Sunday, February 28, 2021

COVID-19 vaccine price cap too low, companies 'feel betrayed', says Biocon chairperson Kiran Mazumdar Shaw

New Delhi: Biocon chairperson Kiran Mazumdar Shaw on Sunday hit out at the government capping COVID-19 vaccine price at Rs 250 at private hospitals, saying vaccine companies "feel betrayed" as it is too low to sustain.

Reacting to a report that the health ministry has fixed Rs 250 per shot at private hospitals and health centres, she tweeted"


The government's capping of the vaccine price at private hospitals comes at a time when India is preparing to vaccinate people aged above 60 years and those over 45 with co-morbidities from 1 March.

The COVID-19 vaccine will be given free of cost at government hospitals, while people will need to pay for it at private facilities.

It is understood that the Rs 250 ceiling per dose includes Rs 150 per dose of vaccine plus Rs 100 service charge.



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Registration for COVID-19 vaccine on CoWin 2.0 portal to begin at 9 am tomorrow; all you need to know

New Delhi: The next phase of the COVID-19 vaccination drive for people above 60 years and those aged 45 and above with comorbidities will begin from 1 March and registration on the Co-WIN 2.0 portal will open at 9 am on Monday.

Citizens will be able to register and book an appointment for vaccination, anytime and anywhere, using the Co-WIN 2.0 portal or through other IT applications such as Arogya Setu.

Registration will open at 9 am on 1 March at www.cowin.gov.in, the ministry said.

All citizens that are aged, or will attain the age of 60 or more as of 1 January, 2022 are eligible to register, in addition to all such citizens that are aged, or will attain the age of 45 to 59 years as of 1 January, 2022, and have any of the specified 20 comorbidities.

This information was shared during the orientation workshop organised by the Union Health Ministry and the National Health Authority (NHA) for the 10,000 private hospitals under Ayushman Bharat PMJAY, more than 600 hospitals empanelled under CGHS and other private hospitals empanelled under State Government's Health Insurance Schemes, on Co-WIN2.0.

The modalities of the new features integrated into the Co-WIN 2.0 digital platform were explained to them.

The private empanelled COVID-19 Vaccination Centres (CVCs) were also trained on various aspects of the process of vaccination and management of adverse events following immunization (AEFI) through video conference with the support of the National Health Authority (NHA).

"There will be only one live appointment for a beneficiary at any point of time for each dose.

"Appointments for any date for a COVID Vaccination Center will be closed at 3 pm on that day for which the slots were opened," the ministry said.

For example, for 1 March the slots will be open from 9 am till 3 pm and the appointments can be booked anytime before that, subject to availability.

However, on 1 March, an appointment can also be booked for any future date for which vaccination slots are available. A slot for the second dose will also be booked at the same COVID Vaccination Centre on the 29th day of the date of appointment of the 1st dose.

If a beneficiary cancels a first dose appointment, then the appointment of both doses will be cancelled, the ministry said.

According to the ministry, there will be a facility of on-site registration so that eligible beneficiaries can walk into identified vaccination centres, get themselves registered and inoculated.

The eligible persons will be able to register at the Co-WIN 2.0 portal through their mobile number, through a step by step process.

With one mobile number, a person can register as many as four beneficiaries. However, all those registered on one mobile number will have nothing in common except the mobile number, the ministry said.

The photo ID card number for each such beneficiary must be different. Either of the following photo identity documents can be used by citizens for availing of online registration -- Aadhaar Card/Letter, Electoral Photo Identity Card (EPIC), passport, driving license, PAN Card, NPR Smart Card or Pension Document with the photograph.

A user guide for the citizen registration and appointment for vaccination has also been uploaded on the websites of the Union Ministry of Health and National Health Authority (NHA).

It was also explained that the central government shall procure all the vaccines and supply them free of cost to the states and UTs who in turn will disburse them further to the government and private COVID Vaccination Centres (CVCs), the ministry said.

It was re-iterated that all vaccines provided to beneficiaries at the government health facilities will be entirely free of cost, while private facilities cannot charge the beneficiary a sum above Rs 250 per person per dose (Rs 150 for vaccines and Rs 100 as operational charges).

Private hospitals will have to remit the cost of vaccine doses allotted to them in a designated account of the National Health Authority (NHA). The payment gateway for the same is being enabled by the NHA on their website, the ministry said.

The government of India has supplied two COVID-19 vaccines, Covishield and Covaxin, free of cost to the states and UTs to vaccinate healthcare workers (HCWs) and frontline workers (FLWs) and they will also be able to cover the next priority group i.e. 60 years plus age group and the age group of 45 to 59 years suffering from pre-specified co-morbidities.

The states have been requested to operationalise the linkages between the CVCs (both government and private empanelled facilities) with the nearest cold chain points for ensuring smooth vaccine delivery to (CVCs).

The ministry specified 20 co-morbidities within the 45-59 years age group including heart failure with hospital admission in past one year, moderate or severe valvular heart disease, coronary artery disease, CT/ MRI documented stroke, diabetes ( >10 years or with complications) and hypertension on treatment, end-stage kidney disease on haemodialysis, diagnosis of any solid cancer on or after 2000 or currently on any cancer therapy for which one will have to submit a medical certificate.

The ministry has shared the format of the simplified one-page certificate to be signed by any registered medical practitioner.

The certificate can either be uploaded on Co-WIN 2.0 by the beneficiary while self-registering or a hard copy can be carried by the beneficiary to the CVC, the ministry said.



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COVID-19: Maharashtra's Hingoli imposes curfew from 1 to 7 March after district reports spurt in daily cases

Aurangabad: In the wake of a rise in daily COVID-19 cases in Hingoli, the local administration has decided to impose curfew in the district from 1 to 7 March.

A total of 46 new COVID-19 cases were found on Saturday in Hingoli, located in the state's Marathwada region, raising its tally to 4,083, as per official figures.

Hingoli Collector Ruchesh Jayvanshi in an order issued on Saturday evening said the curfew will come into force from 7 am on Monday and continue till March 7 midnight.

Schools, colleges, religious places and function halls shall remain closed during the period, while banks will operate only for administrative work, said the order.

Bank officials are instructed to carry their identity cards while travelling to their workplace, it said.

Milk shops will be allowed to operate from 9 am to 5 pm. Medical stores are also permitted to remain open during the curfew period, said the order.

Government offices will continue to work, it said.

The administration has also allowed the continuation of highway maintenance operations and works related to the departments of health, electricity, telephone, water drainage and sanitation.

Petrol pumps are instructed to sell fuel only to vehicles of the government, and those engaged in essential and agriculture services, the order said.

Hotels and other food suppliers for students, who hail from other districts and are currently residing in Hingoli, are instructed to operate parcel service between 9 am and 7 pm during the curfew period, it said.

On Saturday, Maharashtra reported more than 8,000 new COVID-19 cases for the fourth straight day, raising the caseload in the state to 21,46,777.

The death toll in the state due to the pandemic has reached 52,092, as per official data.



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Pooja Chavan suicide case: Cabinet minister Sanjay Rathod tenders resignation to Uddhav Thackeray

Mumbai: Maharashtra minister Sanjay Rathod, facing flak from the opposition BJP after being linked to a woman's death, resigned from the state cabinet on Sunday.

Rathod made the announcement after submitting his resignation to Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, who is also the president of his Shiv Sena party.

"There has been a lot of dirty politics over the issue of the woman's death," Rathod told reporters, adding he has quit the ministry so that the truth can come out.

Rathod, who holds the forest portfolio, was facing allegations of complicity in the death of Puja Chavan (23), a resident of Beed district, who was found dead in Pune on 8 February, apparently after falling off from the building in which she lived.

Talking to reporters after meeting the chief minister at his official residence Varsha, Rathod said he had resigned to facilitate a free and fair probe.

"Attempts were made to tarnish my image and destroy the reputation I had built after 30 years of social work. I was saying that let the probe happen before taking any decision. But the opposition threatened to disrupt the budget session," Rathod said.

Leader of Opposition in the Assembly Devendra Fadnavis said the resignation of the minister wasn't enough and demanded that an FIR should be filed against him.

The BJP has accused Rathod of having links with the woman after his purported photographs, audio and video clips with her went viral on social media.



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Rare Diseases Day 2021: 'Orphans' of the health system, DMD patients are denied access to diagnosis, timely treatment

Any disease that affects a small percentage of the population is a rare disease. In many parts of the world, they also go by the term 'orphan disease’, for the lack of a market large enough to capture the support and resources needed to develop treatments for them. Most rare diseases are genetic, and present throughout a person's lifetime, even if symptoms do not immediately appear. Many rare diseases appear early on in life, and about 30 percent of children with rare diseases will die before reaching their fifth birthday.

