Wednesday, June 30, 2021

National Doctors' Day: Prime Minister Narendra Modi to address medical fraternity tomorrow

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address the medical fraternity on the occasion of the National Doctors' Day on Thursday, officials said.

The event is being organised by the Indian Medical Association (IMA).

The Doctors' Day is observed in the honour of noted doctor and former West Bengal chief minister Bidhan Chandra Roy, whose birth and death anniversaries fall on 1 July.

With the medical community playing a lead role in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, the prime minister has been fulsome in praise for doctors and other medical professionals.



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Atul Keshap appointed interim envoy to India: Old state department hand has an Indian connection

The US has appointed career diplomat Atul Keshap as the country’s Charge’d Affairs in Delhi.

“Ambassador Keshap’s appointment will reinforce the close US partnership with the Government and people of India, demonstrated by our collaboration to overcome global challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic,” the state department said in a statement on Tuesday.

As per the statement, Keshap will be departing for New Delhi to serve as Charge d'Affaires, ad interim, following the retirement of Ambassador Daniel Smith.

The 50-year old has served as an American diplomat for nearly three decades at postings in India, Morocco, Guinea, and as United States Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives.

What's his India connection?

Keshap, an Indian-American, is an old India hand at the state department.

He previously served at the US Embassy New Delhi and as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia.

Where has he served?

He most recently served as the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs.

He has served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, a US Senior Official for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, and as an Office Director in the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs and in the Bureau of International Organization Affairs.

As per his state department profile, Keshap as ambassador has negotiated or advanced bilateral and multilateral initiatives at senior levels with counterparts from the European Union, United Nations, ASEAN, APEC, and governments across the Indo-Pacific, West Asia, Africa, and North and South America.

Keshap also served at the defence department as the National Defense University’s Vice Chancellor for the College of International Security Affairs.

Earlier in his career, he served as Director for North Africa and Middle East regional affairs on the National Security Council staff in the Executive Office of the President of the United States.

Honours and awards

In 2019, he received a Presidential Meritorious Rank Award and in 2018 Keshap received the Distinguished Honor Award (one of the state department’s highest honours) in recognition of his leadership in advancing US interests in the Indian Ocean region.

He has also been awarded numerous individual state department Superior and Meritorious Honor Awards, and six senior executive performance pay awards.

With inputs from PTI


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SET 2021: Symbiosis International to conduct exam from 10 July; book slot at set-test.org

Symbiosis International (Deemed University) is all set to conduct the undergraduate Symbiosis Entrance Test (SET) 2021. The examination will be held from 10 to 13 July in a remote proctored mode this year. Meanwhile, the admit cards for SET 2021 have also been released on the official website set-test.org. The hall tickets can be downloaded by candidates using their registered login credentials.

Students who are seeking admission to the undergraduate (UG) and postgraduate (PG) programmes at Symbiosis can also book their slots for taking the SET General, Symbiosis law admission test (SLAT), and SIT Engineering Entrance Exam (SITEEE) 2021.

Students, appearing for the exam, can download the admit card and book the slots online till 1 July. As per a notice on the website, the process for slot booking began from 29 June.

Candidates can follow these steps to book their slot:

Step 1: Visit the official website: set-test.org/

Step 2: On the homepage, go the ‘Slot Booking for SET’ link

Step 3: A new page will open. Enter SET ID and password to log in

Step 4: Then, choose the preferred date, time and submit it

While these steps can be followed to download the admit cards:

- Go to the website https://ift.tt/2CjimJH

- Log in using SET ID and password

- After logging in, check and download the SET 2021 admit card

- Save a copy and take a printout of the hall ticket (if required)

Candidates will have to appear for the computer-based examination that will be held in the afternoon from 2.30 pm to 4:00 pm.

The exam will be for 90 minutes that will consist of Multiple-Choice Questions (MCQ) for 60 marks. It will have four sections which are General English, Quantitative Aptitude, General Awareness, and Analytical and Logical Reasoning. So, in total, 60 questions will be asked and there will be no negative marking for any wrong answer.

According to an official notice which was released earlier, the varsity had informed that candidates who are appearing for their test from home must ensure that they have good internet connectivity. Also, candidates must not indulge in any kind of misconduct during the exam. They must be in formals or smart casuals while appearing for the test.

 



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Union Cabinet gives nod to BharatNet, distribution scheme for power discoms; a brief look

Two days after Nirmala Sitharaman at a press conference announced a slew of relief measures for COVID-19 affected sectors, the Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved the Rs 6.29-lakh crore relief package, Union minister Prakash Javadekar announced.

Here's a look at some of the proposals given assent to by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) and what it means:

Rs 19,041 cr viability gap funding for BharatNet in 16 states

The Cabinet approved public private partnership mode for the rollout of BharatNet project for broadband services in villages in 16 states with viability gap funding of Rs 19,041 crore, telecom minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

How much it costs: The total expense will be Rs 29,430 crore to cover around 3,60,000 villages in 16 states, which includes Rs 19,041 crore to be spent by the government for the viability gap funding, Prasad said.

Why it matters: The decision to involve private players was taken after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on 15 August, 2020, that around 6 lakh villages in the country will be connected with broadband in 1,000 days, Prasad said. He said till date 1.56 lakh out of the 2.5 lakh village panchayats have been connected with broadband.

CCEA approves Rs 3.03-lakh crore scheme for power discoms

The CCEA also approved a five-year-long reform-based result-linked power distribution scheme worth Rs 3.03 lakh crore. Briefing after the CCEA meet, Power and New & Renewable Energy Minister RK Singh said, "We have done a lot for power distribution reforms. It needs to be strengthened. Today, the Cabinet has approved the new scheme worth Rs 3.03 lakh crore, including Rs 97,000 crore central outlay."

What this means: The Central schemes Integrated Power Development Scheme, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana, and Pradhan Mantri Sahaj Bijli Har Ghar Yojana (Saubhagya) will be merged.

How much it will cost: Total allocation will be Rs 3,03,058 crore, including Central Government share of Rs 97,631 crore.

What it will do: The Reform-Based Result-Linked Power Distribution Scheme was announced in the Budget earlier this year. The funds would be given to power distribution companies (discoms) to strengthen their system. The revamped reforms-based result-linked power distribution scheme will provide financial assistance to discoms for infrastructure creation, up-gradation of system, capacity building and process improvement. It provides state-specific intervention in place of "one size fits all".

How states can avail this scheme: States will have to pre-qualify criteria like publication of audited financial reports, upfront liquidation of state government's dues/subsidy to discoms and non-creation of additional regulatory assets.

What the scheme envisages:

  • 25 crore smart meters
  • 10,000 feeders
  • Four lakh km of low-tension overhead lines planned under the ongoing works under Central Government schemes.

What else was in Sitharaman's relief package?

As part of the package to support the COVID-19 pandemic-hit economy, Sitharaman announced Rs 1.5 lakh crore of additional credit for small and medium businesses, more funds for the healthcare sector, loans to tourism agencies and guides, and waiver of visa fee for foreign tourists.

How much it costs: Together with previously announced Rs 93,869-crore spending on providing free foodgrains to the poor till November and additional Rs 14,775 crore fertiliser subsidy, the stimulus package, which is mostly made up of government guarantee to banks and microfinance institutions for loans they extend to COVID-19-hit sectors, totalled up to Rs 6.29 lakh crore.

Where the money will go: The finance minister provided Rs 23,220 crore of additional funding to set up children and paediatric care at hospitals to prepare healthcare infrastructure to deal with any emergency arising due to COVID-19 wave hitting children.

Further, to incentivise job creation, the government committed to paying the employer and employee's share to provident fund (PF) for all new recruitments done till March 2022. Previously, the government paid Rs 902 crore for 21.42 lakh beneficiaries of 79,577 establishments.

Support for tourism sector

With the tourism sector being hit hard by the pandemic, the minister had announced financial support to over 11,000 registered tourists, guides, travel and tourism stakeholders, in addition to free one-month tourist visa to the first five lakh tourists.

Other announcements

Other announcements included  an extension of tenure of a production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for large-scale electronics manufacturing by a year and Rs 88,000 crore of insurance cover for goods exporters.

Two announcements made by Sitharaman regarding the additional subsidy of Rs 14,775 crore for DAP & PK fertilisers, and extension of Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) free food grains from May to November 2021, were previously approved by the Cabinet.

With inputs from PTI



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Nirmala Sitharaman's COVID-19 relief measures get Cabinet nod: A brief look at BharatNet and other schemes

Two days after Nirmala Sitharaman at a press conference announced a slew of relief measures for COVID-19 affected sectors, the Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved the Rs 6.29-lakh crore relief package, Union minister Prakash Javadekar announced.

