Friday, December 31, 2021

Kerala lottery 2021: Nirmal NR-257 results to be out at 3 pm today; first prize is Rs 70 lakh

Results of the Nirmal NR-257 lottery will be announced at 3 pm today, 31 December, by the Kerala State Lottery Department.

Kerala Lottery result can be viewed by the ticket holders on the official website at https://www.keralalotteryresult.net.

The Nirmal NR-257 detailed results can be checked on the website from 4 pm onwards.

The first prize for the Nirmal NR-257 lottery is Rs 70 lakh. The winner of the second prize will take home Rs 10 lakh. The third prize of the Nirmal NR-257 lottery is Rs 1 lakh.

Similarly, the fourth and fifth prize winners of Nirmal NR-257 will get Rs 5,000 and Rs 1,000 respectively. The Nirmal NR-257 lottery also has a consolation prize of Rs 8,000.

The lottery draw for Nirmal NR-257 will be conducted at the Gorky Bhavan in Thiruvananthapuram of Kerala. The authorities will also publish the result of Nirmal NR-257 in the Kerala Government Gazette.

Nirmal NR-257 lottery: Steps to check result

  • Visit Kerala Lottery’s official website - https://www.keralalotteryresult.net
  • On the homepage, search for 'Kerala Lottery Result 31.12.2021 Nirmal NR-257' link and click on it
  • A new page will be displayed on the screen with the Nirmal NR-257 lottery result
  • Check Nirmal NR-257 lottery’s result and claim the prize money

Following the announcement of the Nirmal NR-257 result, winning candidates can claim their prize money after verifying their ticket numbers that will be published by the authorities in the Kerala Government Gazette.

Next, the winners of the Nirmal NR-257 lottery are advised to submit their tickets to Kerala Lottery Department’s office. Winners should carry valid identity proof such as an Aadhaar card or voter ID while visiting the office. It is to be noted that without valid ID proof, people cannot claim their prize money.

People who win prize money of Rs 5,000 in Nirmal NR-257 can claim their prize from any registered lottery shop across the state.

Lottery holders who win an amount over Rs 5,000 will have to go through the complete verification process to claim their Nirmal NR-257 prize.



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Goodbye 2021: A look at major events political and beyond that shook the world this year

The major happenings in India and abroad that left a mark on the outgoing year, also, tend to have prominent impacts in the coming year. As we bid adieu to 2021, here's a look at the major events that probably history will give space in the future.

Mamata Banerjee's landslide victory in Bengal and Left retaining power in Kerala

The Bharatiya Janata Party's desperate attempt to make inroads in West Bengal turned futile as Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress registered a landslide victory, winning 213 out of the 294 Assembly seats. However, BJP became the main opposition party bagging 77 seats in the state.

In Kerala, the incumbent Left Democratic Front retained power with a thumping margin. The CPM-led LDF broke a four-decade tradition of no-incumbent getting re-elected and won 99 out of the 140 seats in the assembly polls.

Infighting in Congress-ruled states and Capt Amarinder Singh's resigned as Punjab chief minister

The Congress faced infighting among its party cadres in Punjab, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan. While the grand old party's high command managed to tackle the situation in Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan, things took an ugly turn in Punjab. The state's chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh resigned from his post and later from the party following his long-standing power tussle with Congress leader Navjot Singh Sidhu. Replaced by Charanjit Singh Channi, Amarinder Singh has now joined hands with the BJP and hopes to turn the tide in the upcoming assembly elections in Punjab.

Violence at Red Fort and in Lakhimpur Kheri

On 26 January, thousands of farmers agitating against the three contentious farm reform laws had clashed with the police in the national capital. The violence erupted during a tractor parade that was taken out by the protesting farmers to highlight their demands. Driving the tractors, many of them reached the Red Fort and hoisted a religious flag entering the monument. The incident left more than 500 police personnel injured.

In Uttar Pradesh's Lakhimpur Kheri, eight people including four farmers were killed after being run over by an SUV on 3 October. The car allegedly belonged to Ashish Mishra, son of Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Mishra Teni. Later, Ashish and 12 others were arrested after the Supreme Court pulled up the Yogi government for not taking action against the accused. The incident turned into one of 2021's biggest political issues following nationwide condemnation.

Union Cabinet reshuffle

The Union Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi underwent a major reshuffle in July 2021. With Jyotiraditya Scindia being given the high-profile aviation ministry, the revamp also saw some of the big names being dropped. The high-profile ministers who stepped down included Dr Harsh Vardhan, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Prakash Javadekar and Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank among others.

Farm laws repeal by the Centre

The three controversial farm reform laws at the heart of unprecedented protests by farmers for more than a year were eventually withdrawn following an announcement by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 19 November, 2021. The Centre, who held as many as 11 rounds of discussion with the agitating farmers and even offered to amend the laws, failed to achieve a breakthrough. The rollback of the farm laws is seen as a politically expedient move for the BJP ahead of the assembly elections in Punjab and Uttar Pradesh.

The year 2021 also saw several political rumblings around the world, and in many ways, some of them also changed the political narrative forever. Here are a few events that dominated headlines across the world this year.

Capitol Hill riots

Former US President Donald Trump’s attempt to reverse the 2020 US presidential election results took a dangerous turn on 6 January when an armed mob of his supporters stormed Capitol Hill just as Congress convened to validate Biden’s win.

The mob managed to get past the guards and enter the Senate. The rioters clashed with police, smashed windows and even looted the office used by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other representatives. The violence, which led to five deaths, was seen as one of the worst security breaches in the country’s history.

Joe Biden assumed the US Presidency on 20 January this year, amid heavy security concerns after the Capitol Riots. The 79-year-old politician became the 46th President of the United States, making him the oldest person to assume office.

Apart from Biden, Kamala Harris was also sworn in as the country’s first female, South Asian and Black vice-president.

Taliban take over Afghanistan

On 15 August, the Taliban entered Kabul, soon after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani had fled the country for the United Arab Emirates. The group captured Kabul just days before US troops were set to exit the country.

The Taliban’s resurgence to power came after a two-week blitzkrieg in which they captured all major cities including Kandahar, Mazar-e-Sharif, Ghazni and Herat. The insurgent was earlier in power from 1996 to 2001, before it was driven out by US troops as part of its campaign against terrorism.

Since gaining power, the Taliban has re-imposed various restrictions on women, including barring them from most jobs and forbidding women to travel long distances without a male escort.

The Taliban government in Afghanistan has yet to gain international recognition. Afghanistan is also experiencing a humanitarian crisis as the US has frozen approximately $9.5 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank.

Australia-UK-US submarine deal

France’s Naval Group, which is partly owned by the state, had been contracted in 2016 to build 12 diesel-electric powered submarines for Australia. The subs were based on France’s Barracuda nuclear-powered submarines. However, Australia decided to dump the contract and opt for a new security alliance with the US and UK (AUKUS) that will equip it with nuclear-powered submarines.