The number of people in the world living with a rare disease is estimated to be between 300 and 350 million. This figure has often been used by the rare disease community to highlight that while individual diseases – though rare – add up to a huge population of people with rare diseases. With its sizeable population, India has an increased frequency of rare diseases when compared to the rest of the world. Due to the low prevalence of individual diseases, medical expertise is rare, knowledge is scarce, care offerings inadequate, and research limited. Despite the large overall estimate, patients with rare disease are the orphans of health systems, often denied diagnosis, treatment, and the benefits of research.

Relatively common symptoms can hide underlying rare diseases leading to misdiagnosis and delaying treatment. Typically a disabling or debilitating illness, the quality of life of a person living with a rare disease is affected by the absence of autonomy from any progressive, degenerative and occasionally life-threatening aspects of the disease.

It is estimated that every day in India, over 50 male babies are born with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). We do not have any empirical epidemiological data of the DMD prevalence in India  from 2020, but it is estimated that there are between 4 and 5 lakh children suffering from DMD at any given time – roughly a fifth (20 percent) of the global DMD population. The burden in India is made greater than in Western countries by inadequate diagnostic facilities, management and rehabilitation facilities that cater to rare diseases.

Rare diseases, in numbers. Image Credit: Novartis/Pinterest

Genetic disorders get relatively little attention because of the mistaken perception (of health planners, clinicians and the general public) that inherited diseases are very rare – affecting only a small proportion of people and, even if diagnosed, is untreatable. But for the families concerned, they represent a substantial, continuing burden, unlike infectious diseases, which generally manifest only for a limited period.

The plight of those suffering from DMD is on multiple levels in India. The access to diagnostics and procedures is not available across all levels of society and in non-metro areas which make up the maximum amount of the country, there is almost no genetic diagnosis available at all.

Even in metro cities blood tests done in different diagnostic centres even prove to be inconclusive. Post-diagnosis, clinicians who knew about the disease and gave guidance on steps to take are extremely hard to come by. The number of paediatricians who are unable to diagnose DMD till a late stage of disease is alarmingly high. This can be put down to lack of awareness.

India has the second largest population in the world; yet, no comprehensive database for neuromuscular disorders is available. There are still families out there with no idea about the disease, much less how to manage it. In the rare event of the family having access to diagnostics and are able to get an understanding doctor the costs of treatment are sky-high. With the expense in foreign countries reaching hundreds of thousands of dollars per year it is close to impossible for a family to support the treatment here in India.

The Government of India's identification of non-communicable diseases as a target for intervention is a welcome one, but extends to cancer, diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease and stroke, but not genetic disorders. If real progress is to be made, genetic disorders needs to be brought in to the fold.


In August 2000, my wife and were euphoric as our son Karanveer came into this world, bawling his lungs out. Everything was new again, and every day a new adventure. As Karan became older, we grew content and happy in our small world. He would babble, crawl, want to play, sleep and eat much like any other child his age. Like his peers, he would fall down and play. We lovingly thought he was a bit clumsy when he fell often. There were subtle changes as he grew, like trouble climbing stairs, getting up from the floor or running. He would walk on his toes or the balls of his feet with a slightly waddling gait. We presumed he had a small problem in his feet, and doctor visits with the promise of butter chicken on the way back, didn’t bring us the speedy conclusion we had hoped for.

Karanveer, 18. Image Credit: Ajay Sukumaran

We traversed the length and breadth of the country looking for a cure or at the very least find out the cause of the problem. Faith healing, Homeopathy, Ayurveda, Allopathy, Unani – we tried them all, to no avail. He was prescribed vitamins, exercise, changes in diet and a lot more. General practitioners, orthopedicians, paediatricians each giving their own opinions, asking for blood test after another, electromyography (EMG) and more, without a satisfactory answer. Tests in textbooks, treatments unheard of and renown – we tried them all, and with each new treatment that fairled, despaired of ever finding a cure.

We eventually met a renowned paediatric neurologist in Chennai. He put Karan at ease, was interactive, did a lot of poking and prodding and gradually grew contemplative towards the end. He recommended a blood test to aid in diagnosis and delivered a nasty shock. We were taken aback when we were told that Karan had Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), a rare disease where a protein called dystrophin – essential for proper muscle function – was lower than normal. In other words, he was wheelchair-bound for most of his life, after which he would become bedridden.

What would you do if your child was diagnosed with a condition that that most people haven’t heard of? One that progressively worsens and doesn’t yet, have a cure? For decades the health ministry has been focussed on more prominent diseases like heart diseases, diabetes, cancer, and tuberculosis. They seem to have left behind the 70 million who suffer from 7,000-odd rare diseases, that also need medical treatments and disease management.

Stumbling, falling and breaking in search of hope, we ultimately decided to do it ourselves. The Dystrophy Annihilation Research Trust (DART) was founded after scouring the country in search of help for Karan. We have recruited people qualified to run a research lab, places it could be set up, necessary equipment and chemicals, collaborations with researchers abroad, and more. Non-profits have limitations, with whopping costs for drug-development supported by donations. DART is the first lab in India focusing on muscular dystrophy (MD).

We are a group of skilled professionals working towards achieving a realistic treatment option to alleviate and reverse the dystrophy condition at the genetic level thereby enhancing the quality of life of existing patients. DART hopes to change the course of DMD and, ultimately, to find a cure. The hope and motivation fuelling the initiative is that someday, children with DMD will be free of wheelchairs and restrictions and can play, run and walk like children everywhere do. The long-term goal is to develop a cost-effective treatment, as quickly as possible, to relieve the suffering of DMD children and families alike.

DART also performs a common platform for counselling and support for patients with Muscular Dystrophy and their families, as well as to create awareness of the available treatments, and drug trials. Last but not least, DART also facilitate research into alleviating the scourge of muscular dystrophy. 

The author is President of the Dystrophy Annihilation Research Trust (DART).



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Watch: PSLV-C51 launches Brazil's Amazonia-1, 18 other satellites; Narendra Modi congratulates ISRO

In the Indian Space Research Organisation's (ISRO) first mission of the year, the country's polar rocket on Sunday successfully launched Brazilian satellite Amazonia-1 and 18 other satellites from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Andhra Pradesh's Sriharikota.

The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle PSLV-C51 lifted off at around 10.24 am from the first launch pad of the Satish Dhawan Space Centre and injected into orbit primary payload Amazonia-1 about 17 minutes later.

After a gap of over one-and-half hours, the co-passenger satellites, including one from Chennai- based Space Kidz India (SKI), which is engraved with a picture of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, were launched one after another in the space of ten minutes in a textbook launch.

SKI's Satish Dhawan Satellite (SD-SAT) also carried the Bhagavad Gita in a Secured Digital card format. According to SKI, the picture of Modi has been engraved on the top panel of the spacecraft to show solidarity and gratitude for his Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative and space sector privatisation.

A beaming ISRO Chairman K Sivan announced that the mission was successful and all 19 satellites were launched in precise orbits.

"Today is a very great day for the entire ISRO team and the PSLV-C51 is a special mission for India. Let me congratulate and compliment the team ISRO for achieving the precise injection of AMAZONIA-1 and 18 other satellites," PTI quotes him as saying.

PSLV-C51 is the first dedicated commercial mission of New Space India Limited (NSIL), ISRO's commercial arm, and the launch was watched among others by Brazilian government officials at the mission control centre in Sriharikota, over 100 kms from Chennai.

The 18 co-passenger satellites placed in the orbit include four from ISRO's Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (three UNITY Sats from consortium of three Indian academic institutes and the SD-SAT from SKI) and 14 from NSIL.

The 637-kg Amazonia-1, which became the first Brazilian satellite to be launched from India, is an optical earth observation satellite of National Institute for Space Research (INPE) and is intended for providing remote sensing data to users for monitoring deforestation in the Amazon region and analysis of diversified agriculture across the Brazilian territory.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated the space agency on the success of the first dedicated commercial launch of PSLV-C51/Amazonia-1 Mission, saying it ushers in a new era of space reforms in the country. He added that 18 co-passengers included four small satellites that showcase dynamism and innovation of our youth.

The prime minister also congratulated Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro on the successful launch of Brazil's Amazonia-1 satellite by PSLV-C51, and said this is a historic moment in space cooperation between the two countries.

According to a press release, Marcos Cesar Pontes, Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Brazil also congratulated the ISRO team, saying “Amazonia-1 is an important mission for Brazil which also marks beginning of a new era for satellite development in the country."

Union ministers Hardeep Singh Puri, Prakash Javadekar, among others, congratulated the space agency.

