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Alertness of residents helped nab Govindachamy
Alertness of residents helped nab Govindachamy

Time of India

time5 days ago

  • Time of India

Alertness of residents helped nab Govindachamy

Kozhikode: It was the alertness and swift thinking shown by residents on hearing the news of rape- murder case convict Govindachamy escaping from Kannur Central Prison, which helped police nab him within hours around 3.5km away from the jail. The first to spot the fugitive was Vinoj, a local man on his way to work at Thalap around 9.15am. "I was riding my two-wheeler when I noticed a man walking slowly on the left side of the road. He looked like a beggar, and we exchanged glances briefly. I had already heard about Govindachamy's escape from prison, and something about the man I saw made me suspicious," Vinoj said. He noted that the man was carrying what looked like waste cloth on his head, and oddly, his left hand was concealed inside the bundle, further raising suspicion. "I told a nearby autorickshaw driver that I suspected the man to be Govindachamy. He got on my scooter, and we began to follow him. When I called out his name, he immediately bolted into a narrow lane and jumped over the compound wall of an under-construction building," Vinoj added. Wasting no time, Vinoj informed Kannur Town police station. Within minutes, a police team arrived and launched a coordinated search operation, sealing off the area to prevent Govindachamy from slipping away. Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The Secret Lives of the Romanovs — the Last Rulers of Imperial Russia! Learn More Undo by Taboola by Taboola Police cordoned off the entire area, sealing all possible escape routes and conducted a thorough search. A female worker, who was clearing the undergrowth, also saw him flee into the thicket. Sometime later, it was Unnikrishnan a staff member of National Sample Survey Office at Thalap, who spotted Govindachamy hiding inside the well near the office. "After hearing that he had been seen nearby, I searched the office premises in the morning but found nothing. Later, I returned and opened the door to the well. As I looked inside, I saw him standing on the inner ledge, clutching a rope. I think he had submerged himself in water on hearing me approach and came up just after," Unnikrishnan said. He said that on seeing him, Govindachamy threatened him with death if he raised an alarm. Police and residents rushed to the spot, and successfully caught him from the well.

IIT study challenges urban pollution assumptions
IIT study challenges urban pollution assumptions

Time of India

time7 days ago

  • Science
  • Time of India

IIT study challenges urban pollution assumptions

1 2 Bhubaneswar: Normally, cities are regarded as pollution hotspots, with elevated pollution levels compared to surrounding non-urban regions — a pattern commonly known as the 'urban pollution dome' or 'urban pollution island' effect. However, a recent study by IIT Bhubaneswar found that this pattern does not hold true in many northern Indian cities. "Instead of a concentrated urban pollution dome, these cities display a 'clean island' effect, or what the researchers describe as a 'punctured pollution dome', where the city centres are, unexpectedly, relatively cleaner than the heavily polluted surrounding areas," stated the study, published in the scientific journal Nature. Researchers V Vinoj, asssociate professor at the school of earth, ocean and climate sciences, IIT Bhubaneswar, and research scholar Soumya Satyakanta Sethi attributed this unexpected pattern to an 'invisible barrier' formed by city's tall buildings and uneven structures, which slows down wind. "This limits pollutant dispersion, causing pollution to accumulate within the city and form a typical urban pollution dome. However, this same barrier can also prevent polluted air from outside the city from entering. As a result, in some cases, pollution builds up in areas surrounding the city, making the city centre appear relatively cleaner," said Vinoj. Based on two decades of high-resolution aerosol data across 141 Indian cities, the study found that southern cities — less affected by pollution transported from afar — exhibit classic domes with more pollution inside. In contrast, cities in northern and northwestern India, particularly those in the Indo-Gangetic plain, experience heavy regional and long-range pollution, such as dust. There, the city's barrier blocks incoming pollutants, causing them to accumulate in surrounding non-urban areas and forming what the researchers describe as "clean air domes. " The study stated that around 57% of cities exhibited urban aerosol pollution islands, while the remaining 43% showed urban aerosol clean islands. "Delhi and Mumbai are pollution islands normally, but they become clean islands whenever high dust is transported to the surrounding areas of these cities due to various reasons," said Vinoj. Bhubaneswar, on the other hand, remains a pollution island even when high dust is transported to surrounding areas, he added. These findings challenge long-standing assumptions about urban air pollution — particularly the notion that transported aerosols simply add up over cities and uniformly degrade air quality. The study also highlights that monitoring air pollution solely at city boundaries may provide an incomplete picture, as the actual dynamics involve a complex interplay of local emissions, regional transport, microclimatic effects, and atmospheric processes. "Uncovering these hidden atmospheric dynamics is only the beginning. Achieving truly sustainable and climate-resilient cities requires a deeper, integrated understanding of how urban environments interact with atmospheric processes," the researchers concluded.

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