The new security alliance, known as AUKUS, was widely seen as a move to counter China in the Indo-Pacific region. It also prompted much outrage from France, with French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian terming it “a stab in the back”.

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Tensions between Israel and Palestine turned to violence on 3 May, after clashes in East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood. The clashes were sparked by long-standing efforts by Jewish settlers to evict Palestinians from the neighbourhood.

The violence soon spread to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, leading to hundreds being injured. A week after the first clashes took place, Palestinian militant group Hamas began firing rockets from Gaza. Israel’s retaliatory airstrikes led to 11-days of hostilities, marking the deadliest fighting between the two since 2014. As per MoneyControl, 260 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed in the violence.

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Ordering food from Zomato and Swiggy may get costlier from 1 January: Here’s why

Ordering food off Zomato and Swiggy may burn a bigger hole in your pocket from 1 January.

Starting 1 January, the food delivery apps will be liable to pay five percent of Goods and Services Tax on their restaurant services, per government orders.

This new charge may be offloaded to the users of these aggregators — that means you.

What’s cooking?

The GST Council in its 45th meeting in September had recommended that food delivery apps should be made liable to pay five percent tax.

Following this, the finance ministry issued a circular to announce that the new rule will come into effect starting 1 January.

Services provided by cloud kitchens or central kitchens also come under the ambit of restaurant service and attract five percent GST.

The government believes this move will curb tax evasions by restaurants, which, before the new GST rules come into effect, are responsible for collecting and depositing GST.

Estimates showed a loss to the exchequer from the alleged under-reporting by food delivery aggregators at Rs 2,000 crore in the last two years. Making these platforms liable for GST deposits would curb tax evasion.

What does it mean for customers?

As a customer, we are all aware that an order attracts certain taxes.

This new rule, effectively, shouldn't affect customers as the new rule only implies a transfer of responsibility of collecting and depositing the tax and does not mean new taxes were being announced.

So, in short, you should not be charged extra.

However, Swiggy or Zomato may introduce a fee that justifies the extra work that they are deemed to carry out on behalf of restaurants now.

Who's affected then?

Smaller restaurants, which have an annual turnover of less than Rs 20 lakh, will be most significantly impacted by the decision.

This is because they didn't come under the GST ambit earlier.

However, they will now need to pay taxes as it would be collected by the aggregator on their behalf.

With inputs from agencies

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DRDO collaborates with private industry, gives extreme cold clothing technology to five firms

In yet another collaboration with the private industry, the Defence Research and Development Organisation [DRDO] on Tuesday handed over the technology for the development of an extreme cold winter clothing system [ECWCS] to five Indian companies.

The firms are Delhi-based M/s RHD Business Services India Pvt. Ltd and M/s SBNX Innovation [OPC] Pvt. Ltd, Coimbatore-based M/s Shiva Texyarn Limited, M/s Kusumgar Corporates Pvt. Ltd from Mumbai and M/s Ginni Filaments Limited in Mathura.

The technology was developed by the Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences [DIPAS] of DRDO and is particularly critical at a time when India is locked in a military standoff with China at the Line of Actual Control—and soldiers continue to be deployed in the forward areas of eastern Ladakh through the peak winters when the temperatures dip to about minus 30 degrees Celsius.

Earlier this year, the Army had projected an annual requirement of 50,000 to 90,000 sets of extreme cold-weather clothing systems and similar quantities of special sleeping bags, rucksacks, multipurpose boots as well as snow goggles and summer suits for super high altitude areas among others.

These extreme cold weather clothing systems were among the 17 types of special clothing and mountaineering equipment that the Army had sought to procure from Indian vendors.

So far, most of them are imported from other countries, but as per the second positive indigenisation list of 108 items notified by the Defence ministry earlier this year, special clothing and mountaineering equipment will have to be procured only from indigenous sources from January 2023.

Defence officials told News18.com that the DRDO’s technology transfer to the private firms will go a long way in meeting this requirement for the Indian soldiers deployed in Siachen, eastern Ladakh and other high-altitude areas, in line with the Centre’s Make in India initiative.

What is the technology all about and how will it help soldiers?

DRDO officials told News18.com that the extreme cold weather clothing systems are ergonomically designed, modular in nature and comprise three layers, weighing less than 4.5 kg, even for the largest sizes.

The inner layer comprises a vest and a pair of trousers and provides insulation and wicks away sweat from the body, while the middle layer, comprising a jacket and trousers, provides maximum insulation and is resistant to water penetration on the outer surface.

The outer part is a camouflage printed insulated waterproof layer providing protection from wind chill and snow and is reversible.

The insulation was distributed in three layers of clothing for temperatures up to minus 50 degrees Celsius.

The officials said the ergonomic design of the clothing system will facilitate non-obstructive natural joint movements on wearing the winter clothing systems and will ensure minimum restriction to the range of motion of different body joints, thus maintaining flexibility and manoeuvrability of the user. It is designed in a way to provide protection to the face during extreme cold and blizzards.

It will also prevent dehydration and minimise temperature loss through breathing during activities.

The clothing system, officials said, will provide warmth and comfort to soldiers in high-altitude areas up to 30,000 feet and glaciated terrains in temperatures up to minus 50 degrees Celsius and wind velocity up to 60 km/hr, while preventing hypothermia and minimising the risks of frostbite and maintaining normal body temperature.

DRDO’s collaborations with private industry

While officials said that DRDO does not have immediate projects lined up for such collaborations with the industry, the organisation has carried out more than 1400 ToT [transfer of technology] agreements with various industries to date.

An official said this year alone, DRDO has carried out 178 ToT agreements with the private industry.

Some of the technologies that were recently transferred to the private industry include Fire Suppressing Gel, Coastal Surveillance Radar, Automatic Chemical Agent Detection and Alarm [ACADA] & Chemical Agent Monitor [CAM], Unit Maintenance Vehicle, Unit Repair Vehicle, Fused Silica-based Ceramic Core technology.

DRDO gets five percent of the total development cost as ToT fees from each industry, officials from the organisation told News18.com.



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India rejects China renaming places in Arunachal: A look at how northeastern state has remained under a constant threat from Beijing

A day after China renamed 15 places in Arunachal Pradesh, New Delhi said that “invented names” did not change the fact that the state has been and always will be an integral part of India.

India’s reaction came in response to Beijing announcing Chinese names for 15 more places in Arunachal Pradesh which the neighbouring country claims as South Tibet.

“We have seen such. This is not the first time China has attempted such a renaming of places in the state of Arunachal Pradesh. China had also sought to assign such names in April 2017,” External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said.

China claims that Arunachal Pradesh is “South Tibet” – an area that falls under its administrative control. Last year, the country had said that it did not recognise Arunachal Pradesh as a part of India.

Bagchi was responding to a media query on reports that China has renamed some places in Arunachal Pradesh in its own language.

China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs announced on Wednesday that it had standardised in Chinese characters, Tibetan and Roman alphabet the names of 15 places in Zangnan, the Chinese name for Arunachal Pradesh, according to state-run Global Times.