 

Earlier, at the end of the 25.5 hour countdown, the four-stage 44.4 metre tall PSLV, a workhorse launch vehicle of ISRO in its 53rd mission, soared into clear sky and every stage performed as programmed, ISRO said.

According to an ISRO press release, this was the 78th launch vehicle mission from SDSC SHAR in Sriharikota. With today's launch, a total of 342 customer satellites from 34 countries have been placed in orbit by PSLV.

With inputs from PTI



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Odisha govt issues fresh guidelines, allows open-air theatres with cap of 2,000 people

Bhubaneswar: The Odisha government has allowed holding of operas and shows in open air theatres subject to a ceiling of 2,000 persons, in its March guideline issued to contain the spread of COVID-19 in the state.

The government has also allowed social congregations on the occasion of marriage and funeral with a maximum of 500 persons with adherence to the COVID-19 safety measures. The local authorities will verify whether the COVID safety measures are being followed.

Seeking permission of the local authorities will be mandatory for organizers to hold marriage, large gatherings, social, and religious functions and jatra shows, the order issued by the Special Relief Commissioner said.

Also, District Collectors and Municipal Commissionerswere directed to demarcate the containment zones in accordance with the guidelines of MoHFW, Government of India and H&FW Department of the Government of Odisha.

The SRC office issued the detailed guidelines for the month of March where it is mentioned that the Containment Zones will be notified by the respective District Collectors/ Municipal Commissioners and information will be shared with MOHFW.

The notification shall be uploaded by the District Collector and by the state on their websites. Awareness shall be created in communities on COVID-19 appropriate behaviour. Wearing of masks, maintaining social distancing and provision of thermal scanning and use of hand wash or sanitizer will be mandatory, the order said.

While all the medical colleges have been allowed to reopen with effect from 2 December, 2020, the authorities are directed to follow all the SOPs and guidelines with respect to social distancing and prevention of spread of epidemic issued by the Central and state government, scrupulously.

The Department of School and Mass Education/ ST and SC Development, Minorities and Backward Classes Welfare Department Social Security and Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities are authorised to take appropriate decision with regard to the date of re-opening of schools and hostels under its control in respect of class 9 to 12 in a graded manner observing necessary guidelines/ SOP developed for the purpose.

The department shall further develop detailed SOP for the primary schools and decide on opening of such schools with approval of the government.

Considering the present situation, the School and Mass Education Department may allow conduct of intra-school class promotion examination for class 9 and 11, giving the option of online examination to the students with consent of their parents/guardians, it said.

The Department of Higher Education is authorized to take appropriate decision with regard to the date of re- opening of Colleges/ Higher Education Institutions and Hostels under its control superintendence/ supervision by following the guidelines/ SOP issued by the Department UGC/ AICTE/Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India.

The Department of Skill Development and Technical Education is authorized to take appropriate decision with regard to the date of re-opening of Engineering Colleges and other Technical Education/ Skill Development Institutions and Hostels under its control superintendence/ supervision in a graded manner in compliance with the guidelines/ SOP issued by the Department UGC/AICTE/ Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, it said.

Anganwadi Centres have been allowed to function from 1 February, 2021.

Salons, spas, beauty parlours and barber shops shall ensure all safety precautions, disinfection and sanitization before and after service of each customer. The onus of compliance to the guideline lies with the owner, who shall be liable for any violation, which may lead to penal action including closure/ sealing of the premises, it said.

There shall be no restriction on inter-state and intra-state movement of persons, private vehicles and goods including those for cross land-border trade under treaties with neighbouring countries. No separate permission/ approval/ e-permit will be required for such movements



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Mann ki Baat: Narendra Modi calls for 100-day campaign to clean water bodies, harvest rain water

New Delhi: Underlining the importance of collective responsibility towards water conservation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday called for a 100-day campaign to clean up all water bodies and prepare them for rain water harvesting before the monsoon season starts.

In his monthly 'Mann Ki Baat' broadcast, Modi said water has been crucial for the development of humankind for centuries.

"We have to understand our collective responsibility towards water conservation," he said.

The prime minister also said that when people feel proud of indigenous products then Aatmanirbhar Bharat does not just remain an economic programme but becomes a national spirit.

Noting that monsoon will begin in many parts of the country by around May-June, the prime minister asked whether there can be a 100-day public campaign to clean up all nearby water bodies and prepare those for rain water conservation.

In this regard, the Union Jal Shakti Ministry is also launching "Catch the rain" campaign and its main theme is "catch the rain, where it falls, when it falls", he said.

"This is the best time to think about water conservation in the summer months ahead," Modi said.

He also said there is a need to make science more popular across the country and asserted that science cannot be limited to physics-chemistry and labs. Modi called for expanding science with a mantra of ''lab to land''.

During the broadcast, the prime minister also rued not being able to make enough efforts to learn the world's oldest language, Tamil.

"In run up to Mann Ki Baat, I was asked if there was something I missed out on during these long years as chief minister and prime minister. I feel — it is a regret of sorts that I could not make enough efforts to learn the world's oldest language Tamil. Tamil literature is beautiful," Modi said.



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Krishna Dhaba owner's son dies days after being shot by terrorists in Srinagar

Srinagar: The son of the owner of popular eatery Krishna Dhaba, who was shot at by terrorists on 17 February, died at a hospital in Srinagar on Sunday, officials said.

Akash Mehra was undergoing treatment at the SMHS Hospital for the past 10 days. Mehra succumbed to his injuries in the early hours of Sunday, the officials said.

He was shot at by terrorists from a close range and critically wounded, the police had said.

The Muslim Janbaz Force, a terror outfit that was active in the early 1990s, had claimed responsibility for the attack.

Krishna Dhaba, which is famous for serving vegetarian food, is located in Durganag, a high-security area of the city. Several high-profile installations like the office of UN Military Observers Group for India and Pakistan and the residence of the Jammu and Kashmir chief justice are located within 200 metres of the food joint.

The police have arrested three persons allegedly owing allegiance to a shadow terror outfit of the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba for their involvement in the attack.



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India records 16,752 COVID-19 cases in past 24 hours; biggest single-day jump in 30 days

New Delhi: India's COVID-19 tally climbed to 1,10,96,731 on Sunday with 16,752 new infections, the highest in the last 30 days, according to Union health ministry data.

The death toll mounted to 1,57,051 with 113 fresh fatalities, the data updated at 8 am showed.

The country had recorded 18,855 new infections on 29 January.

The active caseload further increased to 1,64,511. It constitutes 1.48 percent of the total infections, the data stated.

The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 1,07,75,169, which translates to a national COVID-19 recovery rate of 97.10 percent. The case fatality rate stands at 1.42 percent.

India's COVID-19 tally had crossed the 20-lakh mark on August 7, 30 lakh on August 23, 40 lakh on September 5 and 50 lakh on September 16. It went past 60 lakh on September, 70 lakh on October 11, crossed 80 lakh on October 29, 90 lakh on November 20 and surpassed the one-crore mark on December 19.

According to the Indian Council of Medical Research, 21,62,31,106 samples had been tested until 27 February with 7,95,723 being tested on Saturday.



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Odisha makes week-long home isolation mandatory for people coming from five 'high-risk' states

Bhubaneswar: The Odisha government on Saturday said that a week-long home isolation will be mandatory for people coming to the state by plane or train from five high-risk states, modifying its previous order of imposing the precautionary measures to those arriving from 12 states.

The five high-risk states are Maharashtra, Kerala, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, Additional Chief Secretary, Health and Family Welfare, PK Mohapatra said. In a partial modification to the instructions issued on Friday to district authorities and others, Mohapatra clarified that at present the measure may be limited to passengers coming from five high-risk states instead of 12 states named earlier.

In its order on Friday, the state government had made seven-day home isolation mandatory also for the people coming from Tamil Nadu, Telangana, West Bengal, Delhi, Chandigarh, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh to Odisha.

Mohapatra said that the government may later include other states in the category of high-risk states if the situation warrants it.

He said that the seven-day mandatory home isolation for people coming from the five high-risk states can be dispensed with for asymptomatic passengers who have an RT-PCR negative report, if the test was done not more than 72 hours before boarding, or a COVID vaccination final certificate.

Meanwhile, Odisha reported 86 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday from 21 districts.

Sundergarh district recorded the highest of 10 new cases followed by Khurda and Sambalpur (9 each).

The state during the day also registered recovery of 56 patients taking the total number of cured people to 3,34,519.

The state's coronavirus death toll remained at 1,915 as no fresh fatality has been reported since Thursday, he said, adding that 53 more COVID-19 positive patients have also died in the state due to comorbidities.

The state currently has 673 active cases.

Odisha has tested over 83 lakh sample tests for COVID-19 cases so far, including 22,763 on Friday.