Here's a look at some of the proposals given assent to by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) and what it means:

Rs 19,041 cr viability gap funding for BharatNet in 16 states

The Cabinet approved public private partnership mode for the rollout of BharatNet project for broadband services in villages in 16 states with viability gap funding of Rs 19,041 crore, telecom minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

How much it costs: The total expense will be Rs 29,430 crore to cover around 3,60,000 villages in 16 states, which includes Rs 19,041 crore to be spent by the government for the viability gap funding, Prasad said.

Why it matters: The decision to involve private players was taken after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on 15 August, 2020, that around 6 lakh villages in the country will be connected with broadband in 1,000 days, Prasad said. He said till date 1.56 lakh out of the 2.5 lakh village panchayats have been connected with broadband.

CCEA approves Rs 3.03-lakh crore scheme for power discoms

The CCEA also approved a five-year-long reform-based result-linked power distribution scheme worth Rs 3.03 lakh crore. Briefing after the CCEA meet, Power and New & Renewable Energy Minister RK Singh said, "We have done a lot for power distribution reforms. It needs to be strengthened. Today, the Cabinet has approved the new scheme worth Rs 3.03 lakh crore, including Rs 97,000 crore central outlay."

What this means: The Central schemes Integrated Power Development Scheme, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana, and Pradhan Mantri Sahaj Bijli Har Ghar Yojana (Saubhagya) will be merged.

How much it will cost: Total allocation will be Rs 3,03,058 crore, including Central Government share of Rs 97,631 crore.

What it will do: The Reform-Based Result-Linked Power Distribution Scheme was announced in the Budget earlier this year. The funds would be given to power distribution companies (discoms) to strengthen their system. The revamped reforms-based result-linked power distribution scheme will provide financial assistance to discoms for infrastructure creation, up-gradation of system, capacity building and process improvement. It provides state-specific intervention in place of "one size fits all".

How states can avail this scheme: States will have to pre-qualify criteria like publication of audited financial reports, upfront liquidation of state government's dues/subsidy to discoms and non-creation of additional regulatory assets.

What the scheme envisages:

  • 25 crore smart meters
  • 10,000 feeders
  • Four lakh km of low-tension overhead lines planned under the ongoing works under Central Government schemes.

What else was in Sitharman's relief package?

As part of the package to support the COVID-19 pandemic-hit economy, Sitharaman announced Rs 1.5 lakh crore of additional credit for small and medium businesses, more funds for the healthcare sector, loans to tourism agencies and guides, and waiver of visa fee for foreign tourists.

How much it cost:

Together with previously announced Rs 93,869-crore spending on providing free foodgrains to the poor till November and additional Rs 14,775 crore fertiliser subsidy, the stimulus package, which is mostly made up of government guarantee to banks and microfinance institutions for loans they extend to COVID-19-hit sectors, totalled up to Rs 6.29 lakh crore.

Where the money will go: The finance minister provided Rs 23,220 crore of additional funding to set up children and paediatric care at hospitals to prepare healthcare infrastructure to deal with any emergency arising due to COVID-19 wave hitting children.

Further, to incentivise job creation, the government committed to paying the employer and employee's share to provident fund (PF) for all new recruitments done till March 2022. Previously, the government paid Rs 902 crore for 21.42 lakh beneficiaries of 79,577 establishments.

Support for tourism sector

With the tourism sector being hit hard by the pandemic, the minister had announced financial support to over 11,000 registered tourists, guides, travel and tourism stakeholders, in addition to free one-month tourist visa to the first five lakh tourists.

Other announcements

Other announcements included  an extension of tenure of a production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for large-scale electronics manufacturing by a year and Rs 88,000 crore of insurance cover for goods exporters.

Two announcements made by Sitharaman regarding the additional subsidy of Rs 14,775 crore for DAP & PK fertilisers, and extension of Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) free food grains from May to November 2021, were previously approved by the Cabinet.

With inputs from PTI



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Maldives reopens for Indian tourists from 15 July: All you need to know about travelling to island nation

The island country of Maldives has announced that it will open its borders to South Asian countries including India from 15 July.

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih announcing his government’s decision, added that the situation will be reviewed periodically between 1 and 15 July in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The island nation heavily relies on tourism for its economy and it comes as relief to many resorts and hotels across the country which rely on international travellers for their business. The latest travel update also comes as a huge relief for all the tourism stakeholders.

If you're looking to travel to the Maldives in the near future, here's all you need to know to plan your holiday.

Visa requirement

The Maldives gives a visa on arrival.  In order to enter the Maldives, Indian nationals visiting the country as a tourist do not require any pre-arrival visa, just a valid passport.

Some of the other visa requirements include:

  • Passport must have at least 1-month validity from the date of your expected departure in the Maldives
  • A confirmed pre-booking at a registered tourist facility is a prerequisite for the visa. Up until guesthouse tourist facilities are to be reopened at a later date, a booking is considered valid only for a tourist resort facility, liveaboards, and/or pre-approved transit facilities
  • Tourist visa extensions will be made available for long-stay tourists without the imposition of any further fees

Any COVID-19 test/vaccine requirements?

As per a tweet from the Maldives tourism ministry, international passengers are required to carry a negative RT-PCR test, with the test taken within 96 hours from the scheduled time of departure.

Here are some other requirements:

  • All tourists have to submit a health declaration form on the Maldives immigration portal 24 hours before travel to the islands (and then again, prior to departure).
  • There is no mandatory quarantine or test on arrival. For non-tourist visitors travelling to an inhabited island, you are required to undergo self-quarantine of 14 days upon arrival at the island.
  • However, those who show symptoms of COVID-19 will have to undergo a PCR test and isolate at a resort or a designated transit facility until they get their results. (Note that this may be at your cost.)
  • For those travelling in a group: if one person tests positive, everyone will have to get tested and isolated as per the procedure.

Previous ban

The Maldives had imposed a temporary suspension of tourist visas for visitors travelling from South Asian countries, since 13 May. In addition to India, the countries included under this ban were Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka.

With inputs from agencies



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Indians see religious tolerance as ‘central part of who they are as a nation’, US think-tank survey finds

Washington: Indians generally feel they live in a society where followers of many religions can live and practice freely, according to the latest survey of the US-based think-tank Pew.

Based on the face-to-face interviews of adults conducted in 17 languages between late 2019 and early 2020 (before the COVID-19 pandemic), the Pew survey on 30,000 Indians found that Indians of all religious backgrounds overwhelmingly say they are very free to practice their faiths.

“Indians see religious tolerance as a central part of who they are as a nation. Across the major religious groups, most people say it is very important to respect all religions to be ‘truly Indian’.

“And tolerance is a religious as well as civic value: Indians are united in the view that respecting other religions is a very important part of what it means to be a member of their own religious community,” it said.

More than 70 years after India became free from the colonial rule, Indians generally feel their country has lived up to one of its post-independence ideals: a society where followers of many religions can live and practice freely, it said.

According to Pew, these shared values are accompanied by a number of beliefs that cross religious lines. “Not only do a majority of Hindus in India (77 percent) believe in karma, but an identical percentage of Muslims do, too,” it said.

“A third of Christians in India (32 percent) – together with 81 percent of Hindus – say they believe in the purifying power of the Ganges River, a central belief in Hinduism.

“In Northern India, 12 percent of Hindus and 10 percent of Sikhs, along with 37 percent of Muslims identity with Sufism, a mystical tradition most closely associated with Islam,” it said.

And the vast majority of Indians of all major religious backgrounds say that respecting elders is very important to their faith, the report found.

According to Pew, despite sharing certain values and religious beliefs – as well as living in the same country, under the same constitution – members of India’s major religious communities often do not feel they have much in common with one another.

The majority of Hindus see themselves as very different from Muslims (66 percent), and most Muslims return the sentiment, saying they are very different from Hindus (64 percent).

There are a few exceptions: Two-thirds of Jains and about half of Sikhs say they have a lot in common with Hindus. But generally, people in India’s major religious communities tend to see themselves as very different from others, it said.

Among other things, the survey finds that Hindus tend to see their religious identity and Indian national identity as closely intertwined: Nearly two-thirds of Hindus (64 percent) say it is very important to be Hindu to be “truly” Indian.

Most Hindus (59 percent) also link Indian identity with being able to speak Hindi – one of dozens of languages that are widely spoken in India. And these two dimensions of national identity – being able to speak Hindi and being a Hindu – are closely connected. Among Hindus who say it is very important to be Hindu to be truly Indian, fully 80 per cent also say it is very important to speak Hindi to be truly Indian, it said.

“The BJP’s appeal is greater among Hindus who closely associate their religious identity and the Hindi language with being ‘truly Indian’.

“In the 2019 national elections, 60 percent of Hindu voters who think it is very important to be Hindu and to speak Hindi to be truly Indian cast their vote for the BJP, compared with only a third among Hindu voters who feel less strongly about both these aspects of national identity,” Pew added.