This is in accordance with regulations on geographical names issued by the State Council, China’s cabinet, it said in a report.

China had for the first time assigned Chinese names in Arunachal Pradesh in April 2017, just after the Dalai Lama’s visit to the state. The latest move comes ahead of China’s new border law – passed in October this year – coming into effect from January 1, 2022.

India had expressed concern that “China’s unilateral decision” to promulgate the new border law could have “implications on our existing bilateral arrangements on border management”.

China’s renaming of the places in Arunachal Pradesh came in the midst of the lingering eastern Ladakh border standoff that began in May last year.

Constant threat from China

China has been stepping up its infrastructure development in areas where previously, border transgressions were reported frequently. Concern over Chinese intrusions in the border state has been brought to the notice of the Centre from time to time.

In 2003, former Chief Minister Gegong Apang highlighted the situation in Maja and the adjoining region to Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee while making a case for early resolution of the dispute.

Longju, Asaphila, Migyitun, Namka Chu, Chantze and other areas in Arunachal have witnessed frequent border transgressions since the late 1990s.

Recently, China upped the ante by building “defence villages” in the border areas. An NDTV report said, “China has constructed a second enclave or cluster of at least 60 buildings in Arunachal Pradesh”. It added the new enclave did not exist in 2019 according to the satellite images, but could be seen a year later.

China has built a large 100-home civilian village inside disputed territory between the Tibet Autonomous Region and India's Arunachal Pradesh, claimed the US Department of Defense in its annual report to Congress on military and security developments involving China.

These and other infrastructure development efforts along the India-China border have been a source of consternation in the Indian government and media, it stated.

The report also specifically points out that China has attempted to blame India for provoking the standoff through India's "increased infrastructure development" near the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

Asserting that its deployments to the LAC were in response to Indian provocation, Beijing has refused to withdraw any forces until India's forces have withdrawn behind its version of the LAC and ceased infrastructure improvements in the area, it stated.

Chinese state-controlled media forcefully asserted China's intent to refuse any territorial concessions demanded by India.

According to The Quint, China, since July 2017, has been aiming to set up 628 xiaokang (well-off) society villages all across Tibet border areas, one-third of which are closer to the 3,488-km Line of Actual Control (LAC) with India. About 21 border counties were identified with India for the construction of these party-army outposts.

Why Arunachal Pradesh?

Arunachal Pradesh, also known as the North-East Frontier Organization (NEFA), is the largest state in the northeast and shares international borders with Tibet in the north and northwest with Bhutan in the West and Myanmar in the East.

However, China claims Arunachal Pradesh as part of southern Tibet.

Beijing's main interest is in the Tawang district, which is located in the northwestern part of Arunachal Pradesh and on the border of Bhutan and Tibet. Defence experts say this is because of strategic and geopolitical reasons as Tawang is an entry point into India’s northeast.

With inputs from agencies

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'Patients are suffering': After 15 days of protests, Delhi resident doctors call off strike

After 15 days, Delhi’s resident doctors — who have been refusing to offer medical services — have decided to call off their strike today.

The resident doctors in Delhi, who were protesting over the delay in NEET-PG counselling and alleged manhandling of doctors by the police, said they will resume work from 12 pm on Friday.

“The strike has been called off. We will rejoin work at 12 pm. We had a meeting with the joint commissioner of police (CP) last night where he gave instructions to cancel the FIR. As for the NEET-PG, we have been assured that the court clearance will come during the 6 January hearing,” said Dr Manish Kumar, president, Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA).

Resident doctors in the National Capital have been protesting for the past 15 days, leading to medical facilities being disrupted across hospitals.

The protests turned violent on Monday night when the junior doctors, who were on a march towards the Supreme Court, had been stopped by the Delhi Police. The situation descended into chaos, as doctors alleged they were lathi-charged by the authorities, a charge which has been denied by them.

Digging down, the resident doctors then refused to resume work till an apology was provided to them and on Tuesday, 28 December, resident doctors belonging to FORDA gathered in large numbers on the premises of Centre-run Safdarjung Hospital and raised slogans like 'We want justice'.

Patient care remained affected at three Centre-run facilities — Safdarjung, RML and Lady Hardinge hospitals and some other Delhi government-run hospitals too.

The Centre-run Safdarjung Hospital, which was the epicenter of the ongoing stir, witnessed chaos as the OPD counters remained shut. The doctors protested outside the emergency ward and all emergency services were obstructed. Even the ambulance services have been disrupted by the agitating doctors.

With inputs from agencies

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'Patients are suffering': After 15 days of protests, Delhi resident doctors call of strike

After 15 days, Delhi’s resident doctors — who have been refusing to offer medical services — have decided to call off their strike today.

The resident doctors in Delhi, who were protesting over the delay in NEET-PG counselling and alleged manhandling of doctors by the police, said they will resume work from 12 pm on Friday.

“The strike has been called off. We will rejoin work at 12 pm. We had a meeting with the joint commissioner of police (CP) last night where he gave instructions to cancel the FIR. As for the NEET-PG, we have been assured that the court clearance will come during the 6 January hearing,” said Dr Manish Kumar, president, Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA).

Resident doctors in the National Capital have been protesting for the past 15 days, leading to medical facilities being disrupted across hospitals.

The protests turned violent on Monday night when the junior doctors, who were on a march towards the Supreme Court, had been stopped by the Delhi Police. The situation descended into chaos, as doctors alleged they were lathi-charged by the authorities, a charge which has been denied by them.

Digging down, the resident doctors then refused to resume work till an apology was provided to them and on Tuesday, 28 December, resident doctors belonging to FORDA gathered in large numbers on the premises of Centre-run Safdarjung Hospital and raised slogans like 'We want justice'.

Patient care remained affected at three Centre-run facilities — Safdarjung, RML and Lady Hardinge hospitals and some other Delhi government-run hospitals too.

The Centre-run Safdarjung Hospital, which was the epicenter of the ongoing stir, witnessed chaos as the OPD counters remained shut. The doctors protested outside the emergency ward and all emergency services were obstructed. Even the ambulance services have been disrupted by the agitating doctors.

With inputs from agencies

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Sameer Wankhede's stint at NCB ends today: A look back at his controversy-filled service

The Narcotics Control Bureau Mumbai Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede's tenure ends today, 31 December.

Wankhede, a 2008-batch IRS officer had been on deputation with the NCB since September 2020.

As he bids adieu to the NCB, here's a look at his tenure, which was marked with a series of controversies, including his public spat with Nationalist Congress Party leader Nawab Malik.

Please read: Sameer Wankhede, top NCB officer behind Mumbai cruise drugs bust, has Bollywood connection of his own

Aryan Khan arrest and drug investigation

No case garnered as much attention as the arrest of Aryan Khan, the son of Shah Rukh Khan, in the drug raid. The case brought a lot of attention to Sameer Wankhede. It was him and his team that allegedly recovered drugs during a raid on a cruise ship off the Mumbai coast in October, following which Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan's son Aryan Khan was arrested with seven others.