Meanwhile, at least 20 students of Veer Surendra Sai University of Technology (VSSUT), a state-run institute at Burla in Sambalpur district, were detected with coronavirus in the last two days, an official said on Saturday.

"While some students went home after they tested positive for COVID-19, 15 students who are asymptomatic are under isolation and they have been accommodated in a hostel that was lying vacant," the official said.

One student was admitted to a hospital.

Offline practical and theory classes of the final year students of the VSSUT resumed on 20 January.

The official said that the students of the varsity might have contracted the virus from people they came in contact with when they went outside the campus.

Currently, around 1,500 students are staying in four hostels.

In-charge Vice-Chancellor of the VSSUT, BB Pati said, Classes will be conducted through online mode onward. However, the pending examination of the final year students will be held through offline mode strictly adhering to all the Covid-19 guidelines.



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Rakesh Tikait to tour five states in March to drum up support for farmers' protest

Ghaziabad: Farmer leader Rakesh Tikait will be touring five states in March to drum up support for the ongoing farmers' protest against Centre's new agriculture laws, a Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) office-bearer said on Saturday.

Tikait, the national spokesperson of the BKU and a prominent face of the farmers' protest, will begin the tour from 1 March, the office-bearer said.

"Farmers' meetings will be held in Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and Telangana, while two meetings will also be held in Uttar Pradesh in March," BKU media in-charge Dharmendra Malik said.

Two meetings will be held in Rajasthan and three in Madhya Pradesh. The last three meetings will be held on 20, 21 and 22 March in Karnataka, Malik said.

"One event is scheduled on 6 March in Telangana, but we have not got permission for it yet due to some election in the state. If permission is granted, the meeting in Telangana will be held as per schedule," he told PTI.

Thousands of farmers are camping at Delhi's border points at Tikri, Singhu and Ghazipur since November with a demand that the Centre should repeal the contentious farm laws enacted in September last year and frame a new one guaranteeing the minimum support price (MSP) on crops.

Tikait is leading the protest at Ghazipur.

The government, which has held 11 rounds of formal talks with the protesting farm unions, maintains that the laws are pro-farmer.



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SC not to use WhatsApp groups to share video conference links for hearings, cites new IT rules

New Delhi: The Supreme Court will no longer use WhatsApp groups to share video conference links for court hearings, the apex court registry said on Saturday.

In a circular, the registry said that instead of WhatsApp, the links for virtual court hearings in the apex court will be shared on registered email ids and registered mobile numbers of the concerned advocates-on-record and party-in-person.

The step was taken in the wake of the newly notified Information Technology (Guidelines for intermediaries and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 (IT Rules, 2021).

It is notified for the information of the Advocates-on-Record /Party-in-Persons that the creation of groups in WhatsApp for sharing of VC links for the hearing of their matters is restricted/barred due to new guidelines or regulations issued by the Government of India pertaining to social media Apps and OTT platforms, it said.

It said the VC links shall be shared "wef 1 March, 2021, through registered email ids as well as by SMS on registered mobile numbers of the Ld Advocates-on-Record / Party-in-Persons".

The government on Thursday announced sweeping regulations for social media firms like Facebook and Twitter as well as OTT players.

The guidelines also make it mandatory for platforms such as Twitter and WhatsApp to identify the originator of a message that authorities consider to be anti-national and against the security and sovereignty of the country.



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Bodoland People’s Front ends friendship with BJP ahead of Assam Assembly polls; joins hands with Congress

Bodoland People’s Front, a key National Democratic Alliance (NDA) partner in Assam, severed ties with the Bharatiya Janata Party on Saturday and announced that it will instead join hands with the Congress-lead Grand Alliance or Mahajath.

The Kokrajhar-based BPF has 12 seats in the current Assembly and three ministers in the Sarbananda Sonowal-led government.

BPF president Hagrama Mohilary shared the party's decision on Twitter:

Congress leader Gaurav Gogoi welcomed the move stating that he was grateful for BPF's renewed trust in Congress.

Congress Campaign Committee Chairman Pradyut Bordoloi also welcomed BPF into the Congress fold.

"The Asom Basao Ahok Yatra has had such massive impact across the state that our old friends, the Bodoland People's Front, could see which way the wind is blowing. Congress is coming and we are proud to partner with the BPF," Bordoloi said.

The Congress, which was in power for 15 years in Assam since 2001, has formed a "Grand Alliance" with AIUDF, CPI, CPM, CPI(ML) and Anchalik Gana Morcha (AGM) to contest the upcoming assembly elections.

The breakup between the allies was in offing for some time as BJP leader Himanta Biswa Sarma had announced two weeks ago that the saffron party will not be renewing its alliance with the BPF.

"We have been telling it many times that our alliance with the BPF was for five years only and both sides were committed to it. They are still in our government and it is healthy politics," the BJP leader said.

The relations turned sour during the recent Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) elections, with the saffron party dumping the BPF and forming the council government in alliance with the United People's Party Liberal (UPPL) and Gana Suraksha Party (GSP) to rule the BTC, a self-governing body in the Bodo-dominated areas of the state.

BPF had emerged as the single-largest party in the BTC polls, winning 17 seats in the 40-member body in December last year.

At the time BPF president Mohilary had said that his party had repeatedly appealed to the BJP to follow the "coalition" norms and help it to form a "government" in the BTC, but the BJP ignored the pleas.

The saffron party is now in talks with UPPL and GSP for a seat-sharing arrangement for the Assembly polls. Elections in the northeastern state will be conducted in three phases on 27 March, 1 April and 6 April.

Assam is likely to see a three-pronged contest with the Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP) — formed by former members of the All Assam Students' Union (AASU) and other civil society groups — joining hands with the Raijor Dol formed by the supporters of noted anti-CAA activist Akhil Gogoi who is in jail for over a year on sedition charges.

With inputs from PTI



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Saturday, February 27, 2021

Centre may cap COVID-19 vaccine price at Rs 250 per dose in private clinics, says report

Private hospitals can charge up to Rs 250 per dose of COVID-19 vaccine, official sources said on Saturday as India prepares to vaccinate people aged above 60 years and those over 45 with comorbidities from 1 March.

The COVID-19 vaccine will be given free of cost at government hospitals, while people will need to pay for it at private facilities.

A source in the Union Health ministry told PTI that the government may put a Rs 250 cap on the price of vaccine for phase 2 beneficiaries, Rs 150 being the cost of vaccine and Rs 100 being allowed as service charge

"Rs 250 will be the ceiling -- Rs 150 cost of vaccine plus Rs 100 service charge. This arrangement will remain effective till further orders," a source said.
According to sources, states and union territories have been informed about it.

The Union Health Ministry on Friday had said beneficiaries would be able to self-register in advance by downloading the Co-WIN 2.0 portal and through other IT applications such as Aarogya Setu, which will show the government and private hospitals serving as COVID-19 vaccination centres (CVCs) with date and time of the available schedules.

The beneficiary would be able to choose the CVC of his/her choice and book an appointment for vaccination, the ministry said.

There will be a facility for on-site registration so that eligible beneficiaries can walk into identified vaccination centres, get themselves registered and inoculated.

"Eligible beneficiaries would be able to register themselves on the Co-WIN platform from March 1 itself," R S Sharma, Chairman of Empowered Group on COVID-19 Vaccine Administration had said.

The nationwide COVID-19 vaccination drive was launched on 16 January. This is now to be exponentially expanded to the age-groups --all citizens above 60 years and those within the age bracket of 45 to 59 years with specified co-morbidities -- from March 1.

During a meeting held on Friday, representatives of states and UTs were explained the basic features of version 2.0 of the digital platform Co-WIN, which is a population-scale software with the capacity of processing several thousands of entries.

It was pointed out that all CVCs must be health facilities which are government health facilities such as sub-health centres (SHCs), primary health centres (PHCs), community health centres (CHCs), Ayushman Bharat Health and Wellness Centres, Sub-Division Hospitals, District Hospitals and Medical College Hospitals or private hospitals empanelled under the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS), Ayushman Bharat- Pradhan Mantri Jan Aarogya Yojana (AB-PM JAY) and similar State Health Insurance Schemes.

States and UTs were asked to ensure that the private health facilities have adequate space for the vaccination process, as detailed in the comprehensive SOPs issued by the ministry, basic cold chain equipment, their own team of vaccinators and staff, and adequate facility for management of any adverse event following immunisation (AEFI) cases for using them as CVCs.

All beneficiaries regardless of the mode of access will have to carry any one of the following photo ID documents -- Aadhaar Card, Electoral Photo Identity Card (EPIC), Photo ID card specified at the time of registration in case of online registration (if not Aadhaar or EPIC), certificate of co-morbidity for citizens in age group of 45 years to 59 years (signed by a registered medical practitioner), and employment certificate/Official Identity Card for healthcare workers (HCWs) and frontline workers (FLWs).