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Delhi’s Laxmi Nagar market closed over COVID-19 protocol violations till 5 July

New Delhi: The Laxmi Nagar main market and some nearby marketplaces have been closed by the East Delhi district administration till 5 July following the violation of Covid protocols, officials said on Wednesday.

In an order issued on Tuesday, Sonika Singh, chairperson of the Delhi Disaster Management Authority (east district), said the market association and shopkeepers in the main bazaar, Laxmi Nagar were “unable to ensure Covid protocols (compliance) on last Sunday (June 27) due to large footfall”.

“The guidelines/directions of Covid protocol are being contravened in the Main Bazar, Laxmi Nagar which may cause super spreading of the corona virus. The Market Welfare Association of Main Bazaar, Laxmi Nagar has failed to ensure the strict compliance of guidelines of COVID-19,” the order said.

To curtail the spreading of the virus in the larger interest of the public, it was necessary to take an “immediate and stringent action”, it added.

The areas that will remain closed till July 5 include the Laxmi Nagar main market from Vikas Marg to Lovely Public School, Kisan Kunj, and its surrounding markets like Mangal Bazaar, Vijay Chowk, Subhash Chowk, Jagatram Park, Guru Ramdas Nagar.

The restrictions are applicable to all shops except those dealing with essential goods and services.

Delhi was under a complete lockdown from 19 April to 30 May, following which the capital saw a phased unlock. Markets were, however, allowed to reopen only from June 7 onwards.



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Ex-gratia for COVID-19 deaths: Supreme Court gives Centre six weeks to issue new guidelines

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Wednesday directed the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) to issue fresh guidelines for providing minimum standards of financial help to families of those who lost their lives to COVID-19.

A special bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan and M R Shah said the court cannot direct the Centre to fix a particular amount of financial help but the government can fix the minimum standard of amount to be paid as ex-gratia to family members of those who lost their lives due to COVID-19 while keeping various aspects in mind.

The bench said the government can fix a reasonable amount while keeping in the mind the funds and resources available to the country.

The top court directed the Centre and the NDMA to issue fresh guidelines within six week for minimum standard of relief to be granted to families of victims of COVID-19.

It also directed the authorities to issue guidelines for simplifying the process of issuing death certificates for COVID-19 fatalities.

The top court asked the Centre to consider formulating an insurance scheme for cremation workers as proposed by the Finance Commission.

The bench also rejected the argument of the Centre for reading shall as may in section 12 of the Disaster Management Act for grant of ex-gratia amount to victims of disaster, and said that the NDMA has failed to perform its statutory duties.

The top court's verdict came on two separate pleas filed by lawyers Reepak Kansal and Gaurav Kumar Bansal seeking directions to the Centre and the states to provide Rs 4 lakh compensation to the families of coronavirus victims as provisioned under the Act.

On June 21, the top court had reserved its verdict on the batch of pleas which also sought formulation of a uniform policy for issuing of death certificates.

The Centre has told the top court that though there was no issue of "fiscal affordability" with it, ex-gratia compensation of Rs 4 lakh to the families of those who have died of COVID cannot be paid keeping in mind the "rational, judicious and optimum usage of resources of the nation".

In its additional affidavit, the government has termed COVID as a "once in a lifetime pandemic inflicted on the entire world" and said that various steps to strategise the nation's response to the pandemic have been taken and not just the funds of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF), but even the funds of Consolidated Fund of India are being utilised according to advice of experts.

Advocate Sumeer Sodhi, appearing for four intervening applicants who had lost their family members to COVID, had submitted that there cannot be any discrimination in the amounts being paid by different states to family members of those who had succumbed to the deadly infection.

Sodhi had submitted that some states pay a higher sum in compensation and others pay less and this discrimination should not be allowed to remain and the Centre should frame a uniform policy under the Disaster Management Act.

The top court had that the Finance Commission's recommendations on dealing with disasters cannot override the statutory schemes on compensation under section 12 of the DMA.

The government has said that it has already extended for one more year, starting from April 2021, the benefit of the 'Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Insurance Scheme' of Rs 50 lakh to about 22 lakh healthcare professionals.

It had said the guidelines, meant for 2015 to 2020, recommended expenditure for providing financial relief against 12 specific identified disasters on the national level that is "cyclone, drought, earthquake, fire, flood, tsunami, hailstorm, landslide, avalanche, cloudburst, pest-attack, frost and cold wave" and the COVID-19 was not included.

"It is submitted that information has been received from all the States and UTs in this respect. However, as per information received, it is clarified that no State/UT has provided any ex-gratia to COVID-19 victims from SDRF," the Centre had said.

It further said that in accordance with the recommendations of 15th Finance Commission and the experts, the Centre has devised the strategy to deal with, the extremely contagious, volatile and ever changing impact of the mutations of the virus COVID-19, in the best possible manner utilising all the financial, human and infrastructural resources of the nation, rationally and judiciously.

The affidavit has further said that the central government has already declared Covid as a "disaster" under the Disaster Management Act.

"However, on the issue of 'ex-gratia' assistance on account of loss of life, the guidelines provide that the norms provided by government of India (Ministry of Home Affairs) for assistance from SDRF should be the Minimum Standards of Relief," it had said.



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Explained: India's drone policy, threats posed by rogue UAVs and how they can be neutralised

The first-of-its-kind attack by purported drones at the air force in Jammu prompted Prime Minister Narendra Modi to hold a meeting that included Union home minister Amit Shah and defence minister Rajnath Singh to discuss the framing of a policy response to check against security threats posed by the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

India has guidelines in place for civilian use of drones, but the Jammu attack has shown the need for tightening rules and response strategies to provide a clear deterrence against any such attacks.

What are the rules on drones in India?

In March, the Ministry of Civil Aviation notified the Unmanned Aircraft System Rules that govern the operation of drones and similar systems in India.

These rules follow the Civil Aviation Requirements (CAR) for drones that were issued by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) in 2018.

Weight is the primary basis by which the rules classify drones vis-a-vis the specific rules governing their operation. Thus, 'Nano' unmanned aircraft are those that weigh less than or equal to 250gm while 'Micro' drones are those weighing more between 250gm and 2kg.

'Small' drones can weigh more than 2kg but should not exceed 25kg. 'Medium' drones can weigh between 25kg and 150kg and 'Large' unmanned aircraft are those that weigh more than 150kg.

For operating any of these drone types, except for the Nano models, permission is required from the Director General of Civil Aviation.

Several checks and bans are built into the rules to prevent drones posing a security threat. For example, all drones have to mandatorily contain autonomous flight termination system or return to home (RTH) option and should also come with geo-fencing mechanism. Geo-fencing systems provide a means for restricting the movement of a drone for a real-world geographic location using the global positioning system (GPS) or radio frequency identification.

Further, all drones, except Nano models, will have to have a tamper-proof 'No Permission–No Takeoff (NPNT) mechanism. This system will ensure that every drone has to obtain a valid approval from DGCA via an app or the procedure created for the purpose before it can be operated. There are also no-fly areas for drones that include airports, strategic locations, and the LoC with Pakistan and LAC with China, etc.

There is also the requirement for mandatory registration of drones, except Nano drones, with DGCA.

However, the attack in Jammu was likely a case of rogue drones dropping explosives and, hence, the civil aviation ministry guidelines leave open the question as to what the response will be to rogue actors operating drones to carry out attacks.

What are the threats posed by rogue drones?

As it became increasingly apparent that drones can pose a considerable security threat, the civil aviation ministry in 2019 put together guidelines for countering rogue drones.

It identified three specific types of drones on the basis of the threat profile: autonomous drones, which are controlled by on-board computers and don't need to be manually operated; drone swarms, which can be used in attacks by simultaneously launching and controlling multiple drones using coordination software; and stealth drones that can be made to evade radar and other means of detection.

Such drones, the guidelines say, can be used for smuggling, reconnaissance, or to carry out various types of attack, targeting VIPs, crowded areas or other aircraft.

How can the threat from drones be neutralised?

The rogue drone guidelines note that conventional air defence systems are "generally ineffective against drones" and that military radars are designed to track larger, fast-moving aircraft and "cannot always pick up small, slow, low-flying drones".

Importantly, it is not cost effective to use expensive anti-aircraft systems to shoot down these drones, which are typically cheap and can be easily devised.

What an effective counter unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) needs, therefore, is an ability to detect and track all kinds of drones, including the ones that have low radar and infrared footprint. Along with that it should be able to quickly identify and classify whether a drone is friendly or hostile. Finally, comes the requirement of engaging and defeating a rogue drone in a timely and cost-effective manner.

Depending on the location and asset being protected, the rogue drones guidelines suggest a three-tier approach to guarding against drones. The 'full-scale model' is the top priority level and covers sites like the Parliament, Rashtrapati Bhavan, nuclear installations, airports, etc.

