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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

ADV.KUNHIKRISHNAN PULLERI-THE NEW STANDING COUNSEL FOR OUR MANAGEMENT

WE CAME TO UNDERSTAND THAT ADVOCATE.P.V.KUNHIKRISHNAN,ONE OF
THE LEADING ADVOCATES IN THE HON.HIGH COURT OF KERALA HAS  BEEN
APPOINTED AS THE 'STANDING COUNSEL' OF OUR SCHOOL MANAGEMENT. HE  DEALS WITH NUMBER OF CASES IN CONNECTION WITH  THE
SERVICE MATTERS OF TEACHERS AND OTHER EMPLOYEES  (KER  MATTERS}.  WE CONGRATULATE THE EDUCATION ADVISORY BOARD OF THE
NORTH KERALA DIOCESE FOR APPOINTING ONE OF THE EFFICIENT
AND FAMOUS ADVOCATES TO DEAL WITH ALL THE COMPLICATED CASES
EXIST IN OUR MANAGEMENT AND WISHING HIM ALL THE SUCCESS.


MAY THE GOD BLESS HIM AND REQUESTING ALL OF YOU TO PRAY FOR 
HIM.


ABOUT HIM:-


    1. Standing Counsel for the Kerala State Electricity Board. (3years)
    2. Standing Counsel for Kozhikode Corporation. (3years)
    3. Standing counsel for Kerala State Cashew Development Corporation Limited. (1year)
    4. Standing counsel for District Co-operative Bank, Kozhikode. (Now continuing)
    5. Now appearing for several  Panchayaths in the Kozhikode District. (Kakkodi Panchayat, Perumanna Panchayat, Koduvalli Panchayat, Chathamangalam, Chelannoor Panchayat, Kuruvattoor Panchayat, Kakkur Panchayat, Thalakulathoor Panchayat,  Kunnamangalam Panchayat, Nannambra Panchayat, Perambra Panchayat, Thiruvambadi Panchayat etc.)
    6. Conducting Civil,Service, Criminal and constitutional matters in the High Court of Kerala from 1993 onwards.
    7. Practiced as Junior of Ad.Kunhirama Poduval and Ad.K.P.Damodaran Nambiar at Kozhikode District court centre from 1990 to 1993.








P.V. Kunhikrishnan
Advocate,High Court Of Kerala.
47/167 D ‘PULLERI’ Anglo Indian School Road,
Vaduthala, Kochi-682023. 
Contact Number Land Phone:  0484-2402469, 3096070, 3096030 Mob. Phone:  98470314

Kunhikrishnan Pulleri Vadyan   (FACE BOOK)
 
published for information and  best interest of the people of CSI NORTH KERALA DIOCESE.
csipass workers,puthiyara,calicut 

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Kudankulam Project-Church of England News Paper



Church leaders in India staged a one-day hunger strike to protest against the construction of the Koodankulam nuclear power station, saying the Russian-built plant is a danger to the community.
On 27 October 2011 the Bishop in Thoothukudi-Nazareth, the Rt Rev JAD Jebachandran and approximately 100 clergy from his diocese joined activists outside the construction site who were in the 10th day of a hunger strike. The Indian press reported the bishop told the gathering the church was there to extend its moral support to the protesters.
Construction has slowed to halt at the power station in Koodankulam in the Tirunelveli district of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd and the Russian state corporation Atomstroyexport are building two 1 Gigawatt reactors at a projected cost of £2.2 billion. When completed the water-cooled reactors will be the largest atomic power plant in India.
However, local residents have opposed the programme blocking highways to construction traffic and staging hunger strikes to halt the building. In September the Church of South India’s (CSI) General Synod issued a statement expressing “her deep solidarity” with the protestors.
The CSI charged that the “proper rules were not followed in the construction of the Reactor, in a place where the population density is too high.
“We fear that the reactor effluents would kill the fish and further, that the other life inside the sea would be affected by the water discharged from the nuclear reactor into the Bay of Bengal,” the CSI said.
The site chosen for the reactor was in a “tsunami-prone and quake-prone area,” they said, adding that the “huge radioactive accumulations at the plant site could become the principal causes of environmental and health hazards.”
The CSI joined with the local “struggling communities” around the plant and called upon the government to “hold a democratic and transparent national consultation on nuclear power projects in the country with proper assessment of economic, environmental and human cost of such expansion.
“It is true that energy can neither be created nor destroyed,” the CSI said, “but let us not forget that energy can destroy us.”   
courtesy-conger.wordpress.com





Bishop arrested in anti-nuclear protests in India: The Church of England Newspaper, November 25, 2011 p 6. November 29, 2011

Posted by geoconger in Church of England NewspaperEnvironmentChurch of South India
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Church leaders are among those arrested by police in the Southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu in a crackdown against activists protesting the construction of the Koodankulam nuclear power plant.
The Roman Catholic Bishop of Tuticorn along with clergy from the Church of South India’s (CSI) diocese of Thoothukudi-Nazareth were booked by police on charges of unlawful assembly, creating a public nuisance, “spreading rumours” and blocking civil servants from the lawful performance of their duties.  They have been released on bail pending hearing and a formal investigation.
Construction has slowed to halt at the power station in Koodankulam in the Tirunelveli district of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd and the Russian state corporation Atomstroyexport are building two 1 Gigawatt reactors at a projected cost of £2.2 billion. When completed the water cooled reactors will be the largest atomic power plant in India.
However, local residents have opposed the programme and for three months have blocked access to the site to construction traffic and have stated hunger strikes to halt the building.
In September the CSI General Synod issued a statement expressing “her deep solidarity” with the protestors and warned it was a mistake to build a nuclear reactor in a “tsunami-prone and quake-prone area,”
The risk of ecological damage was great, the CSI stated. “We fear that the reactor effluents would kill the fish and further, that the other life inside the sea would be affected by the water discharged from the nuclear reactor into the Bay of Bengal.”
On 27 Oct 2011, the CSI Bishop in Thoothukudi-Nazareth joined protestors outside the plant and pledged his solidarity in stopping construction.  However, local government leaders have charged the bishops with crossing the line between religion and politics.
The indictment charges the protestors with having used places of worship to organize political protests – a practice forbidden by Indian law.  Police have also begun an investigation of the churches’ bank accounts to see if they were funding the protests.
A police spokesman told the Indian press the churches’ involvement in the protests was bad for local businesses.  “Some are asking the people to revolt against the government and against the plant. This is unfair. The shops are closed, the life is not normal…this cannot be allowed to go on indefinitely,” the spokesman told the New Indian Express.