States and UTs on Friday explained the simplified process of registration, which shall be through three routes -- advance self-registration, on-site registration and facilitated cohort registration.

Under the first route, beneficiaries will be able to self-register in advance by downloading the Co-WIN 2.0 portal and through other IT applications such as Aarogya Setu.

"This will show the government and private hospitals serving as CVCs with the date and time of the available schedules. The beneficiary would be able to choose the CVC of his/her choice and book an appointment for vaccination.

"The facility of on-site registration allows those who cannot self-register in advance to walk into the identified CVCs and get themselves registered on-site and then vaccinated," the ministry said.

Under the facilitated cohort registration mechanism, the state and UT government will take the proactive lead, the ministry said in the statement.

Specific date(s) for COVID-19 vaccination will be decided where target groups of potential beneficiates will be vaccinated. State and health authorities will ensure that that the target groups are actively mobilised and brought to the vaccination centres. ASHAs, ANMs, Panchayati Raj representatives and Women's Self Help Groups (SHGs) will be utilised for mobilising the target groups.

Vaccination will be free of charge at government vaccination centres. The beneficiary will have to show a photo ID document for proof of age (preferably an Aadhaar card or EPIC card) and a certificate of co-morbidity (if required). Those taking the COVID vaccine at any designated/empanelled private health facility will have to pay a pre-fixed charge.



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Centre discusses fresh spurt in COVID-19 cases with states, advises strict surveillance and testing

The Centre on Saturday advised states and UTsreporting an increase in coronavirus cases to enforce COVID-appropriate behaviour by dealing firmly with violations and ensure effective surveillance in case of potential super spreading events so as not to squander last year's gains.

Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba chaired a high-level review meeting with chief secretaries of states and UTs of Maharashtra, Punjab, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Telangana and Jammu and Kashmir.

These states and UTs have been reporting a high COVID-19 active caseload or an increasing trend in new cases in the last week.

"They were advised not to lower their guard, enforce COVID appropriate behaviour and deal firmly with violations. It was strongly underlined that they need to follow effective surveillance strategies in respect of potential super spreading events," the Union Health Ministry said in a statement.

The need for effective testing, comprehensive tracking, prompt isolation of positive cases and quick quarantine of close contacts were also strongly emphasised.

During the review meeting, states were advised to undertake vaccination on priority in districts reporting higher cases and monitor mutant strain and clustering of cases for early hotspot identification and control, the statement.

They have also been asked to improve the overall testing in districts reporting a reduction in testing, and increase RT- PCR tests in districts having high antigen testing.

The states and UT were asked to refocus on surveillance and stringent containment in selected districts reporting reduced tests/high positivity and increased cases.

They have also been asked to focus on clinical management in districts reporting higher deaths and promote COVID-appropriate behaviour to ensure effective citizen communication to not let complacency set in, especially in light of vaccination drive entering the next phase, and enforcing stringent social distancing measures.

Six states Maharashtra, Kerala, Punjab, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat- have shown a surge in new cases in a span of 24 hours.

Maharashtra continues to report the highest daily new cases at 8,333. It is followed by Kerala with 3,671 while Punjab reported 622 new cases in the last 24 hours. In the last two weeks, Maharashtra has shown the highest rise in active cases from 34,449 on February 14 to 68,810 currently, the ministry said.

A detailed presentation was made on the current status of COVID-19 in these states with a focus on districts reporting an increasing number of new cases or positivity.

This was followed by a comprehensive review with all the states and UTs.

The chief secretaries briefed about the current situation in the states and their preparedness to tackle the recent spike of COVID cases.

They informed about the enforcement of COVID appropriate behaviour by levying heavy fines and challans, reviewing the surveillance and containment activities closely with the district collectors, and other steps being taken in line with the guidelines provided by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare(MoHFW) and the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).

The Cabinet Secretary reiterated that states need to maintain a continued rigorous vigil in terms of containing the spread and not squander away the gains of the collective hard work of the last year.



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TN TRB Special Teacher Recruitment 2021 notification released; registration begins from 31 March

Tamil Nadu Teacher Recruitment Board (TN TRB) has announced 1,598 vacancies in addition to the backlog vacancies on its official website. The advertisement notification released on Friday, 26 February, at trb.tn.nic.in, is for the recruitment of TN TRB Special Teacher 2021.

As per the schedule released, the application process for TN TRB Special Teacher recruitment 2021 will commence from 31 March onwards. The last date to submit an application form is 25 April (5 pm). Candidates must note that the TN TRB Special Teacher 2021 application form can only be submitted in an online mode.

The written examination will be conducted on 27 August 2021. The duration of the TN TRB Special Teacher recruitment 2021 examination will be two hours 30 minutes. As per the exam pattern, the paper will have 95 questions carrying one mark each.

TN TRB will recruit for the posts of Craft Instructor(sewing), Art Master, Music Teacher, Physical Education Teacher via written exam.

TN TRB Special Teacher Recruitment 2021 application process is entirely online and no offline application form will be accepted by TRB in any case.

All the candidates applying for this vacancy must have passed Class 12 or it's equivalent with at least 50 per cent marks from the recognised board.

Selection Procedure

The selection for the post of TN TRB Special Teacher will be based on two stages- Computer-based examination and document verification.

According to The Times Of India, once the document verification round is over, the total marks scored by a candidate will be finalised by adding weightage marks to the written exam marks/normalized written exam marks if the examination is held in multiple sessions.

Based on this, a merit list of total marks will be prepared. The final selection will be done on the basis of the merit list by following the merit-cum-communal rotation.



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Women run fewer than 13% of India's MSMEs; inaccessibility of credit, govt schemes and now COVID are key hurdles

Editor's Note: In this two-part series, Indiaspend explores the factors that inhibit women's participation in businesses. The first part looks at the biggest hurdle: access to finance. The second part will focus on the other issues that hold back women entrepreneurs — the absence of support networks, skewed social norms and restricted mobility — and collate suggestions from experts on how best to tackle these problems.

By Shalini Singh

New Delhi: Software entrepreneur Niyati Chander, 30, ran into gender bias fairly early in her career. A Bengaluru-based management graduate, she had set up a software enterprise, an MSME, with eight employees in June 2020. "I wanted to be in control of where I'm going in life," she said.

From investors and government officials to real estate agents and even friends and former colleagues, Chander found that she was not being taken seriously.

"People assume you don't know what you want. When we were looking for office space, the emails from the landlord would go to my male co-founder though it was made clear that I am the main founder — it was assumed that the final call would be his," she said, "The networking platforms are dominated by men and there are none for start-ups run by women. Your skills, education, age are analysed more closely (than for men)."

Women business-owners could potentially create 150-170 million jobs in India by 2030, as per a 2019 report, 'Powering The Economy With Her: Women Entrepreneurship In India', published jointly by Google and Bain & Company, a Boston-based consulting firm.

Female entrepreneurship is particularly critical for India because it catalyses women's participation in the labour force, at a time when India's Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) is at a historic low, having fallen to 17.5 percent in 2017-18. Only 7 percent of working-age women in India have paid jobs currently, as per a recent report in The Economist.

Yet, only seven of 100 entrepreneurs in India are women and of them, nearly half (49.9% percent) get into business out of necessity rather than aspiration, says a November 2020 report of the Initiative for What Works to Advance Women and Girls in the Economy (IWWAGE), a gender research and advocacy organisation.

Globally, India ranks third among countries reporting gender gaps in business — only 33 percent of the early-stage entrepreneurs in India are women, as per 'Financial Inclusion for Woman-Owned Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in India', an August 2019 report of the International Finance Corporation (IFC). India also ranks 70th among 77 countries covered in the Female Entrepreneurship Index, as per the IWWAGE report.

"Globally, it (female entrepreneurship) is a tool of empowerment since it helps the entrepreneur take decisions, lead, manage and develop skills in production and even personal leadership," said Sona Mitra, principal economist at IWWAGE. Running a business also allows women greater independence, financial and otherwise, in their personal lives, said Mitali Nikore, founder, Nikore Associates, a policy and research group.

Why then are Indian women poorly represented in business? We interviewed women who run a range of enterprises, from consultancies to grocery shops and found that they are obstructed by gender bias every step of the way, by institutions and society at large.

Every woman entrepreneur we interviewed complained of loan applications being either rejected or delayed by institutions. This bias has already been established by studies — over 70 percent of the total finance requirement of women entrepreneurs in the country is unmet, as per the 2019 IFC report.

The few government schemes that aim to promote female entrepreneurship are either not visible enough or are tied up in red tape, we were told.