It envisages a protective cover that includes primary and passive detection systems like radar, radio frequency detectors, electro-optical and infrared cameras. For the task of neutralising drones these sites can have both 'soft kill' systems, like radio frequency jammers, and 'hard kill' mechanisms like high-powered electromagnetic and LASER weapons, drone-catching nets, etc.

For installations such as oil refineries andpower stations, the guidelines recommend a 'mid segment model' that includes primary and passive detection and soft kill options. The 'basic model' is for locations like important government offices, national monuments, and includes only passive detection like radio frequency trackers while it is recommended that the security on the premises can use their conventional weapons to shoot down drones.

In the wake of the Jammu drone attack, reports have suggested that the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has already put together a counter drone system that incorporates many of the strategies discussed in the rogue drone guidelines.



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Patna University to commence admission for students from 2 July; check patnauniversity.ac.in for details

The Patna University (PU) has finally decided to begin the admission process for students for the new academic session. The online admission process will begin from 2 July and the last date for filling the form is 17 July.

The announcement has come as a major relief to students who are waiting for their admissions into colleges. University’s vice-chancellor Girish Kumar Chaudhary has informed that online admission forms will soon be made available on the official website - patnauniversity.ac.in.

While Professor Anil Kumar, dean of students' welfare said that the university is yet to decide on the mode of selection.

"Interested applicants can fill online admission forms through an online portal. We are yet to decide the mode of selection as we are waiting for Raj Bhawan's direction in this light,” Kumar said. Further in the statement, he updated that they are planning to begin the academic session on time this year, which hopefully begins by the first week of August.

Speaking about the pending exams of Undergraduate (UG) and Postgraduate (PG) courses, Kumar asserted that the pending exams will be conducted soon to clear backlogs and bring the academic calendar on track.

Amid the coronavirus pandemic this year, more than 11 lakh students passed their Class 12 examination that was conducted by the Bihar School Examination Board.

Patna University was established in 1917 and since then it has been functioning as an affiliating and examining body. This varsity is one of the oldest universities in the country. Meanwhile, in Bihar itself, it is the first, and in the subcontinent, it is the seventh oldest academy institution.

Patna University has 31 postgraduate departments apart from Patna Medical College and Patna Dental College in the Faculty of Medicine that are under the State Government.



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Bharat Biotech says 'no wrongdoing' amid Brazil Covaxin controversy; all you need to know

The Brazilian government on Wednesday announced the temporary suspension of its 20 million dose COVID-19 vaccine contract with Bharat Biotech following allegations of irregularities in the deal, with the Indian drugmaker insisting that it has not received any advance payments.

'No wrongdoing', says Bharat Biotech

The Hyderabad-based firm said it has not received any advance payments and that the company has followed a "similar approach" in Brazil towards contracts,  regulatory approvals and supplies in several countries worldwide, where Covaxin is being supplied successfully.

Bharat Biotech has denied any allegation of wrongdoing with respect to vaccine supply, saying in an emailed statement that it adheres to the highest standards of compliance. It said the company has not received any advance payments nor has it supplied any vaccines to Brazil.

"As of 29th June 2021, Bharat Biotech has not received any advance payments nor supplied any vaccines to MOH Brazil." "Bharat Biotech has followed a similar approach towards contracts, regulatory approvals and supplies in several countries worldwide, where Covaxin is being supplied successfully," it said in a statement.

Bharat Biotech has received advance payments from several other countries at the above price points, with supplies in process, pending approvals, Bharat Biotech said. The company follows a similar partnership model in all countries, where its vaccines are supplied, as it does not have its own offices there.

Bharat Biotech and Precisa Medicamentos are conducting a 5000-subject phase III clinical trial in Brazil, which was recently approved by Anvisa. The trial will be conducted by the Albert Einstein Institute, the vaccine maker said.

Precisa Medicamentos is Bharat Biotech's partner in Brazil, providing assistance, guidance, and support with regulatory submissions, licensure, distribution, insurance, conduct of phase III clinical trials, etc.

Here's what you need to know about the controversy:

What?

The Brazilian government, which had earlier agreed to purchase 20 million doses of Bharat Biotech’s COVID-19 vaccine Covaxin, announced the suspension of the contract following allegations of irregularities in the deal.

The controversy has turned up the heat on Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro who is accused of turning a a blind eye to possible corruption in the deal.

The contract was also evaluated by the Ministry of Health's Integrity Directorate, which will carry out an administrative investigation. The unit will act together with the "Controllership" in determining the terms of the contract, it further said.

Why?

The Covaxin contract to Brazil landed in controversy after the South American country's Attorney General reportedly launched a probe into the deal. The minister of the CGU, Wagner Rosrio, explained that suspension is a preventive measure.

"We opened a preliminary investigation last week, that is, a specific audit in relation to the contract. The suspension time will only last for the period of calculation.
We put the reinforced team to be very quick in the process," he said.

According to CGU's preliminary analysis, there are no irregularities in the contract, but, due to compliance, the @minsaude opted to suspend the contract for further
analysis," Brazil health minister Marcelo Queiroga tweeted.

Earlier, the National Health Surveillance Agency of Brazil- Anvisa, had denied permission to import Covaxin under Emergency Use Authorisation after authorities found that the Indian plant in which the jab was being made did not meet the Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) requirements.

However, Anvisa on 5 June gave clearance to the proposal to import Covaxin into the South American country, with some conditions.

When?

On 26 February, Bharat Biotech Ltd had said it entered into an agreement with the Brazilian government for the supply of 20 million doses of Covaxin during the second and third quarters of 2021.

The Emergency Use Authorisation for Covaxin was granted by Brazil on 4 June. The pricing of Covaxin has been clearly established between $15-20 per dose for supplies to governments outside India. The pricing for Brazil has also been indicated at $15 per dose.

With inputs from agencies



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Jammu drone attack: Pakistan's role in strike is plausible, India must share probe findings at home, UNSC

The drone attack on the Jammu airbase seriously escalates the threat of terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir from Pakistan. Earlier, drones from across the border have been used to drop weapons in Punjab for terrorist purposes. In those cases, the targets were not military. However, in the Jammu drone attack, the target was an Air Force base with the intention no doubt to cause serious material damage.

Even if this objective was not realised, the message that our air bases close to the Pakistan border are now vulnerable has been conveyed.

The drone used in the Jammu Air Force Station attack was a relatively less sophisticated one, but in future more potent drones with greater reach can be used. That will depend on the calculations of the Pakistani elements behind this escalation and how much they think they can get away with, as well as their assessment of the options available to New Delhi.

Because drones fly low, they escape detection by radars and interjection by air defence systems.

Drones have been used with deadly effect, for example, from Yemeni soil against the Saudi oil installations. They have also been used militarily with great success against the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh by Turkey-supported Azerbaijani forces. The Chinese have used drones for aerial surveillance in Ladakh during the current stand-off. The Americans have used armed drones in Afghanistan and in Iraq to eliminate terrorists, and even a high-ranking serving military officer as in the case of the Iranian General Qasem Soleimani.

Drone swarms are now part of the panoply of a country’s military arsenal. India too has acquired armed drones from the US for maritime security.

This new security challenge that has surfaced has to be effectively met. It is not possible for local Kashmiri elements to, without external help, get access to drones and get trained to operate them with explosive charges and target acquisition.

An in-depth investigation is needed to determine the trajectory of the drone used in the Jammu Air Force Station attack and the source of the technical support needed for operating it.

It can safely be assumed that Pakistani elements are behind this one way or another. It is well to recall the attack on the Pathankot air base in 2016 wherein the Jaish-e-Mohammed was involved. Judging from the manner in which Pakistan treated the Pathankot investigation, there is no doubt that it was carried out with the connivance of Pakistan-based ISI.

Ceasefire: A win-win for both sides

India has to carefully evaluate its options. According to our Army chief, the ceasefire along the Line of Control (LoC) has been holding well barring a minor infraction. He has acknowledged the absence of attempts by Pakistan to infiltrate terrorists with covering fire. The tenor of statements from the Indian side has been supple lately, suggesting that we see value in preserving the ceasefire, if for nothing else than protecting our civilian population from the firing across the LoC.

A ceasefire on our western border is also helpful in fully concentrating on the military stand-off with China on our northern border. For Pakistan, putting a stop to punishing fire from the Indian side would be a consideration, besides the need to concentrate on the developments on its border with Afghanistan. Pakistan may also be calculating that for it to exit from the Financial Action Task Force or FATF grey list a ceasefire with India and curbing terrorist infiltration would add to its credibility in making the case that it was seriously addressing the FATF concerns.