During the course of the investigation, several allegations were levelled against Wankhede, accusing him of forgery and extortions.

In a series of tweets and comments, Nationalist Congress Party and senior Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik had also accused Wankhede of using forged documents to get a government job under the Scheduled Caste (SC) category. He also claimed that the senior NCB officer was a Muslim.

While Wankhede denied these allegations, his father filed a defamation suit against Malik.

Sushant Singh Rajput's death

In August 2020, he was loaned out to the NCB to probe the Sushant Singh Rajput drug case. Starting with actor Rhea Chakraborty, multiple high-profile Bollywood personalities were interrogated and arrested by the NCB under Wankhede.

It was Wankhede who was on the other side of the table when actors such as Deepika Padukone, Shraddha Kapoor and Sara Ali Khan were questioned by the NCB as part of the alleged drug nexus involving the film industry.

World Cup episode

Not many would know this but in 2011 when the Indian cricket team won the World Cup, the team had to make do with a replica of the trophy.

The original trophy was stuck at Mumbai airport customs for non-payment of a 35 percent duty on it. Wankhede had been an assistant commissioner at the airport customs at the time.

Customs stint

As the Assistant Commissioner of Customs, posted at Mumbai Airport, he had several run-ins with celebrities who were evading Customs duty.

He had detained actors Minissha Lamba and Anushka Sharma at the airport for not declaring that they were carrying gold and diamond-studded jewellery.

In July 2011, he had fined Shah Rukh Khan Rs 1.5 lakh at the airport for carrying excess luggage. The actor had arrived at Mumbai airport after a family vacation in Holland and London.

Encounters at Central Excise

In 2013, he served at the Central Excise department for a few months. In his short term there, he had memorable run-ins with several Bollywood bigwigs, such as Anurag Kashyap, Ram Gopal Verma and Vivek Oberoi. In August 2013, he imposed a fine of Rs 55 lakh on Anurag Kashyap for service tax evasion. A similar fine of Rs 40 lakh was imposed on Vivek Oberoi too, by Wankhede.

With inputs from agencies

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Omicron: You may forget the COVID-19 variant but here's why your T-cells won't

Countries are going into fresh curfews and restrictions are coming back again amid fresh surges under the shadow of the Omicron variant of the novel coronavirus. Public authorities everywhere are worried about health systems buckling under a load of severe cases, something that the likes of India especially can ill afford after the second wave in the middle of 2021 showed the kind of devastation that can occur if cases shoot up all of a sudden.

But some have sought comfort in the theory that Omicron, even if more transmissible, causes a milder infection than the Delta variant. The view that the immune system — prepped via either recovery from infection, or vaccination — can tackle the new variant has found support in a South African study that credits T-cells with putting up a robust defence against Omicron. But what are T cells?

What Has The Study Found?

Researchers in South Africa, which was the first to report the emergence of a new variant with an unprecedented number of mutations at the end of November 2021, said they have found that T cells — a part of the immune system — are able to successfully take on the Omicron variant.

“Despite Omicron’s extensive mutations and reduced susceptibility to neutralising antibodies, the majority of T cell response, induced by vaccination or natural infection, cross-recognises the variant," the researchers say in a paper that is yet to be peer-reviewed. Cross-recognition, or cross-reactivity, is the phenomenon where protection tailored to target a specific antigen is successful in beating back another as well.

Reports said that the researchers conducted test tube experiments in which they exposed copies of the virus to T cells from volunteers who had received either the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine, the two-dose regimen of the Pfizer-BioNTech jab or had not been vaccinated but recovered from a bout of Covid-19 infection with an earlier version of the novel coronavirus.

They found that even though Omicron’s mutations might be helping it to escape antibodies, which are described as being the body’s first line of defence against infection, the newest variant of concern (VoC) cannot escape the body’s second-line defence, the T cells. The researchers concluded that T cells were are highly effective at recognising and attacking the Omicron variant, thus preventing most infections from progressing to critical illness.

“Well-preserved T cell immunity to Omicron is likely to contribute to protection from severe Covid-19," they said.

What kind of defences does the immune system have?

While it might appear that the novel coronavirus has made it a habit to defy all kinds of evasive or safety measures, it turns out that there are, in fact, two layers of defences the immune system can present to a pathogen like the novel coronavirus or Sars-CoV-2.

The so-called first line of defence, says the World Health Organisation (WHO), is the body’s ‘innate immunity’, which is the “general immediate response to any infection".

Move past that and the virus encounters 'adaptive immunity', which is the “specific response to an infection" built via cellular response — the T cells — and the antibody response, which involves what are known as memory B cells.

If the innate immunity kicks instantly upon brush with a pathogen, the cellular and antibody response “usually starts after six to eight days", WHO says.

For people who have been vaccinated or have recovered from infection, their T and B cells, upon a subsequent encounter with the same virus, “respond rapidly and the immune system can effectively clear an infection before it causes disease". WHO adds that vaccines use this immune memory to protect us from infection.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), an agency of the European Union (EU), explains that after a bout of infection or vaccination, “it is the adaptive immune response that ideally delivers long-term protection". The memory B cells “produce different classes of antibody to neutralise the virus or virus-infected cells", while the memory T cells “support antibody production and also have a direct role in killing virus-infected cells".

So, what are T-cells?

The ‘T’ in T cells stands for thymus, which is the organ in which the cells’ final stage of development occurs. T cells are basically white blood cells that devise different means to counter specific diseases.

Experts at the Imperial College London said that while more research is needed “to fully understand the relationship between our T cells and immunity to Covid-19… early findings suggest that they may provide us with long-term protection against the disease".

“T cell responses could also help to explain why some people recover relatively quickly from Covid-19, but others continue to suffer chronic after-effects for months following infection," said Rosemary Boyton and Danny Altmann, both professors at the Imperial College London. They explain that T cells can play different roles, act either as “killer cells" that attack cells which have been infected with a virus, or as “helper cells" that support B cells to produce antibodies.

Noting that with other coronavirus infections like Sars and Mers, the assumption has been that T cell responses “offer far more durable protection", the duo said in August 2020 — after they had published a paper on T cell immunity and Covid-19 — that the “the good news is that most people who’ve been infected, from those who are hospitalised through to those who are asymptomatic, seem to have decent levels of T cell immunity".

Where do T-cells score?

Profs Boyton and Altmann said that T cells are able to mount “a very widely targeted immunity", that is, they can target “an array of different proteins made by the virus".

But while T cell responses can be long-lasting and more powerful, “the only catch is that researchers haven’t proved that T cells in their own right are protective". Further, while it is relatively simple to conduct as serological test to determine if the body has built up antibodies against a virus following infection or vaccination, “methods for T cell testing are reasonably high-tech hospital laboratory tests".

Antibodies, the first line of defence, are geared towards targeting the first line of attack of the virus, which in the case of the novel coronavirus is its spike protein, the spear-like structures studding its surface that it uses to invade and latch on to human cells.