Women-run MSMEs hit worst by pandemic

Total early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) rate is the percentage of working-age adults in a population who are either nascent entrepreneurs or owner-managers of new businesses. In India, the female TEA rate in comparison to male TEA rate fell from 79.6 percent to 62.1 percent between 2018 and 2019, as per Women Entrepreneurs as Powerhouse of Recovery, a 2020 IWWAGE report. This was despite a government push for the MSME sector in 2018.

Up to 95 percent of all MSMEs in India are micro-businesses and for women, this percentage is even higher — 98 percent of women-led MSMEs are in the micro category, as per the 2019 IFC report. And these were the vulnerable businesses that folded up first in the pandemic-led crisis, as we explain.

There are approximately 63 million micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in India, and women run about 8 million (12.6 percent). MSMEs are critical to India's economy — they are the second biggest employers after agriculture and contribute to over 30 percent of the GDP.

The 2019 Google-Bain report estimated that women owned 13.5-15.7 million or 20 percent of all enterprises. An earlier estimate, the Sixth Economic Census (2013-14) calculated that women owned 13.76 percent of enterprises in India. Among MSMEs, these figures improve for women but only by a small percentage: Of the 63.3 million MSMEs in India, 60.8 million (96 percent) were proprietary concerns and of these men ran 79.6 percent of enterprises and women, 20.4 percent, according to the 2019-20 annual report of the MSME ministry.

To deal with the economic crisis caused by the pandemic, the government announced relief measures for MSMEs in 2020. But there were no specific measures to help women entrepreneurs though 73 percent of women-run businesses were hit badly, and nearly 20 percent were on the brink of closure, as per an October 2020 Bain-Google-AWE Foundation report.

Nano and small set-ups like food and cigarette stalls, with their low scale and low turnover, were the first to wind up. The crisis has also added to a drop in the already low FLFPR.

Both female entrepreneurs and employees have been impacted more than their male counterparts by layoffs and business losses because of gender bias, as per a recent analysis by the McKinsey Global Institute cited in the IWWAGE report.

In India, 90 percent female entrepreneurs reported a significant decrease in their sales revenues post-lockdown. With characteristic low levels of profits and higher rates of unpaid and domestic work, the recovery for women-led MSMEs is also likely to be slower, said the report.

No collateral, no loan

Almost every woman entrepreneur interviewed by IndiaSpend spoke of hardships in accessing institutional finance. The problems related mostly to social attitudes and bias, difficulty in securing collateral-based loans (most women do not own property), and poor awareness or knowledge of financial schemes including those that provide collateral-free financing.

Only 17 percent of women entrepreneurs interviewed in a survey for the IFC report were aware of the financial schemes rolled out by the government or financial institutions. Even among those who were aware, there was little clarity on the specific features of schemes, their relevance in addressing their challenges and points of access.

Kavneet Sahni, 40, organises cookery events and registered her culinary consultancy as a micro enterprise in 2013.

"My vision was that food shows would be the next big thing here, so I quit my job to pursue this dream from the basement of my home," she said. Based in Gurugram, she now manages a team of 10 and clocks a turnover of over Rs 1 crore. But it has been a difficult journey, she said.

"When I started in 2012, banks refused to give me a loan because I didn't have collateral. I had to use up my personal savings," she said.

Given India's gender-skewed inheritance laws, women have, historically, rarely owned property. Thus, they lack the collateral needed to seek start-up loans, as the IWWAGE report showed. An August 2020 judgement of the Supreme Court that granted equal property rights to women seeks to change this scenario.

When asked why they opted out of seeking formal credit for their businesses, about 36 percent of women entrepreneurs said they preferred to use personal resources, and 25 percent said they had "limited access to collateral", as per a survey conducted for the 2019 IFC report.

There are two significant factors in this, as per the study: First, most women-owned MSMEs — 95.6 percent — are unregistered, which means they cannot access institutional finance. And, even for those that were registered and could — and did — seek credit from financial institutions, the average loan amount sanctioned was only about 68 percent of the average amount required.

Data show no grounds for this bias, as per the IFC study. Both men and women earned similar average annual profits — men made Rs 2.82 lakh and women Rs 2.68 lakh.

But women entrepreneurs who applied for loans faced more than twice the number of rejections (19 percent) than men (8 percent). And 70 percent of the total finance requirement of women entrepreneurs in the country is unmet, as we said.

It was only in 2016, when Sahni secured the sponsorship of a top media house, that a private bank granted her a non-collateral loan. The pandemic hit her businesses badly — she had to close her office for five months and defer salaries. The expectation, she said, was that being a woman she would not be able to deal with the crisis and would shut down the business.

"But I wanted to be resilient and prove we can still handle/manage the company even if unable to grow it in a difficult time like the pandemic," said Sahni.

A three-month loan moratorium was announced in March for businesses in the wake of the lockdown and this was later extended to 31 August, 2020.

"In the first moratorium, we only got relief for two months and in the second, we didn't get any relief. We've been paying our EMIs on time, but the bank denied extensions without citing reasons. We wrote to the bank, even the RBI but there was no response. The government should have announced some relief or special measures for women MSMEs at a time like this," Sahni said.

The pandemic also hit the small business run by Sarita Devi, 40, a vegetable vendor in south Delhi's Okhla Industrial area. She knows nothing about government schemes such as Mudra that could have given her access to a small loan to sustain her micro business. S he had to take a loan of Rs 30,000 to pay the rent on her carts and manage home expenses during the lockdown.

"We borrowed from a middle-man who came to our neighbourhood and offered loans at a 5 percent monthly interest," she said.

Longer wait for credit

On average, women have to make four to five visits to the bank if they are seeking credit, men need to only visit twice, said the IFC report.

Ashwini Mhetre, 31, a Mumbai-based fashion designer, has been planning a venture employing rural craftspersons but will need to borrow the entire Rs 49 lakh it is likely to cost her.

"A government loan seemed the best option for me because it comes collateral-free," she said. She heard of the Chief Minister's Employment Generation Programme (CMEGP) started in August 2019 to help micro and small enterprises, both rural and urban, and offered loans of up to Rs 50 lakh. She applied for the loan and is still waiting for it.

"For six months we kept chasing (officials). Everything was in place, except that I did not own any property. Even some nationalised banks that claim to give collateral-free loans asked for security. A private bank said, 'We are not into government schemes'," she said.

There are three government loan schemes available for small businesses under the government-run Mudra or Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency Ltd — Shishu, Kishor and Tarun. These offer loans ranging from Rs 50,000 to Rs 10 lakh and of these, women tend to ask for the lowest bracket, Shishu.

"Women don't have the confidence to secure high-value loans. They find it intimidating. There is social conditioning that tends to undervalue what women do by women themselves. Women are risk-averse and hence settle for smaller loans which they think they can repay easily," explained Mitra of IWWAGE.

Banks, on the other hand, hesitate to give these loans because they earn low interests, said Mumbai-based business consultant Shubhadip Das. "Business loans come at 11-14 percent interest, while Mudra loans are less than 10 percent," he said.

Women ended up as Mudra's biggest recipients (70 percent) because the scheme does not require collateral, said an IWWAGE report. "These only allow women to develop nano enterprises at best, given that over 80 percent of Shishu loan takers are women," said Mitra.

Last year, a revised definition was announced for MSMEs: both manufacturing and service MSMEs would be seen as one instead of two types of enterprises. Investment in plant and machinery/equipment, as well as annual turnover, would be seen as a composite criteria when earlier the annual turnover was not taken into account. Also, for micro enterprises, the investment required would be no more than Rs 1 crore (up from Rs 10 lakh-Rs 25 lakh) and the annual turnover no more than Rs 5 crore. Similarly, for small enterprises, the caps were raised to Rs 10 crore (earlier, Rs 2 crore-Rs 5 crore) and Rs 50 crore turnover, and for medium, to Rs 50 crore investment (earlier, Rs 5 crore-Rs 10 crore) and Rs 250 crore for turnover.

Recent surge in Maharahstra offers clues of how COVID19 pandemic may move through rest of India

"This is likely to increase the number of firms that fall under the sector's purview and this means more firms will vie for limited resources," said Mitali Nikore. "And for Indian women-owned enterprises, for whom the credit gap was estimated to be $20.52 billion, the situation is likely to worsen due to women's historically low access to land and other collateral."

Government schemes 'not visible, too much red tape'

The Prime Minister Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP) is a flagship programme started in 2008-09 that extends financial assistance to micro enterprises. Women have an extra incentive under the scheme — they only need to deposit 5 percent of the initial capital compared to the 10 percent specified for general categories. The number of women benefiting from this scheme was the highest in 2018-19, at 25,399. But this dropped to 12,529 the next year (as per data available till December 31, 2019).

In 2018, the Indian government had promised to promote women power in the economy.