Pakistan’s malevolence: A permanent feature

On the other hand, the anti-India political rhetoric from Pakistan has not significantly abated. In his recent interview with The New York Times, Imran Khan projected himself as someone who is loved and respected in India, a peace-maker looking for a civilised trade relationship with New Delhi. Durign the interview, he hit hit against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s RSS ideology.

Khan's condition for a dialogue with India is a reversal of the 5 August, 2019, changes in Jammu and Kashmir. He is living in a fantasy world if he really believes what he says. If Khan thinks that this is the right propagandist line to take with the “liberal” US press, which is antipathetic towards Modi, he is exhibiting his lack of political maturity.

Pakistan’s foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi has developed a new concept that the size of a diplomatic mission in a country depends on whether it is a neighbour or not. According to him, India, not being a neighbour of Afghanistan, has a larger presence in Afghanistan than what is necessary. He also alleged that India uses its presence in Afghanistan to promote terrorist activity against Pakistan.

Pakistan National Security Adviser Moeed Yusuf claims that Kashmir has never belonged to India and that after India inevitably reverses its 5 August, 2019, decisions, Pakistan will consider a dialogue with India.

Pakistan seems to believe that India’s policy in Kashmir is failing, and that it can leverage opinion in the US administration against Indian actions in Jammu and Kashmir to its advantage. And this, even as its interventionist policy in Afghanistan is succeeding with the US consent.

It is not unlikely that Pakistan may have reasoned that with India embroiled with China in the north, the internal situation in Kashmir still unsettled, the cooperation of the old political class still needed to implement the post 5 August agenda of the Modi government, and the developments in Afghanistan which have compelled India to reach out to the Taliban contrary to long-standing policy — no doubt to ward off concerns about an externally abetted revival of terrorist activity in Kashmir — upping the ante on Kashmir was needed to put India on the defensive.

If India retaliated, it would be accused of violating the ceasefire and distracting Pakistan from constructively cooperating with the US to facilitate its withdrawal from Afghanistan. It will argue, as it has always done, that it is wrongly blamed by India for its own failures to control the insurgency in Kashmir.

Pakistan’s malevolence towards India remains a fundamental feature of its foreign policy.

It is most important that the result of India’s meticulous investigation of the drone attack is widely shared domestically and internationally. India could bring the incident to the attention of the Security Council of which it is currently a member. A clear warning should go to Pakistan that India reserves the right to react appropriately to such a dangerous provocation at a time of its own choosing.

The author is former foreign secretary. He was India’s Ambassador to Turkey, Egypt, France and Russia. Views are personal.



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SC says ICAI CA July exams to start from 5 July, allows opt-out for COVID-19 affected students

The Supreme Court of India today (Wednesday, 30 June) ordered that the CA July exams which are conducted by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) can be held starting from Monday, 5 July.

The decision was taken by the bench of justices AM Khanwilkar, Dinesh Maheshwari and Aniruddha Bose, reported NDTV.

The apex court also said that the candidates who are infected with COVID-19 can opt out by getting a certificate from a medical practitioner. The court said a student opting out should not be considered as an attempt.

The CA July exam candidates need not submit an RT-PCR report if they submit a certificate by the doctor that they have been affected by COVID-19, the apex court stated.

The apex court was hearing a petition filed by students who were seeking postponement of the exams because of the COVID-19 pandemic. There were also other concerns raised by the students which have been addressed by ICAI in the court.

Yesterday, the apex court had assured that the exams would not be postponed. However, it had asked ICAI to submit notes clarifying certain aspects related to the exam.

The Supreme Court further said andidates will be allowed to opt out of the CA July exam if there is a last minute change in the examination centre, even within the city.

 



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Scheduled international passenger flights to remain suspended till 31 July

New Delhi: The coronavirus-induced suspension of scheduled international passenger flights has been extended till 31 July, aviation regulator DGCA said on Wednesday.

"However, international scheduled flights may be allowed on selected routes by the competent authority on a case-to-case basis," the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) added.

Scheduled international passenger services have been suspended in India since 23 March, 2020, due to the coronavirus pandemic. But special international flights have been operating under the Vande Bharat Mission since May 2020 and under bilateral "air bubble" arrangements with selected countries since July 2020.

India has formed air bubble pacts with around 24 countries, including the US, the UK, the UAE, Kenya, Bhutan and France.

Under an air bubble pact between two countries, special international flights can be operated by their airlines between their territories.

The DGCA circular also said that the suspension does not affect the operation of international all-cargo operations and flights specifically approved by it.



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India okays Moderna vaccine for emergency use: How does it work and how effective is it?

The vaccine made by the US-based Moderna is the fourth COVID-19 shot to have obtained an emergency use nod in India. The mRNA platform on which it is built has given some of the vaccines with the highest efficacy rates in trials. Although the Centre had introduced specific criteria to ease the arrival of foreign-made vaccines to India, regulatory, legal and infrastructural issues had
so far prevented their actual launch in the country. The approval to Moderna thus assumes significance at a time when the country is planning to massively expand vaccine coverage amid fears of a third wave of COVID-19.

What is an mRNA vaccine?

Vaccines such as the ones made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna in the US and India-based Zydus Cadila's ZyCoV-D are classified as nucleic acid vaccines. But while the Zydus Cadila vaccine is a DNA vaccine, the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are built on the mRNA platform. They belong, however, to the same class of vaccines because what they essentially do is to use the target pathogen or, in this case, the virus's genetic material to train the immune system to combat it.

For creating such vaccines, scientists extract genetic material embedded in the virus and insert it inside the human body. In the case of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, this genetic material prompts human cells to specifically create the spike protein that studs the surface of the novel coronavirus and helps it to infect people. As the human cells produce this spike protein, the immune system recognises it as a threat and begins to produce antibodies against it, thus helping the body build up resistance against the virus.

While such vaccines induce a good immune response and are considered safe because they use no live components of the virus that can trigger an infection, the platform on which they are built is relatively new and, prior to the emergency nod to such vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic, no nucleic acid vaccines had been launched for use in humans although DNA vaccines for animals are
available.

What is the efficacy rate Of The Moderna vaccine? Does it protect against variants?

The Moderna jab was the second vaccine to get an emergency nod in the US after the Pfizer vaccine, another mRNA shot. Both are two-dose vaccines. Preliminary clinical trial data had shown that the Moderna vaccine has an impressive 94.1 percent efficacy against the novel coronavirus. According to experts, the body takes about two weeks after the second dose to develop full immunity against the virus.

Outside of clinical trials, the real-world effectiveness of this jab has been measured at over 90 percent and it has also been seen to provide protection against the newer variants of the novel coronavirus.

Moderna said on 29 June that its vaccine is able to combat the Delta variant, or B.1.617.2, that was first detected in India and is now the most prevalent variant in the country. The vaccine-maker said that the mRNA jab was more effective in producing antibodies against the Delta variant than against the Beta variant, or B.1.351, which was first identified in South Africa.

Only a modest 3.2 to 2.1-fold reduction in its antibody impact was seen against the Delta and Kappa, or B.1.617.1, lineages of the variant, the company said.

"These new data are encouraging and reinforce our belief that the Moderna vaccine should remain protective against newly detected variants," said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.

Will this vaccine be produced in India? What about the legal and logistical hurdles?

According to GAVI The Vaccine Alliance, a public-private global health partnership working to increase access to immunisation for poorer countries, "it is relatively quick and easy to design" a nucleic acid vaccine once the virus's genome has been sequenced. The Moderna vaccine had entered clinical trials within two months of the SARS-CoV-2 genome being sequenced.

Reports suggest that the first doses of the vaccine will be imported into the country by Moderna's local partner, Cipla, and will come in the form of donations. There is no confirmation yet on when the commercial launch of the vaccine will happen.

Moderna, like Pfizer, had flagged issues of indemnity and bridging trials in India as the key factors that were keeping it away from the country even after the Centre cleared the decks for their speedy launch in April this year. Announcing the decision to grant the emergency nod to the Moderna vaccine, NITI Aayog member Dr VK Paul said that the issue of indemnity, which implies a waiver from legal liability in India, "is being addressed and (the Centre has) taken it up for examination".

Logistics is an important aspect for the launch of mRNA vaccines in India as these vaccines are known to require ultra-cold storage facilities. However, Paul said that sealed vials of the vaccine can be stored for up to 30 days at temperatures of 2-8 degrees Celsius, which fits in with India’s cold storage infrastructure as part of the country's Universal Immunisation Programme. However, storing it for longer periods requires the vaccine to be frozen at over -20 degrees Celsius.



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Consulate warns Indians face serious threat of kidnapping in Afghanistan: All you need to know

The Indian embassy in Afghanistan on Tuesday advised all Indians visiting, staying and working in Afghanistan to exercise utmost caution with regard to their security and avoid all types of non-essential travel in view of escalating violence in various parts of the country.

According to official data, over 3,000 Indians are staying in Afghanistan currently.