The Imperial College experts said that “antibodies probably wane quite quickly, and it might only be possible to detect them eight to ten weeks after infection", which means that “you no longer have any immediate protection from the virus after that time".

Citing a study, ECDC says that “neutralising antibodies… are detectable within seven to 15 days of disease onset, and levels increase until days 14-22, before plateauing and then decreasing" but memory B cells “persisted for over 242 days post-symptom onset".

“Similarly, the development of memory T cells directed at non-surface Sars-CoV-2 proteins following infection or vaccination may offer a route to durable immunity where virus evolution leads to spike protein mutations that escape pre-existing neutralising antibodies," it adds.

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Drenched out: Unexpected torrential rain reminds Chennai of previous downpours in 2021

Tamil Nadu has had a very wet year and on the last day of 2021, the situation was no different as parts of Chennai and surrounding districts experienced very heavy rainfall, throwing life out of gear.

The sudden heavy rains on Thursday left three people dead and several others stranded on arterial roads as a result of traffic congestion. After the downpour started to intensify, the India Meteorological Department issued a red alert warning to Chennai, Tiruvallur, Kanchipuram, and Chengalpattu districts.

Take a look at the times when the city and the state experienced very heavy showers.

December floods

Parts of Chennai witnessed heavy rains on Thursday, 30 December.

Popular weather blogger Pradeep John said that the rainfall was unprecedented with many areas like Nungambakkam, Mambalam and MRC Nagar receiving over 100 mm in a short span of time.

The unprecedented rainfall led to mishaps and electrocution incidents that left three people dead and caused damages to buildings.

The water-logging led to traffic congestion, causing hardship for commuters who were unprepared for severe rainfall. Chennai metro rail extended services by one hour on Thursday to help stranded commuters. The last metro left by 12 am.

Four subways in the city were also shut in view of the heavy rains.

A red alert has been issued for four districts including Chennai, Kanchipuram, Thiruvallur, and Chinglepet.

S Balachandran, Deputy Director-General, IMD, was quoted as saying, “The interaction of easterly winds at lower levels and westerly winds at upper level has brought rain to the city. The rains in the city will continue till 3 January."

November rains

November 2021 was the wettest for Chennai since 2015. The observatory in Nungambakkam recorded 1044.3 mm of rainfall in November 2021 — just 4.5 mm short of the 1049 mm rainfall recorded in November 2015 — that caused unprecedented floods and inundated Chennai.

The intensity of the rains had paralysed the capital city, its adjoining districts of Chengalpattu, Thiruvallur and Kancheepuram and other districts. According to reports, as many as 15,016 people had been evacuated from low lying areas and accommodated in relief camps. Moreover, crops spread over 50,000 hectares in Tamil Nadu’s delta districts were damaged.

The observatories at Nungambakkam and Meenambakkam recorded 23 and 22 days of rainfal of 2.5 mm and above in November, double the average number of rainy days of 11.1 for the month considered the city's wettest.

Wet beginnings

The southern metropolis welcomed 2021 with heavy rains too. The city witnessed highest rains in the month of January in 100 years, not just surprising the citizens but also causing severe inconvenience to them.

Several major roads were full of water forcing motorists to wade through the water and causing traffic jams across the city.

On 5 January, the city had recorded 114.60 mm of rainfall in just seven-and-a-half hours between 8.30 am and 4 pm.
Independent weather blogger Pradeep John had said that the January rainfall was the highest recorded in the month of January in a century after 1915.

With inputs from agencies

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2022: The year that can make us ‘future proof’

The fortunes of a country, organisation or team are often intertwined with that of the leader. The two are difficult to separate. By all counts, 2021 was one of the most trying years for India in a long time. For the prime minister, the de-facto CEO of the nation, too it was a tough year when nothing seemed to be going right. When we exited 2020, after the holocaust of COVID-19, we thought the worst was behind us. Little did we anticipate what 2021 had in store. But, looking back, if one were to draw up a “balanced score-card” shorn of bias and prejudice, India has fared well in comparison to the rest of the world. Therefore, it is also not surprising that, at the end of the day, Narendra Modi’s own ratings remain higher than his peers across the world — much to the frustration of his detractors both in politics and the civil society.

However, this piece is not intended to be yet another Modi-Shah Nama. The more important question at this point is what we can expect in the year ahead — so as not to repeat the same mistakes of 2021 — if that is at all possible. If there is a lesson that we ought to have learnt from our two-year tryst with the pandemic it is, the only thing predictable is that nothing is, any longer, predictable. Though hindsight is said to be 20/20, the second wave of COVID-19 has shown the severe limitations of counterfactual analysis. Everything the experts said we should have done when the Wuhan virus was let loose upon the world two years ago, would not have protected us from the scourge of last year.

Similarly, as Omicron knocks at our door, the experience of the Western world which had to bear the initial brunt, shows old strategies may not be as effective. Even vaccination and boosters are no insurance against reinfection. Thus far, one can only hope against hope that the new variant is milder, even if more contagious than its precursors. So, like the virus, mankind too has to reinvent its game.

When coronavirus arrived, thinkers and trend-watchers indulged in frenzied crystal ball gazing to come up with ideas of a “new normal” in a post-Covid era. Most of those prophecies pertained to how we would live and work. While some of their prognosis may have turned out to be, at least partially, correct, many more have been miles off the mark.

The idea of “Work From Home” becoming the rule has been diluted with the concept of the “hybrid” workplace. But, air travel is back to old levels as clients and customers still prefer in-person or on-site interactions. Different sectors of the economy have reacted and responded in ways that were not expected, sometimes with pleasant surprises. In India, the rural economy has shown far greater resilience and spunk in the midst of apprehensions. Revenge buying during festivals notwithstanding fears of job and income loss flummoxed pundits. While digital transactions have taken off, the physical marketplace is far from dying.

Yet, changes are happening inconspicuously and imperceptibly that may be missing the naked and untrained eye. Epidemiologists and virologists, who once opined that pandemics appear and disappear with equal abruptness have now revised their prognosis and are saying viruses do not go away completely; they only recede over time in terms of severity and spread. So, we may not see the last of this micro monster any time soon. But, what happens in the interregnum? With the advent of AI, Robots and Technology, humanity may be in the throes of a tectonic shift without realising it that may sound like science fiction today but become reality sooner than we anticipate.

Yuval Noah Harari recognises these prospects to visualise what life would be for kids growing up today, 20 years from now when they would be in their prime. So, as parents, when we are fretting about when schools will restart putting an end to the trauma of online classes for them, students and teachers alike, it may be a good time to think about what kind of education we would like to give our children.

It is clear that the past will not for long be an indicator of the future. So, what kind of skills should we impart to the next generation? This isn’t relevant for the upper-class urban elite but society at large cutting across social strata. So, when politicians and economists clamour for more jobs, it is also important to reflect upon the jobs of the future so that we build age-appropriate competencies. Even politicians have to re-engineer their methods of connecting with stakeholders.