"There are specific instruments available (within the government) to help women entrepreneurs. Beyond that, an entrepreneur is an entrepreneur," said a former private secretary at the WCD ministry, indicating that the government can only offer limited assistance to businesses.

Archana Garodia-Gupta has been running a costume jewellery business for 30 years and finds that government schemes for businesswomen rarely work because of poor access and red tape.

"I've not seen a single penny for women entrepreneur schemes. The only time I got something was an allotment in a women's industrial park in Greater Noida, which I'd helped the Uttar Pradesh government to float back in 1999," said Garodia-Gupta, who is also the former national chair of the MSME committee of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and its women's wing.

"No bank loans, no subsidies, I started a venture with my own savings. I got a bank loan later as a regular business person, at the normal MSME rate."

There are schemes for women, she said — for example, when women entrepreneurs go abroad for business exhibitions, they are reimbursed upto 80-90 percent of their costs; men get less: 60-70 percent.

"But the process is so cumbersome. If you want to deliver a scheme, make it available to a woman entrepreneur (through) regular conduits, such as income tax, GST returns, or her regular bank, instead of making some barely visible scheme."

This article originally appeared on IndiaSpend, and has been republished with permission. Read the original article here.



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Bengal BJP chief Dilip Ghosh promises single-phase polls in state if voted to power

Slamming West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee for raising questions over eight-phase assembly elections, state BJP president Dilip Ghosh Saturday said it was required because of the "political violence unleashed by the ruling TMC", and asserted that his party will ensure a single-phase poll if voted to power.

He also vowed to make the state free from violence and terror if the BJP comes to power. "The eight-phase poll in the state is to ensure a free and fair election. Political violence unleashed by the TMC is rampant in the state," Ghosh said during a 'chai pe charcha' (discussion over tea) session.

The BJP MP said it will be a matter of pride if the polls are conducted in a single-phase. Banerjee on Friday questioned the decision of the Election Commission of India to conduct the assembly polls in Bengal in eight phases and suspected that the dates were announced as per the suggestions of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah for better management of the BJP's poll campaign. She said the poll panel should not look at the state "through the eyes of the saffron camp" -- a reference to the BJP.

Elections for the state will be held in eight phases, up from seven last time, beginning with polling for 30 seats on 27 March, Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora said on Friday while announcing the poll schedule.

The second phase of the assembly elections is scheduled on 1 April and will cover 30 constituencies, followed by the third phase on April 6 for 31 seats, fourth
phase on 10 April for 44 seats.

The fifth phase will be held on April 17 for 45 constituencies, the sixth phase for 43 seats on 22 April, the seventh phase on April 26 for 36 seats and the last and eighth phase on 29 April for 35 seats, Arora said.

Reacting to Ghosh's assertion, Trinamool Congress MP Saugata Roy wondered if a political party can make a decision on holding an election.

Alleging that the saffron party has its influence on the decision of independent bodies like the ECI, CPM leader Sujan Chakraborty asked, "Don't know how he made such comments. Can a political party decide on the phases of an election?"

Meanwhile, a section of BJP supporters alleged that the party's 'Parivartan Yatra' was stopped by police at the Baguihati area in Kolkata Saturday morning. The saffron party activists blocked VIP road, a major thoroughfare in the north-eastern part of the city, for a few hours, protesting against the police action.

A senior officer of the Baguihati police station claimed that there was no permission for the programme. The 'Parivartan Yatra' was launched as part of the
saffron party's outreach programme ahead of the assembly polls.



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India-Pakistan ceasefire pact won't impact counter-terrorism ops, says Indian Army

Udhampur: The Army's northern commander Lt Gen YK Joshi on Saturday said the agreement between India and Pakistan to strictly adhere to the ceasefire pact along the Line of Control (LoC) would have no bearing on the counter-terrorism operations in Jammu and Kashmir.

He said the northern command, which looks after the security of the twin union territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh, remained on the highest alert and made possible what was believed impossible by the bravery, grit and determination of its personnel in the face of challenging situations along the border.

"Recently, the Director-General of Military Operations (DGMOs) of India and Pakistan have announced an agreement to uphold ceasefire along the LoC from February 24 and 25 midnight. I want to assure you that this ceasefire will have no bearing on the counter-terrorist operations and we will maintain our alertness," Lt Gen Joshi said at the northern command investiture ceremony Udhampur.

During the ceremony, the Army commander presented two Bar to Sena medals (gallantry) and 50 Sena medals (gallantry) to the brave soldiers.

He also presented three Sena medals (distinguished) and six Vishisht Seva medals for selfless service to the nation.

Lt Gen Joshi also awarded unit appreciation to 26 units for their overall outstanding performance in the command theatre.

"The northern command has always stood like a shield against the attempts by our neighbouring countries to spread disturbance and it will continue to remain so in the future. Whenever anyone raises an evil eye on our country, the Indian Army has replied strongly," Lt Gen Joshi said.

Without naming China and Pakistan, he said the Indian Army has maintained its domination on its borders with the neighbouring countries and helped in maintaining peace in the hinterland.

Referring to the eastern Ladakh standoff with the Chinese army, he said Indian Army stood up to the challenge on the snow-capped mountains of the Line of Actual Control during the challenging situation in 2020 and maintained the highest alert.

"Our action is a glaring example of our training, bravery and pledge (to safeguard the borders) and it will be written in history with golden words. The northern command made possible what seemed impossible. The success of the operation (in Ladakh) is the glaring example of the bravery of the Indian Army, he said.

He said 2020 was historic in many ways for the Army which demonstrated its mettle in eastern Ladakh by its "grit, determination, self-confidence, bravery and steadfastness".

He said there has been a tremendous improvement in the basic deployment and preparedness and the efforts in this direction will continue. The measures we have put in to strengthen our defences, the same efforts were made to maintain peace, he said.

In Kashmir, he said, the overall security situation saw a great improvement in the previous year as there has been a considerable reduction in terrorist-initiated incidents, stone-pelting activities and protests as a result of tireless efforts of the security forces and the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

He said the Army also played a key role in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

"Under 'Seva Paramo Dharma', Army doctors, nursing staff, ambulance and medical corps staff without caring for their lives worked round-the-clock and are continuously doing so," he said.

He congratulated those who were decorated for their bravery and conveyed his heartfelt gratitude to the brave men who made the supreme sacrifice on the borders, including at Galwan Valley, and in the battle against internal security challenges.

Lt Gen Joshi urged all ranks, ex-servicemen, civilians and their families to rededicate themselves to the cause of the nation.



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Tamil Nadu polls: AIADMK begins seat sharing talks with BJP, set to meet PMK in evening

Chennai: The ruling AIADMK and BJP commenced the talks for sharing seats for the 6 April assembly election n the state. Both the parties are likely to arrive at a consensus soon.

A delegation from the BJP which included Union Ministers Kishan Reddy, Gen VK Singh, BJP national general secretary in-charge of Tamil Nadu CT Ravi, state party chief L Murugan, held discussions with Chief Minister and AIADMK co-coordinator K Palaniswami and AIADMK coordinator and deputy chief minister O
Panneerselvam, on Saturday.

BJP state organising general secretary Kesava Vinayagan was also present during the talks. The parleys, according to a BJP senior, were cordial and the deal is likely to be clinched soon.

"Our expectation is for 60 assembly constituencies, which we have identified as winnable seats. They (AIADMK) may have their plans. The numbers which will be agreeable to both the parties will be announced," BJP senior M Chakravarthy told PTI.

The AIADMK will hold separate talks with a delegation from the PMK this evening. Actor-politician Vijaykanth-led Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK) and GK Vasan's Tamil Manila Congress (TMC) are the other allies of the AIADMK.

Meanwhile, R Sarath Kumar, founder of All India Samathuva Makkal Katchi (AISMK) who had been in alliance with the AIADMK for a decade, called on Kamal Haasan, founder of Makkal Needhi Maiam party on Saturday to discuss the possibility of forging electoral ties for the upcoming election.

Speaking to reporters in Tamil Nadu, he said his party had a chunk of vote bank in Tamil Nadu.

"AISMK was in the AIADMK alliance for 10 years. We waited for a call from the AIADMK, but there was no word. We have decided to move on," Sarath Kumar said and added that he would strive for a change in Tamil Nadu.

He had called on Haasan as it was nice for like-minded people to meet, said Sarath Kumar who earlier this week, called on VK Sasikala, the ousted AIADMK general secretary at her residence hereafter she returned to Chennai from Karnataka.

Announcing alliance with Indhiya Jananayaka Katchi (IJK), a political party floated by Lok Sabha MP Paarivendhar, who heads the SRM group of institutions, Sarath Kumar said he has joined hands with IJK to contest the elections "with good people."