A majority of Indian nationals in Afghanistan are engineers and staff working on hundreds of development projects being implemented across the country. India is the largest regional donor in Afghanistan, with pledges of around $3 billion.

What's the threat

In a 13-point advisory, the embassy strongly cautioned against the threat of abduction, death and injury in terrorist attacks in Afghanistan, which is considered the most dangerous place in the world.

"The security situation in Afghanistan remains dangerous in several provinces. Terror groups operating in Afghanistan have escalated violent activities and carried out a series of complex attacks in various parts of Afghanistan, including targeting Afghan defence and security forces and Afghan government institutions and even civilians," the embassy said.

"Indian nationals are not exceptions, and they additionally face a serious threat of kidnapping," it said.

  • The embassy said the security situation in Afghanistan remains "dangerous" and that terror groups have carried out a series of complex attacks, including targeting civilians.
  • The embassy also warned that Indian nationals additionally face a "serious threat" of abduction.
  • In addition to this, Taliban had also issued a threat to journalists working or reporting from Afghanistan, who they perceive as siding with the West and Afghanistan's government.

What has Indian Embassy advised its nationals?

  • The embassy "strongly advised" all Indians to avoid all types of non-essential movements
  • The embassy advised people to avoid movement during peak commuting hours.
  • Venturing out of main cities should be avoided, it said, adding that essential travel should be undertaken by air as many highways and roads are unsafe and prone to attacks.
  • It urged them to keep essential movements as discrete as possible and avoid following predictable routes or routines
  • The embassy also strongly advised the Indian companies operating in Afghanistan to take up necessary security measures for their Indian employees deployed at project sites.
  • While travelling on roads, it advised Indians to maintain distance from possible targets like military convoys, vehicles of government ministries/offices, high-ranking officials, law-enforcement agencies, and to avoid visiting crowded markets
  • All Indian nationals arriving in Afghanistan were also advised to register with the Embassy/Consulates on the website: https://eoi.gov.in/kabul/ or by email to paw.kabul@mea.gov.in. Those who are already present but have not registered or updated their contact details are also requested to do so immediately.

The backdrop

Afghanistan had been in a state of almost constant war for over 20 years even before the US got involved.

In 1979, a year after a military coup, the Soviet army invaded Afghanistan to support a friendly government. It fought a resistance movement - known as the mujahideen - that was supported by the US, Pakistan, China and Saudi Arabia, among other countries. In 1989, Soviet troops withdrew but the civil war continued. In the chaos that followed, the Taliban (which means "students" in the Pashto language) sprang up.

They ruled the country since 1996, the West living in oblivion to the harsh Sharia rule implemented by them that included beheadings and public executions. But after the 11 September attacks in America killed nearly 3,000 people, US invaded Afghanistan as the Taliban supported and protected Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, the main perpetrator behind the US bombings.

After the US attack, the Taliban rule was quickly dismantled and its fighters and warlords quickly melted away across the porous Pakistan border but they didn't totally disappear.

What's happening there now?

  • In recent days, the Taliban have made quick gains in Afghanistan’s north, overrunning multiple districts, some of them reportedly with hardly a fight, even as the US and NATO press forward with their final withdrawal from Afghanistan. By all accounts, their departure will be complete long before the 11 September deadline set by President Joe Biden when he announced in mid-April an end to America’s “forever war.”
  • The Taliban gains are significant because:
  • A) The transportation routes they provide the insurgents. With the recent gains, Taliban now control the main border crossing with Tajikistan, the main trade route. They also hold the strategic district of Doshi, critical because the one road linking Kabul to northern Afghanistan runs through it.
  • B) Equally significant is that the north is the traditional stronghold of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic groups, who aided the US-led invasion that drove the Taliban from power nearly 20 years ago and have been part of the ruling leadership since. The traditional stronghold of the Taliban, who are mostly ethnic Pashtuns, has been in the country’s south and east.

As a result, a worried government this week launched what it called National Mobilisation, arming local volunteers. Observers say the move only resurrects militias that will be loyal to local commanders or powerful Kabul-allied warlords, who wrecked the Afghan capital during the inter-factional fighting of the 1990s and killed thousands of civilians.

"The fact that the government has put out the call for the militias is a clear admission of the failure of the security forces... most certainly an act of desperation," said Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the US-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Roggio tracks militant groups and is editor of the foundation’s Long War Journal.

“The Afghan military and police have abandoned numerous outposts, bases, and district centers, and it is difficult to imagine that these hastily organized militias can perform better than organized security forces,” he said.

Meanwhile, as the districts fell, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani swept through his Defense and Interior Ministries, appointing new senior leadership, including reinstating Bismillah Khan as defence minister. Khan was previously removed for corruption, and his militias have been criticized for summary killings. They were also deeply involved in the brutal civil war that led to the Taliban’s takeover in 1996.

Afghan and international observers fear a similar conflict could erupt once more. During the 1990’s war, multiple warlords battled for power, nearly destroying Kabul and killing at least 50,000 people — mostly civilians — in the process.

Those warlords returned to power after the Taliban’s fall and have gained wealth and strength since. They are jealous of their domains, deeply distrustful of each other, and their loyalties to Ghani are fluid. Ethnic Uzbek warlord Rashid Dostum Uzbek, for example, violently ousted the president’s choice for governor of his Uzbek-controlled province of Faryab earlier this year.

A former adviser to the Afghan government, Torek Farhadi, called the national mobilization “a recipe for future generalized violence.”

He noted the government has promised to pay the militias, even as official security forces complain salaries are often delayed for months. He predicted the same corruption would eat away at the funds meant for militias, and as a result “local commanders and warlords will quickly turn against him (Ghani) and we will have fiefdoms and chaos."

With inputs from The Associated Press



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Eid al-Adha likely to be celebrated on 21 July; origin and significance of festival

The festival of Eid al-Adha is expected to be celebrated on 21 July in India. As per the Islamic faith, it is believed that Prophet Ibrahim was willing to sacrifice his firstborn on the command of Allah.

Eid al-Adha is celebrated to mark the spirit of sacrifice on the 10th day of the month Dhu al-Hijjah, which is the final month of the Islamic calendar. The festival is celebrated by sacrificing an animal and distributing its meat among the community members and needy.

Eid al-Adha 2021 date

It is expected that the festival will be celebrated in India on 21 July. The Dhu al-Hijjah moon will likely be sighted on the evening of 11 July and therefore, the last Islamic month will start from 12 July this year.

Eid al-Adha origin

The Islamic holy book Quran narrates the story of Prophet Ibrahim. It is said that when Allah commanded him to sacrifice his son Ibrahim, the Prophet was prepared to do that. It is believed however that at the last moment, an animal replaced Ibrahim, on Allah’s command.

It also marks the conclusion of Hajj which is the compulsory pilgrimage for all able-bodied and financially capable Muslims.

Eid al-Adha significance

The festival is considered to be the second most important one after Eid al-Fitr which marks the end of the month of Ramadan. Animals such as sheep, goats or buffalo are sacrificed on the day.

The religious ruling on the distribution of the meat is that it should be divided in three parts. One part should be for the family of the person who has sacrificed the animal, the second one should be given to their extended family and third to the needy.



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CBSE affiliation 2022: Schools can apply till today at saras.cbse.gov.in

The registration process for the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) affiliation is going to end today on Wednesday, 30 June. Schools who want to be affiliated to CBSE can apply today at the SARAS (School Affiliation Re-engineered Automation System) by visiting saras.cbse.gov.in.

The deadline for affiliation was extended by CBSE due to the COVID-19 pandemic for fresh affiliation, upgradation of affiliation and extension of affiliation. In a notice issued on 29 April, the secretary of CBSE Anurag Tripathi had extended the deadline for all the types of extension considering the coronavirus pandemic situation.

The process of affiliation for 2022 started this year on 16 March. The CBSE affiliation system was restructured and has been effective since 1 March.

For both fresh and upgradation of affiliation, CBSE has another window which will open from 1 September to 31 October. However, for the extension of affiliation, the deadline to apply is 30 June.

Those schools who want to apply for affiliation need to meet the requirements determined by the board. The school applying for affiliation need to submit certificates and proofs for NOC, Society/ Trust, Affidavit, land, recognition letter, franchisee schools, Infrastructure and Facilities, salary and allowances, service conditions, essential safety certificates, adequacy of teaching staff, school managing committee, enrolment of students, EPF scheme, reserve funds and balance sheet.

Previously, the board had asked the managers and heads of schools to be vigilant against unscrupulous elements who are contacting school administrations and offering to guide them through the CBSE affiliation process.

Discouraging the ‘unethical practice,’ the board said that it has not appointed any stakeholders, advisors or agencies. The application for CBSE affiliation can be accessed online.



