making arrangements to ensure that devotees would have darshan of the deity within 60 to 90 minutes of entering the queue line. Special queue lines would be erected for devotees purchasing special darshan tickets. As many as 30 lakh water packets would be kept ready for devotees standing in the queue lines. About 250 nayee brahmins would be pressed into service at Kesha khandanasala for tonsuring. In coordination with the medical and health department, 15 medical camps would be conducted to provide emergency medicines. Six bed hospitals would be made available near Om Turning and VMC office. Also, 1,500 sanitation workers would be on duty to keep the temple precincts clean, he said.
NTR District Collector S. Dilli Rao, Police Commissioner Kanthi Ranta Tata, DCP Vishal Gunni, Sub-Collector Adithi Singh, Devasthanam Trust Board Chairman Karnati Rambabu, Temple EO Dharbamulla Bramaramba and others were present.
“We are judges and therefore, cannot act like Mughals of a bygone era ... the writ courts in the guise of doing justice cannot transcend the barriers of law,” the High Court of Karnataka observed while setting aside an order of a single judge, who in 2016 had extended the lease of a public premises allotted to a physically challenged person to 20 years contrary to 12-year period stipulated in the law.
The High Court of Karnataka on Monday declined to interfere, at present, in the investigation against a Bharatiya Janata Party worker, who is among the accused persons facing charges of circulating obscene clips, related to “morphed” images and videos clips related to Prajwal Revanna, former Hassan MP, in public domain through pen drives and other modes.