And, as for us adults, after two years of blaming everyone else, 2022 should be the year for looking inwards to see how we can make ourselves, our families and the society at large “future proof” as we wait for booster shots to make us Omicron proof.

The author is a current affairs commentator, marketer, blogger and leadership coach, who tweets at @SandipGhose. Views expressed are personal.

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How 2022 would witness further enhancement of India’s defence capabilities

December 2021 witnessed the most horrific helicopter crash which claimed the life of the nation’s first Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Bipin Rawat, alongside others. The last two months also saw growing terrorist incidents in the North East, including an ambush on an army convoy that claimed the life of a Commanding Officer of Assam Rifles, Colonel Viplav Tripathi, his family and four others.

The ambush in Nagaland’s Mon district which resulted in 14 dead in early December only proved that peace in the North East is still some distance away and tactical errors could alienate society. These could also lead to increased demands for the abolition of AFSPA, which could push back gains made over the last few decades.

In Jammu and Kashmir, while security forces achieve success regularly and the ceasefire continues to hold, targeting of innocents and unarmed police personnel continues. Protests during encounters to support trapped terrorists have almost ended. Infiltration has witnessed a drop. Though the situation has considerably improved, and tourism has increased, peace still eludes the region.

The standoff with China has entered the second winter. Increased troop deployment has become the norm and will remain even if peace is restored. Despite multiple rounds of talks all friction points have not been addressed and the trust deficit continues. This will flow into the coming year. Diplomatically, India’s relations with both neighbours, Pakistan and China remained cold in 2021.

During this year, capability enhancement was an ongoing process. For the IAF, 33 of the contracted 36 Rafale aircraft have already landed on Indian soil. The balance would arrive early next year. The second Rafale squadron has been activated at Hashimara in West Bengal. Tejas aircraft are being inducted and air power would witness a quantum leap. The HAMMER air to ground precision-guided weapon systems for the Rafale would arrive soon. The first battery of the S-400 missile system has reached India and is in the process of being deployed, adding to air defence capabilities. The majority of the balance systems are expected in 2022, with delivery completed in 2023.

The army finally saw the signing of the AK-203 assault rifle deal, which would be manufactured in Amethi under technology transfer. In addition, anti-drone systems, ammunition for tanks, loitering ammunition and man-portable air defence systems have been inducted. The artillery witnessed a quantum leap with multiple gun systems with longer ranges, accuracy and enhanced destructive power introduced. The army also issued a request for information to procure indigenously developed launchers, observer stations and additional loitering ammunition for its forces. The army aviation has expanded with aviation brigades under raising. Infrastructure and improved connectivity along the borders continue being developed at a rapid pace.

The Navy commissioned the first of its P 15 destroyers, Visakhapatnam, as also the fourth of the six indigenous Scorpene-Class Submarines. The second aircraft carrier, Vikrant, also built indigenously, is undergoing a second phase of sea trials. It is likely to be inducted into the navy by August 2022. The debate for the third aircraft carrier continues. The navy has obtained the first few MH 60R multi-role helicopters, the delivery for which will continue in 2022. It is currently seeking light helicopters.

With the testing of the AGNI-P medium-range ballistic missile, India has reduced the time needed for a nuclear launch. MIRV technology would be developed over the next two years. The AGNI V launch in Oct this year projected that India is no pushover and conflicts with India will have to be regionalised and kept below nuclear thresholds.

The new CDS is likely to be appointed shortly. He will be expected to fill the big boots left behind by General Bipin Rawat and pursue the process initiated for the creation of theatre commands. The defence minister had stated that the process will adhere to laid down timelines. However, discussions on structures and methodology for their creation would continue. The studies ordered on new theatre commands are expected to be finalised by mid-2022. The first theatre command may finally roll out in 2023.

Simultaneously, the new CDS would need to concentrate on the development of joint capabilities with the intention of maximising the bang for the buck. The first integrated capability development plan, replacing individual service capability development programmes, is expected to be released in 2022. Emphasis on indigenisation would remain the order of the day and the next list enhancing indigenous products to 65 percent of capital procurement can be expected to be issued in 2022. India cannot continue banking on import technologies.

With the COVID-19 scenario showing no signs of receding, the economy is unlikely to revive to the level that additional funds may be allocated for defence. This would impact defence preparedness. It would require astute handling by those at the helm to balance the capability development of the three services alongside infrastructure enhancement.

On the western front, infiltration attempts would continue, so would violence in the Valley. Pakistan would attempt to re-ignite terrorism south of Pir Panjal. Support to terrorist groups will be boosted by the change in government in Kabul and its ability to reign in anti-Pakistan terrorist groups, sparing Pakistan forces to redeploy along the Indian border. While terrorists would lack capabilities to challenge security forces, attacks on innocent civilians to create an environment of fear would be the order of the day.

Narco-terrorism will continue being the means utilised by Pakistan to fund ongoing terrorist activities. Continued pressure on overground workers and recruiters would keep numbers joining terrorist ranks low. An added role for security forces could possibly be the conduct of elections in Jammu and Kashmir as the delineation exercise is nearing completion.

Pakistan would continue exploiting Indian cultural and religious fault-lines through disinformation campaigns on social media to enhance tensions within the country, resulting in India employing its diplomacy to dent adverse global fallouts. Punjab, as it moves towards elections, may witness added incidents of terrorism.

Tensions and enhanced deployment would remain along the LAC. Troops would remain on alert to thwart any attempts at infiltration and salami slicing. New Chinese land laws and increased border settlements would pose a security risk. China would attempt to push Myanmar-based terrorist groups to launch increased attacks seeking to ensure that the army withdraws additional troops deployed along the LAC for counter-terrorist actions. It would keep moving drugs into the North East to fund anti-national activities. Salami slicing actions along the LAC would remain localised as China would avoid entering into a military confrontation.

Whether the current government remains in power in Pakistan is a moot question. There are already indicators that there is likely to be a change. This may bode well for India. With China focused on the Beijing Winter Olympics, further Chinese offensive actions may be expected post conclusion of winters. Whether the leaders of the RIC (Russia-India-China) group meet in 2022, remains a question mark. If they do, it could ease tensions along the LAC.

The year 2022 would witness further enhancement of India’s defence capabilities. Cohesion between the three services would improve. Changes in structures, including within the Department of Military Affairs, resulting in increased effectiveness of the forces may occur. External land threats would remain as in 2021. India’s missile capabilities, which would be the main deterring factor for its adversaries, would witness substantial growth. Diplomatically, India’s relations with Pakistan and China would remain strained, while globally they would witness a leap forward.

The author is a former Indian Army officer, strategic analyst and columnist. Views expressed are personal.

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Tamil Nadu: Red alert issued for 4 districts including Chennai; heavy downpour causes traffic snarls, flooding

Heavy to very heavy rains pounded Chennai and the suburbs on Thursday, inundating roads and subways and three persons were killed in rain-related incidents.

Three persons (two women and a boy) died of electrocution, Minister for Revenue and Disaster Management, KKSSR Ramachandran said.