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SBI releases prelims exam call letters for Junior Associate recruitment 2021 at sbi.co.in

The State Bank of India (SBI) has issued the call letters/admit cards for the Junior Associate (Customer Support and Sales) recruitment. The admit cards were released on Tuesday, 29 June and will be available on the website till Tuesday, 13 July.

Candidates follow these steps to download the SBI Junior Associate call letters:

Step 1: Visit the website sbi.co.in
Step 2: Scroll down on the homepage and click on the option ‘Careers’
Step 3: A new page will open. On the top right corner, click on Latest Announcements
Step 4: Now click on Download Preliminary Exam Call Letter under Recruitment Of Junior Associates (Customer Support & Sales)
Step 5: On the new page, enter your registration number, password and the security key. Click on Login
Step 6: After logging in the page, download your SBI Junior Associate call letter for prelims
Step 7: Take a print out of the call letter for future reference.

Candidates can also click on the direct link here and enter their credentials to access their call letters

For the post of Junior Associate, candidates should not be under 20 or over 28 years of age as on 1 April, 2021. The recruitment process will be completed in three steps including preliminary exam, main exams and a test for the opted local language.

While the prelims will be divided in three sections, namely English Language, Numerical Ability and Reasoning Ability, the main exam will have 190 questions from sections including General Awareness, General English, Quantitative Aptitude and Reasoning Ability and Computer Aptitude.

The prelims exam for SBI Junior Associate will be an hour long while the main exam is going to be two hours forty minutes in duration.



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Gujarat Board declares Class 10 results on gseb.org; all students clear exam

On 29 June, the Class 10 results were declared by the Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board (GSHSEB) at gseb.org

This year, the Class 10 of the Gujarat board has a pass percentage of 100. As many as 8.57 lakh students had registered for the Gujarat board class 10 exam, out of which there were 3,66,722 girls and 4,90,482 boys.

The GSHSEB class 10 exams were cancelled due to the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. The results have been prepared using an alternative evaluation scheme. As the results have now been declared, students can now take admission in Class 11 on the basis of Class 10 results.

Marksheets are also available with the schools and students can collect them starting 30 June. All the students have been promoted to Class 11, however, the marks awarded to them are different. With the ‘all pass’ policy, the board has promoted all the students. In Class 10, students are granted grade marks, wherein E means the student has to take a compartment exam and F means repeating the year.

The board has also decided to conduct a bridge course in order to overcome academic gaps. During the bridge course, students will be taught the course of their previous class for a month before the new session starts.

As the Class 10 results have been declared, it is expected that the board is now going to declare Class 12 results in July.

Along with the Gujarat board, the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education also declared Class 10 results on 29 June.



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India's Covaxin effectively neutralises Alpha, Delta variant of coronavirus, says US NIH

India's Covaxin, developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration with the Indian Council of Medical Research, effectively neutralises both Alpha and Delta variants of coronavirus, the US' National Institute of Health has said.

The NIH said results of two studies of blood serum from people who had received Covaxin suggest that the vaccine generates antibodies that effectively neutralise the B.1.1.7 (Alpha) and B.1.617 (Delta) variants of SARS-CoV-2, first identified in the UK and India, respectively.

The top American health research institute, which has a history of strong scientific collaboration with India, also said that an adjuvant developed with funding from it has contributed to the success of the highly efficacious Covaxin, which has been administered to roughly 25 million people till date in India and elsewhere.
Adjuvants are substances formulated as part of a vaccine to boost immune responses and enhance a vaccine's effectiveness.

Covaxin comprises a disabled form of SARS-CoV-2 that cannot replicate but still stimulates the immune system to make antibodies against the virus. Published results from a phase 2 trial of the vaccine indicate that it is safe and well-tolerated, the NIH said, adding that safety data from a phase 3 trial of Covaxin will become available later this year.

"Meanwhile, unpublished interim results from the phase 3 trial indicate that the vaccine has 78 per cent efficacy against symptomatic disease, 100 per cent efficacy against severe COVID-19, including hospitalisation, and 70 per cent efficacy against asymptomatic infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, it said.

"The results from two studies of blood serum from people who had received Covaxin suggest that the vaccine generates antibodies that effectively neutralise the B.1.1.7 (Alpha) and B.1.617 (Delta) variants of SARS-CoV-2, first identified in the UK and India, respectively, the NIH said.

Ending a global pandemic requires a global response, said Anthony S Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of NIH.

"I am pleased that a novel vaccine adjuvant developed in the US with NIAID support is part of an efficacious COVID-19 vaccine available to people in India, he said.

The adjuvant used in Covaxin, Alhydroxiquim-II, was discovered and tested in a laboratory by the biotech company ViroVax LLC of Lawrence, Kansas with support from the NIAID Adjuvant Development Program.

Alhydroxiquim-II is the first adjuvant in an authorised vaccine against an infectious disease to activate receptors TLR7 and TLR8 that play a vital role in the immune response to viruses.

In addition, the alum in Alhydroxiquim-II stimulates the immune system to search for an invading pathogen. Molecules that activate TLR receptors stimulate the immune system powerfully, but the side effects of Alhydroxiquim-II are mild, the NIH said.

According to the NIH, the NIAID Adjuvant Program has supported the research of the founder and chief executive officer of ViroVax?Sunil David, M.D., Ph.D.?since 2009. His work has focused on searching for novel molecules that activate innate immune receptors and developing them as vaccine adjuvants.

The collaboration between Dr David and Bharat Biotech International Ltd. of Hyderabad was initiated during a 2019 meeting in India coordinated by the NIAID Office of Global Research under the auspices of NIAID's Indo-US Vaccine Action Program.

A delegation of five NIAID-funded adjuvant investigators, including Dr David; two members of the NIAID Division of Allergy, Immunology, and Transplantation; and the NIAID India representative, visited four leading biotechnology companies to learn about their work and discuss potential collaborations.

The delegation also attended a consultation in New Delhi co-organised by NIAID and India's Department of Biotechnology and hosted by India's National Institute of Immunology.

Among the scientific collaborations sparked by these activities, Bharat Biotech signed a licensing agreement with Dr David to use Alhydroxiquim-II in their candidate vaccines. This license was expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic to include Covaxin, which has received Emergency Use Authorisation in India and more than a dozen other countries.

"The company conducted extensive safety studies of Alhydroxiquim-II and undertook the complex process of scaling up production of the adjuvant under Good Manufacturing Practice standards. Bharat Biotech expects to produce an estimated 700 million doses of Covaxin by the end of 2021, the NIH said.



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Goa's iconic Club Tito's sold by owners citing 'harassment' by police, NGOs, panchayats and other authorities

Panaji: The owners of Club Tito's, one of Goa's most happening nightlife spots, on Monday announced they have sold the club due to "harassment" by authorities and NGOs.

The iconic club, located at Baga beach in North Goa, has been synonymous with nightlife in the tourist state.

"It is with sadness but with anger that we have sold our entire business in Goa. I personally have suffered the least as I was compensated adequately and even my future generations won't have to work," Richardo Joseph D'Souza, whose family owns the club, said in a post on Facebook.

"I will also share some with our staff but in the long term they have no jobs. Can I please ask our officials to employ them as I do not ever plan any more business in Goa," he said.

He did not share any information about the new owner.

D'Souza claimed he has been "harassed" by officials from the police department, the Planning and Development Authority, the Coastal Regulation Zone, NGOs, panchayat and sarpanches, Block Development Officers, Deputy Collectors and others.

He, however, said he is "grateful to certain segment of the government like Dr Sawant (chief minister Pramod Sawant), the IAS officers, ex-staff, present staff, our neighbours, all my friends and family and the common people of Goa who all contributed to this great brand called Tito's".



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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

MPBSE Board Result 2021: Madhya Pradesh board releases evaluation criteria for Class 12; check details here

The School Education Department, Madhya Pradesh has released the evaluation criteria for Class 12 on Monday.

Results of Class 12 are going to be calculated on the basis of the performance of students in the best five subjects of Class 10.

In a tweet on Monday, the School Education Department, MP said that the Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan has announced that the best of five subjects in Class 10 will be used to prepare the Class 12 result of the MP board.

However, if any student wants to improve their class 12 results then they can give the examination.

The decision was taken in a meeting presided over by Chouhan. School Education Minister Indersingh Parmar, Minister of Medical Education Vishvas Kailash Sarang and Higher Education Minister Dr Mohan Yadav were also present.

A presentation was given by Rashmi Arun Shami, the principal secretary of the School Education Department.

As per the tweet, the chief minister and other ministers also discussed the future strategy for private and government educational institutions, keeping in mind the COVID-19 pandemic.

It was also announced that the schools will not be reopening in the state from 1 July.

Earlier, they were scheduled to open after the summer vacations.

The announcement comes a week after the West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh state boards declared the evaluation criteria for classes 10 and 12.

