Articles by Laasya Shekhar

Laasya Shekhar is an independent journalist based in Chennai with previous stints in Newslaundry, Citizen Matters and Deccan Chronicle. Laasya holds a Masters degree in Journalism from Bharathiar University and has written extensively on environmental issues, women and child rights, and other critical social and civic issues. She tweets at @plaasya.

Just like all civilizations, Madras also drew sustenance from a river. Historically, Adyar and Cooum Rivers played a pivotal role in the flourishing of Chennai. But today, with these rivers polluted, Chennai is largely dependent on the Northeast monsoon (mid-October to mid-December) that recharges groundwater. The presence of hundreds of lakes and temple tanks is a silver lining, but with most of them encroached and polluted, they don’t meet the water demand of the ever-growing city. So how exactly does this city of roughly 11 million people sustain itself? Where do you get the water that flows in your taps…

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Three months and a number of loans -- This is what it took for S Mohammed Thameem’s father to buy a smart mobile. Thameem is a student with hearing disability, studying in Class 10 at the St Louis Institute of Deaf and Dumb. He had already missed classes for more than three months, due to the lack of a smartphone. Whenever his friends sent a screenshot of their virtual attendance, Thameem would be sad and gloomy.  With a salary of Rs 6,500 per month (after the pay cuts, due to the COVID-19 driven economic crisis), it was not easy for…

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Translated by Vadivu Mahendran வீட்டிலிருந்து அலுவலகப் பணி செய்து கொண்டே, பல்வேறு விஷயங்களையும் நிர்வகிக்கும் சமயத்தில் அரவணைப்புக்காக ஏங்கி உங்களை நெருங்கும் ஒரு நாய் உங்களது  மன அழுத்தத்தைக் குறைக்கும் ஒன்றாக இருக்கலாம். பெருந்தொற்றால் தொடங்கப்பட்ட ஊரடங்கின் போது காணப்பட்ட பலதரப்பட்ட போக்குகளில் நாய்க்குட்டிகளுக்கான தேவையின் அதிகரிப்பு குறிப்பிடத்தக்க ஒன்றாகும்.  “லாப்ரடார், ஹஸ்கி மற்றும் கோல்டன் ரெட்ரீவர் போன்ற அடுக்குமாடி குடியிருப்பு நாய்களுக்கான தேவை கடந்த ஆறு மாதங்களில் ஐம்பது சதவீதத்திற்கு மேலாக அதிகரித்துள்ளது.  அனைத்துத் தரப்பு மக்களும் ஒரு நாயை வாங்குவதிலோ அல்லது தத்தெடுப்பதிலோ ஆர்வம் காட்டுகிறார்கள்“, என்கிறார் கோகுல்ராஜ் தர்மலிங்கம் எனும் நாய் வளர்ப்பாளர். ஆனால் நம்மில் எத்தனை பேருக்கு ஒரு செல்லப்பிராணியை எவ்வாறு கவனித்துக் கொள்வது என்பது தெரியும்? ஒரு பொறுப்பான செல்லப்பிராணி வளர்ப்பாளராக இருப்பதற்கு அது குறித்த அறிவும் அனுபவமும் தேவைப்படுகிறது, அதனால்தான் சமூக ஊடக சேனல்களில் புதிய செல்லப்பிராணி வளர்ப்பாளர்கள் பகிர்ந்து கொள்ளும்…

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Greater Chennai Corporation has kickstarted the vertical gardens project under 14 selected flyovers in Chennai. According to a news report, the spaces under the flyovers at IIT-M traffic junction, North Usman Road flyover, Mint, Doveton, Pantheon Road, Perambur, Mahalingapuram, Usman Road, TTK Road, Kauvery hospital, Royapettah high road, G P Moopanar flyover, LB Road and Gandhi Mandapam will get vertical green cover.  This is a utilitarian move aimed at better use of public spaces in order to mitigate carbon emissions on Chennai roads. GCC is following in the footsteps of developed cities such as Singapore that has made the concept…

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A dog snuggling up to you, craving belly rubs, can be a real stress-buster, especially when you are working from home and managing multiple fronts. Of the different trends witnessed during the pandemic-initiated lockdown in Chennai, a notable one is an increase in the demand for puppies. “The demand for apartment dogs such as Labrador, Husky and Golden Retriever has increased by more than fifty per cent during the past six months. People from all walks of life are showing interest in buying or adopting a dog,” says Gokulraj Dharmalingam, a dog breeder.  But how many of us know how…

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All it takes for Bharani (name changed), a social work student at Madras Christian College (MCC) to take part in her department's webinar is a mobile phone with a good internet connection.  Happy to save three hours of commuting time from her home in Avadi to her college in Nungambakkam, M Varsha, a Journalism student from MOP Vaishnav  College attends classes online. A BSc Maths student at Loyola College, Anto Nelson doesn't miss the class; he listens to the live online class and notes down the sum as instructed by the professor.  These instances clearly portray the evolution of college…

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It is the morning jamming sessions that excites Srihari S Nair the most these days. Every morning, the 12-year-old gets ready, sits by the window and gently taps his fingers on the piano. Soon music fills the rooms, as his parents and piano master listen intently and Srihari's eyes sparkle with joy. His master even corrects some of the notes. In reality, though it is his sister, sitting next to him, who is creating the music under the guidance of their teacher, but the collaborative exercise brings great joy to the boy. More importantly though, these jamming sessions act as…

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“It has become a matter of routine for me to go to the police station once in every ten days,” says an inconsolable Kavita (name changed). Since this March, she has been desperately pleading with the cops at the Maduravoyal Police Station, asking them to do what it takes to ensure justice for her 10-year-old daughter. Kavita's daughter was raped and killed by their 29-year-old neighbour five months ago.  The girl who woke up in the middle of the night to go to the loo, which is detached from their house, never came back to sleep next to her mother. …

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COVID-19 has had a seriously unsettling effect on all sections of people, not least on students who find themselves in an unprecedented situation caused by closure of schools and colleges, and a rather hasty, unprepared thrust on digital modes of learning. Figures released by UNESCO, as they assess the impact of the global coronavirus pandemic on education, say that in India alone, some 32 crore learners have been impacted in some way or the other by the closure of educational institutes, nearly 17 crore of them in secondary school or at higher levels. Undoubtedly, the most affected and stressed are…

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A famous musician from Delhi, Govind (name changed)* had been addicted to marijuana in the past but quit it a year ago. However, some weeks into the lockdown, he lost his job and slipped back to the old habit of taking marijuana.  Govind had been a member of a Delhi-based Narcotics Anonymous group and attended their meetings every day. That was a key factor behind his successful withdrawal but the sudden suspension of usual meetings due to the lockdown led to loss of all gains made. “It made me anxious and I ended up seeking respite in the old habit,”…

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