It was a repeat of scenes witnessed last month as motorists struggled to manoeuvre their vehicles on flooded roads and subways while showers led to traffic congestion in the city and suburbs.

The intense spell may turn out to be one of the heaviest witnessed in recent years, while police said three subways were closed and in view of inundation and traffic moved at a snail's pace in at least 14 arterial city thoroughfares.

Greater Chennai Corporation said that over 145 pumps were used to de-clog inundated locations.
Metrorail authorities said services were extended by an hour from 11 pm onwards in view of rains so as to help passengers reach their destinations safely.

Starting from noon, most areas in the city and suburbs began receiving rainfall and it was heavy to very heavy in several locations.

According to India Meteorological Department (IMD), the highest rainfall of 17.65 cm was recorded in MRC Nagar. It was 14.65 cm and 10 cm at Nungambakkam and Meenambakkam respectively.

In other areas, including those falling under neighbouring Tiruvallur and Kancheepuram districts, the showers ranged from 1 cm (Madhavaram) to 10 cm (Nandanam). The rainfall data was recorded between 8.30 am and 6.15 pm today.

Isolated heavy to very rainfall activity is likely to continue over north coastal Tamil Nadu and adjoining areas of south coastal Andhra Pradesh during next three days and decrease thereafter, the IMD said.

According to the state government, a red alert has been issued in Chennai and surrounding districts of Kanchipuram, Thiruvallur and Chinglepet.

Weather enthusiasts made claims in the social media vis-a-vis the intensity of rains and on showers beating previous records.

One such claim said Thursday's rains in Chennai was the heaviest for a single day in the month of December after 2015.

IMD officials, however, did not confirm such claims.

Officials said a conclusion could be arrived at only after looking into actual rainfall for the 24-hour period and following a scrutiny of previous data.

Enthusiast Pradeep John (Tamil Nadu Weatherman) tweeted, "Mylapore crosses 200 mm. One of the craziest spells of lifetime. Chennai City (Nungambakkam) beats 2015 annual rainfall."

In another tweet, he said,"2015 annual rainfall is overtaken by 2021 & is the 3rd wettest year of all time behind 2005 & 1996."

He had also given data for Chennai city (Nungambakkam) to support his claim.

Tamil Nadu witnessed heavy rainfall during the north east monsoon (October-December) monsoon and according to the weather office, presence of 'convective cells,' led to rainfall.

A weather forecast by the IMD (issued 12.30 hours on 30 December) had said: "Thunderstorm with moderate rain is likely to occur at a few places over coastal Tamil Nadu. Thunderstorm with moderate rain is likely to occur at many places over Villupuram, Cuddalore and Delta districts, Puducherry and Karaikal. Light rain is also likely to occur at isolated places over Interior Tamil Nadu districts."

With inputs from PTI

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China challenge hangs like a dark cloud but India will increasingly strive to be a rule shaper, not rule taker

On Tuesday, while dedicating to the nation 24 new bridges and three new roads built by the Border Roads Organization in areas of Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh, Union defence minister Rajnath Singh said “in today’s uncertain environment, the possibility of any kind of conflict cannot be ruled out.” His reference to China wasn’t to be missed. These infrastructural developments are mostly girding India’s border regions with Beijing.

One of these roads, the Chisumle-Demchok Road in eastern Ladakh, the world’s highest motorable road, is built at an altitude of more than 19,000 feet. The Chinese have built so-called “civilian settlements” in the disputed region over which India also claims sovereign control, and Demchok has seen frequent clashes between troops in the past.

In this regard, Singh’s pointed remarks are worth noting: “Infrastructure development in border areas also strengthens our strategic capabilities. As we move forward in strengthening the border infrastructure, we must also strengthen our surveillance capacity in the same manner.”

Singh is not a man of casual remarks. The mention of possible “conflicts” and the resolve to strengthen India’s infrastructural and surveillance capabilities are a warning that over 100,000 troops from both sides continue facing off in the high Himalayas across the entire LAC amid another brutal winter. The Galwan clash of May 2020 that resulted in the deaths of 20 Indian soldiers and at least four Chinese troops is a reminder that the chance of an escalation arising even from a miscalculation remains high.

All past agreements and protocols have been torn away and the entire LAC is now ‘live’. Both nations have deployed state-of-the-art arms and equipment. In India’s case, it means recently acquired US-made weaponry and operationalisation of a full Mountain Strike Corps. The situation imposes steep costs on both sides, but it is particularly painful for India whose GDP is five times lesser and defence budget is a third of China’s.

Any review of India’s foreign policy in the past year and projection for the year ahead must be put in the context of the ongoing crisis that poses a challenge to India’s grand strategy. If India’s rise is predicated on creating a favourable external environment that allows India the time, space and resources to build capabilities to accelerate its own progress, then a resolution of the dispute with China is a prerequisite.

As we come to the end of 2021, the prognosis for Sino-Indian bilateral ties is grim. The year started with some promise. In February, Indian and Chinese troops disengaged from the northern and southern banks of Pangong Tso and Kailash Range followed by the withdrawal of troops from Gogra in eastern Ladakh in the first week of August.

At that stage, it wasn’t unreasonable to expect gradual disengagement from the rest of the conflict zones such as the crucial Depsang Bulge and Karakoram Pass in the north, as well the Demchok area where Chinese “civilians” remain pitched in tents.

Despite the optimism that prevailed, it was worth noting that China appeared unwilling to take forward discussions on further disengagement, and the “no-patrolling buffer zones” post disengagement were “largely coming up in what India claims to be its territory.”

Throughout the dispute, it was evident that India is more interested in the two in pragmatic management of bilateral ties that it believes will carry lesser costs than a confrontational posture — without compromising on sovereign interests.

The pragmatic settlement of a dispute that has introduced hostility and distrust in bilateral ties will carry some costs, but it will be “less than the costs of a difficult relationship,” as external affairs minister S Jaishankar writes in his book, The India Way. The focus right now for India is finding the right terms for a pragmatic settlement while managing the expenses of that strategy by limiting expectations and audience costs.

As it grapples with tensions along the land border while trying to position itself as a trade hub and fulcrum of international commerce, the trouble for India is that China doesn’t appear to be interested in a pragmatic settlement.

An invisible switch was flipped post the Gogra disengagement in August. China seemed to have drawn a red line, perhaps driven by a calculation that India has no more leverage to force a return to April-May 2020 status quo.

Beijing’s behaviour betrayed a belief that it has the wherewithal to force India to accept the new border settlement on its preferred terms. Satellite imagery showed China is building several villages and accommodations in the uninhabited, disputed tri-junction areas between India, Bhutan and China.

On 23 October, amid the protracted border tension with India, China promulgated a new ‘land border law’ that aims to solidify its claims on disputed areas by framing the peripheral regions as “sacred and inviolable”. The wording of the law, which comes into force from 1 January, is kept deliberately vague to encourage variable interpretations and create space for coercive actions.