The Central Board of Secondary Education also shared the marking criteria for Class 12 after a decision was taken to cancel the board exams earlier in June.

Recently, the Goa Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education (GBSHSE) also declared the evaluation criteria for classes 10 and 12.

 



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IGNOU July Admission 2021: SC/ST students exempted from fee payment, check details here

The Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) has released a notification on Monday, 28 June, exempting students belonging to the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) categories from fee payment.

The exemption is available for students who are registering for the first time and those who are re-registering for IGNOU admissions in the July 2021 admission cycle.

SC/ST students will receive fee exemption in as many as 84 programmes mentioned in the notification including several bachelors, certificates, diplomas and postgraduate diploma/certificate courses. Some of the courses are Bachelors of Arts, Certificate in Fashion Design, Diploma in Event Management and Postgraduate Diploma in Criminal Justice.

However, this scheme is not going to be available for the modular certificate and diploma programmes that are a part of the degree programme. The fee exemption will be given to candidates only for one programme if they are simultaneously enrolled for undergraduate and certificate level courses.

During their period of study, such students should not take any scholarship, funding, exemption or reimbursement to be eligible for this scheme.

Another condition for availing of this scheme is that the beneficiary should not be employed anywhere including government, private or semi-government organisation. Candidates seeking admission with fee exemption need to upload the undertaking confirming that they are not employed with any organisation.

The students who want to take admissions in IGNOU under this scheme should apply online and upload soft copies of the caste certificate and other essential documents.

Finally, the claims are going to be verified by the Student Registration Division of the university and eligible students will be exempted from paying fees.

Meanwhile, the last date to apply for the Term End June examination has been extended to 30 June by the university.



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China-made COVID-19 vaccine, CoronaVac, found safe, effective in children, adolescents: Lancet study

Beijing: Two doses of the China-made COVID-19 vaccine, CoronaVac, are safe and produce a strong antibody response among children and adolescents aged 3-17 years, according to a study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.

The phase 1/2 trial on 550 young people found that over 96 percent of children and adolescents who received two doses of the vaccine, manufactured by Sinovac, developed antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

Most adverse reactions were mild or moderate, with pain at the injection site the most commonly reported symptom, the researchers said.

"Children and adolescents with COVID-19 usually have mild or asymptomatic infections compared with adults. However, a small number may still be at risk of severe illness," said Qiang Gao from Sinovac Life Sciences, China.

"They can also transmit the virus to others, making it vital to test the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in younger age groups," Gao said.

The researchers conducted the phase 1/2 clinical trial of CoronaVac in healthy children and adolescents aged 3-17 years in Zanhuang County, China.

Between October 31 and December 2, 2020, 72 participants were enrolled in phase 1, and 480 participants enrolled in phase 2 between December 12 and December 30, 2020.

The vaccine — either 1.5 microgram ( g) or 3 g per dose — or control was given by intramuscular injection in two doses, at day 0 and day 28.

Among the 550 participants who received at least one dose of vaccine or the control, adverse reactions within 28 days occurred in 56 (26 percent) of 219 participants in the 1.5 g group.

Such adverse events were reported in 63 (29 percent) of 217 participants in the 3 g group, and 27 (24 percent) of 114 in the control group.

Only one serious adverse reaction — a case of pneumonia — was reported in the control group, however, this was unrelated to the COVID-19 vaccination, the researchers said.

In phase 1, 100 percent of participants in both the 1.5 g and 3 g groups generated antibodies against SARS-CoV-2.

Stronger immune responses — determined by the amount of antibodies produced that can neutralise the virus — were detected among the 3 g group compared with the 1.5 g group.

In phase 2, 97 percent of participants in the 1.5 g group produced antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, compared with 100 percent in the 3 g group.

Participants in the 3 g group again produced a stronger immune response than those in the 1.5 g group.

The researchers noted that immune responses among children and adolescents were higher than those measured in adults aged 18-59 years and elderly aged 60 years and older.

No significant differences in immune response were detected in an analysis by age group.

More than 93 percent of those in the 1.5 g and 3 g groups aged 3-5 years, 6-11 years, and 12-17 years produced antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 at day 28 after the second dose.

The researchers recommend two 3 g doses of the vaccine for children and adolescents aged 3-17 years based on their results.

They acknowledged some limitations in their study.

T cell responses — which play an important role in SARS-CoV-2 infections — were not assessed in the study, though these have been investigated in related studies.

The study involved a small number of participants and all were of Han ethnicity, highlighting a need for larger studies in other regions and involving multi-ethnic populations.

The researchers noted that long-term safety and immune response data were not available, though participants will be followed for at least one year.

They said the results should be interpreted with caution as it was not possible to draw strong statistical conclusions owing to the small number of participants in the study.

"Herd immunity against COVID-19 is the prerequisite to end this pandemic, either through vaccinations or natural infection, said Professor Bin Cao, of the China-Japan Friendship Hospital, who was not involved in the study.

Cao noted that most estimates placed the threshold at 65-70 percent of the population gaining immunity, mainly by vaccination.

"However, widely circulating virus variants and persistent hesitancy on vaccine make this threshold difficult to reach. Thus, the calculation has to be revised upward and children must be covered in the immunisation campaign," he added.



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LPG prices: Check out cost of domestic LPG cylinder in Gurgaon, Delhi other cities

The prices of liquified petroleum gas (LPG) or cooking gas have remained unchanged since they were increased on 1 June by the oil marketing companies. The price was increased up to Rs 37 in metro cities. Currently, the non-subsidised price of a 14.2 kg cooking gas cylinder is Rs 587 in Gurgaon. In New Delhi, the LPG domestic cylinder is available for Rs 809.

A domestic LPG cylinder can be purchased for Rs 809 in Mumbai on 29 June while in Kolkata, it costs Rs 835.50. In Chennai, a 14.2 kilogramme cooking gas cylinder is available for Rs 825.

One 14.2 kg cylinder of LPG costs Rs 636.50 in Hyderabad and in Bengaluru, it is retailed at Rs 825, the same as the price of cooking gas in Chennai.
On the other hand, the price of commercial LPG cylinders was reduced by over Rs 100 on 1 June, reported DNA.

The 19 kg commercial cylinder costs Rs 1473.50 in Delhi, Rs 1422.50 in Mumbai, Rs 1544.50 in Kolkata and Rs 1603 in Chennai.

According to a report in Business Standard, the managing director and chairman of ONGC Subhash Kumar has said that for the period of October 2021 to March 2022, the prices of natural gas is going to be increased by 50 to 60 percent.

The publication further mentions that the natural gas prices at the global gas hubs have been used to determine the domestic gas prices in the country. Currently, the domestic gas price is at $1.79 per mBtu (million British thermal units).

In order to increase the competition among distributors to provide the best services, the government has announced that customers will be free to choose their delivery distributor. The facility will soon be launched in cities including Ranchi, Pune, Chandigarh, Coimbatore and Gurgaon and is going to be implemented in other cities later.



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NABARD Nabcons recruitment 2021: Apply online for 86 vacancies by 10 July; check details here

The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD)-owned subsidiary NABARD Consultancy Services (Nabcons) has released the notification for the recruitment of senior and middle-level Consultants as well as for field enumerators. The notification for NABARD Nabcons recruitment 2021, which is being held for as many as 86 posts, was released on 26 June.

The application process for the NABCONS recruitment 2021 started from Saturday, 26 June, and will end on Saturday, 10 July.

Interested candidates can apply by visiting the form link for their preferred job role.

Click here for senior-level consultant, here for middle-Level Consultant and on this link for the post of enumerator.  Aspirants should enter their details in the Google form and then click on submit to apply.

Eligibility criteria:

Age limit

For all three positions, the minimum age requirement as on 1 June is 24 years. For enumerators,  the maximum age allowed for the aspirants is 45 years, while for senior and middle-level consultants.the maximum age limit is 65 years.

Educational qualifications

While senior and middle-level consultants are required to have a graduate or postgraduate degree in Agriculture or allied subjects, the enumerators should have graduated from a recognised university.

Remuneration:

The monthly remuneration for senior-level consultants is going to be from Rs 51,000 to 60,000 while middle-level consultants will be paid Rs 41,000 to 50,000 per month. The salary range for enumerators is Rs 20,000 to 25,000. The remuneration will be decided on the basis of experience, educational qualification and overall suitability.

The vacancies for the NABCONS recruitment 2021 are spread out in 25 states. The senior-level consultant positions are available at NABCONS head office in Mumbai. There are two senior consultant posts on offer, 21 vacancies for middle-level consultant and 63 for enumerators.

Selection Process

On the basis of the application, NABCONS will call candidates for interviews. Shortlisted candidates will receive call letters from the company. They would have to appear for the interview based on the location mentioned in the call letter.

 



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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...