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Recent surge in Maharahstra offers clues of how COVID-19 pandemic may move through rest of India

By Rukmini S

Chennai: One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, new evidence is casting doubts over India's pathway through and out of the pandemic, with epidemics of different contours now evident deep below national and state averages. Nowhere does this multi-speed epidemic seem more evident than in Maharashtra.

From the beginning of the pandemic, Maharashtra has dominated the Indian curve on account of its sheer number of cases. Maharashtra's 'peak' and 'fall' in mid-September was closely mirrored by India's overall trajectory. What this could mean is that Maharashtra's new surge may dictate how things look in India again.

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Not just the plain numbers, the disease's progression could contain clues for how the pandemic may move through the rest of the country — the way the virus progresses in Maharashtra's rural districts, which were earlier relatively unaffected, and its big cities that were hit hard by the 'first wave'.

Pradeep Awate, Maharashtra's chief epidemiologist, attributes the current surge in the state to three factors.

"One, the cold conditions seen in north India in the early part of the year led to cold weather in parts of Maharashtra, including in the north-east Vidarbha region, and this could have aided the spread of the virus. Two, on 15 January there were local body elections across 14,000 villages in the state, and many people returned from cities to cast their votes in the villages, potentially taking the virus with them. Three, weddings and other social functions that had been put on hold were held again after we began unlocking, leading to the congregation of large numbers of people," Awate said.

From the numbers, it does not appear that this was an urban-to-rural wave, in that the surge of cases in Pune and Mumbai did not precede that in rural districts, points out Murad Banaji, lecturer of mathematics at Middlesex University in the UK, who has been tracking India's COVID-19 numbers closely.

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But what is undeniable is that a far larger pool of uninfected people still exists in rural areas compared to urban areas.

"From the sero-surveys, we know that there is still a high uninfected population in rural areas. It is only in the big cities with high sero-positivity like Mumbai and Pune where we are approaching herd immunity," Manoj Murhekar, director of the National Institute for Epidemiology, and lead author of the Indian Council of Medical Research's (ICMR) national sero-surveys for COVID-19, told IndiaSpend.

Indeed in districts like Akola and Amaravati, the new daily COVID-19 numbers are higher than they were when the state experienced its September 'peak', while in other districts like Buldhana and Wardha, the new numbers are approaching the respective districts' highest so far.

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The bigger mystery is what is happening in cities like Mumbai and Pune, where sero-prevalence in the population is estimated to have surpassed 50 percent. For one, there could be parts of these cities' populations that are only now getting exposed to the virus, as they were able to better protect themselves during the earlier surge.

"Our sero-surveys showed a small increase in sero-positivity in non-slum areas and a slight decline in sero-positivity (on account of antibody decay) in slums areas between the first and second rounds," Sandeep Juneja, professor at the Tata Institute for Fundamental Research (TIFR), and co-investigator of the Mumbai sero-surveys conducted jointly by TIFR and the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai, told IndiaSpend.

The numbers could have been biased downwards because the antibodies tested for have been found in some studies to sero-revert (meaning to disappear) quickly, Juneja added.

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"Although the numbers in Mumbai fell from the September peak, the COVID-19 epidemic never really died out," said Banaji.

"With that low but constant level of prevalence, if you have congregations and improved testing, you're going to once again see new clusters or waves," he said.

One such opportunity for a congregation that the TIFR team's modelling had predicted was the partial re-starting of local train travel, although the current surge is above what they had estimated, Juneja said.

Another reason for the higher intensity of the current surge may be that people have become much less compliant to social distancing rules over time as the cases in India have been coming down, Juneja added.

BMC workers taking

Then there is more testing in wealthier areas, said Banaji.

Juneja's analysis of their sero-survey data found that detection rates are much higher in non-slum than in slum areas — people in their non-slum sample were four to six times more likely to get tested as in their sample of slum people, even as far back as August 2020 when the epidemic was raging.

This impact of better detection was clearly visible in the recent Bengaluru housing society outbreakGiridhar Babu, epidemiologist with the Public Health Foundation of India, and co-chair of the city municipal corporation's Task Force on COVID-19 Public Health Response, told IndiaSpend.

Three days after a party in a housing complex in the city, some residents took a COVID-19 test ahead of a planned trip to Dehradun; when they tested positive, the municipal corporation tested over 1,000 residents of the complex and found over 100 positive cases. Given that the majority of positive cases were asymptomatic, the discovery of the cluster was a clear outcome of testing, Babu said.

It is possible also that sero-surveys have artificially created certainty about a situation in which uncertainty still dominates. This was demonstrated recently by research around Manaus, a city at the edge of the Amazon rainforest in northwest Brazil that has become the epicentre of discussions around "herd immunity".

Manaus experienced a COVID-19 surge that peaked by April 2020, and by October 2020, analysis from the sera of blood donors in the city had led researchers to believe that 76 percent of the city's population had been infected. herd immunity, it appeared, was imminent.

Yet in January 2021, the city saw a resurgence, prompting the investigators of its first study to re-examine the causes of the new surge. They observed that there could be at least four reasons for this, in a study published in The Lancet medical journal on January 27, 2021.

First, the attack rate of SARS-CoV-2--the virus that causes COVID-19--could have been overestimated during the first wave in Manaus on account of some mathematical and epidemiological assumptions that could have contained errors. Second, immunity against infection might have already begun to wane by December 2020, and there could have been re-infections. Third, immunity acquired from the first wave might not guard against infection from new variants. Lastly, the authors suggested, new variants could be more transmissible.

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"Exactly what Manaus is showing, and now other regions of Brazil and Latin America, is that high attack rate in the first wave with prevalences higher than the theoretical value for herd immunity does not prevent a second wave," Ester Sabino, lead author of The Lancet study, said in an email to IndiaSpend, when asked about Mumbai's numbers.

"Sero-surveys are helpful to understand attack rate but not the duration of immunity. Being antibody-positive does not mean that the individuals will not be reinfected, especially for variants with mutations on the spike protein that help the virus to escape the immune system," she said.

Continuous, well-designed studies in accordance with the available resources are the only solution, even in resource-constrained low- and middle-income countries, she added.

On that count, India has been slow to move, with its genomic surveillance lagging far behind other badly-hit countries.

"There is huge (genome) sequencing capacity in India. Out of the approximately 300,000 (genome sequenced) strains that were globally available by the middle of January 2021, 150,000 of them are from the UK, and that's why the UK is able to pick up new strains. Other places that are doing good sequencing are South Africa, and to an extent Brazil.

So we are seeing variants in places where they are sequencing more," Gagandeep Kang, virologist and professor of microbiology at Christian Medical College, Vellore, told IndiaSpend.

"In India, there was initially a huge pitch to sequence, but it turns out we have virtually no strains sequenced after July 2020. Now they are going to start sequencing again," she said.

At the end of December 2020, the government launched the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomic Consortia (INSACOG), comprising 10 laboratories to monitor genomic variations on a regular basis. While Maharashtra has sent samples from Amaravati, Akola and elsewhere in the state to the National Institute of Virology in Pune, there is no clarity yet that a new variant is resulting in the surge or is more transmissible, both Awate and Murhekar said.

Maharashtra govt imposed curfew in several districts in the Amaravati division to curb the 'resurgence' of COVID-19. PTI

What this also means is that the efficacy of vaccines, which are being tested against the UK and South African variants in other parts of the world, will need study and updation if and when Indian variants are sequenced, Murhekar said.

Re-infection, too, remains poorly studied, despite some emerging evidence — a minister in Maharashtra's COVID-19-hit cabinet is among the most high profile people to have publicly announced that he recently tested positive for the second time.

The ICMR's sero-surveys returned to the same districts, but not to the same individuals in subsequent rounds, meaning that the possibility of re-infection remains untested.

"We have the sera. We could test to see if antibodies are produced against newer variants," Murhekar said. In Amravati, some of the samples sent for sequencing are from people who tested positive twice, the head of the district's molecular lab said, but the lab no longer has the blood samples from the first time that tested positive. These were reportedly destroyed for lack of storage capacity.

In October 2020, Manaus and Mumbai appeared to show the future pathway — and potential end-point — for the COVID-19 pandemic. That certainty has been irreparably dented, say experts, adding that this is reason for renewed humility.

"We need to recognise that we don't know yet much about the disease and with the data we have today, it is hard to predict the future," Sabino said.

This article originally appeared on IndiaSpend, and has been republished with permission. Read the original article here.



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Tata's COVID-19 test kit to detect Omicron variant gets IMCR nod: All you need to know about 'OmiSure'

The Indian Council of Medical Research on Wednesday announced that it has approved a kit designed to detect the Omicron variant of coronavir...