Researcher Shuxian Luo points out in her column for Brookings Institution, the “law prohibits the construction of permanent facilities near China’s border without permission from Chinese authorities”, potentially challenging India’s rapid upgradation of infrastructure along the border. Also, as Shuxian observes, “while border town development resonates with China’s domestic agenda of “developing the border regions, enriching the local people” (兴边富民) articulated in 1999… it may be perceived as legitimizing a land version of the “salami-slicing” tactic that China is seen as employing in its maritime disputes.” 

India’s reaction was predictable. “China’s unilateral decision to bring about a legislation which can have an implication on our existing bilateral arrangements on border management as well as on the boundary question is of concern to us.” In view of the overlapping claims along the 3,488-kilometer LAC that serves as the de-facto border, India said: ”Such unilateral move will have no bearing on the arrangements that both sides have already reached earlier,” and the external affairs ministry spokesperson underlined that “we also expect that China will avoid undertaking action under the pretext of this law which could unilaterally alter the situation in the India-China border areas.” 

India’s concern isn’t misplaced. Framing the dispute as a sovereignty issue puts it beyond the pale of border negotiations that involve rational give-and-take associated with historical legacies. In effect, China is telling India that it is disinterested in any further discussions on restoring the status quo on disputed areas that it now controls, and India’s sovereign claims on the peripheral territories are therefore notional — a proposition that is obviously unacceptable to India.

On Thursday, China’s ministry of civil affairs declared that it has issued “standardised” names for 15 places in India’s state of Arunachal Pradesh (which it calls Zangnan or South Tibet) to be used henceforth on official Chinese maps — prompting an acerbic response from India that “Arunachal Pradesh has always been, and will always be an integral part of India. Assigning invented names to places in Arunachal Pradesh does not alter this fact.”

What are India’s options as China consolidates control over areas on which New Delhi’s sovereign claims overlap? It is noticeable that a significant section of India’s strategic community prioritizes conflict resolution over the settlement of dispute.

According to former NSA Shivshankar Menon, who had played an integral part in past Sino-Indian border agreements, “New Delhi and Beijing need to improve communication, including by engaging in a high-level bilateral strategic dialogue to identify each other’s core interests, determine which are complementary and which are in conflict, and then decide how to manage their relationship. Such a process would not immediately restore trust between India and China, now a scarce commodity. But it could solidify the uneasy calm and prevent a slide into conflict.”

But adopting a strategic framework that works and engaging in a meaningful dialogue won’t be easy, especially when China is keen on leveraging its considerable national power and enormous capabilities for strategic purposes.

That creates a gap which India, at this stage of its development, cannot surmount. Quite naturally, the dialogue mechanism as it exists right now seems to have broken down. After the 13th round of talks on 11 October, India pointed out that the “situation along the LAC had been caused by unilateral attempts of the Chinese side to alter the status quo and in violation of the bilateral agreements.”

China responded by saying that India is making “unreasonable and unrealistic demands” and “China’s determination to safeguard national sovereignty is unwavering and we hope that the Indian side will not misjudge the situation.” It isn’t difficult to see how this argument could be bolstered by the newly promulgated ‘land border law.’

For an aspirational nation that is climbing up the global hierarchy and setting the agenda for its rise, increasing rapidly its capabilities and focusing on developmental priorities at home, the China question hangs like a dark mist that clouds future vision.

In October, at a DD News conclave, foreign minister Jaishankar said that both nations should “give each other space” and “mutual respect”. Batting for a multipolar Asia, the minister said: “A lot of the dynamics between India and China would be how well they understand each other, how much they respect each other, how sensitive they are to each other, as I said, do they give each other enough space and recognize that sometimes… they will have different interests, and learn to live with it.”

India’s clamour for space and respect is understandable because it feels that China is constricting both in seeking to stunt India’s growth even as it scripts its own meteoric rise. A sense of pessimism in the minister’s speech was evident a month later at an event when he said, “We are going through a particularly bad patch in our relationship because they have taken a set of actions in violation of agreements for which they still don’t have a credible explanation and that indicates some rethink about where they want to take our relationship, but that's for them to answer…”

That the frost in the relationship still couldn’t prevent a record rise in bilateral trade (46.4 percent year-on-year from January to November 2021) and a concomitant rise in India’s trade deficit (up 53.49 percent year on year)  point to China’s deep relevance to global and Indian economy.

This adds to India’s constraints because while it needs resources, capital, technology and best practices to increase capabilities and engage with the world in its own terms, India cannot decouple itself from China despite stating clearly that bilateral ties will be affected if peace and tranquility in border regions is disturbed. As I had argued previously, India’s main leverage vis-a-vis China (or what New Delhi considers as its chief leverage) — the restoration of normalcy in bilateral ties — isn’t working.

Also read: India, China border emerging as a bigger flashpoint than Taiwan for a short, sharp war; all bets are off​

Under the circumstances, what we are likely to witness in the coming year is India’s continued move towards issue-based coalitions and even more perceptible shift from a policy of non-alignment to tightening further its strategic relations with the United States, Europe and Indo-Pacific countries. Towards this end, India is developing rapidly its security and military ties with the US, whom Jaishankar has described as “undeniably the premier power of our times.”

The direct threat emanating from China rise — given the fact that Beijing seems to have decided that as a classic ‘land-sea’ power it needs to pull its weight equally on the continental front as it has on the maritime frontier — may compel India to strike more counterbalancing coalitions and leverage its own position as a democratic counterweight to China to address the bilateral imbalance arising from the power differential with Beijing.

It has helped India that Europe, long peripheral to India’s security calculus, is taking a greater interest in Indo-Pacific if only to invest in resilient supply chains and ensure the free flow of trade. The European Union finally came up with an Indo-Pacific Policy in September this year that reassesses its engagement strategy with the nation. The EU approach to Indo-Pacific may not be overtly military-security-centric as the US policy is, yet it still presents Europe as a key player in maintaining and shaping the order that is facing enormous geopolitical turbulence from China’s assertive rise.

This presents a unique opportunity for India that looks to harness more multilateral and plurilateral partnerships to leverage its position. As German Marshall Fund fellow Garima Mohan points out, “an important dimension of the Indo-Pacific is the emergence of flexible coalitions among like-minded partners, particularly the Quadrilateral between the US, India, Japan and Australia. While outlining its approach to China, the EU strategy also opens the possibility and willingness to work with other partners and coalitions. It explicitly mentions working with Quad working groups on vaccines, climate change and emerging technologies.”

While the EU-India relationship is yet to fully develop despite the convergence of interests in the Indo-Pacific, New Delhi has been rapidly scaling up its partnership with nations such as France and the UK. With France, specifically, whose defence minister Florence Parly arrived earlier this month for the annual defence dialogue, India’s level of “trust, confidence and comradery” (as Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan writes in The Diplomat is worth noting.

In an interview with Times of India, Parly said: “France is a nation of the Indo-Pacific, and India is our foremost strategic partner to keep this region free, open, and prosperous. And I am glad that our other partnerships in the region are also gaining strength, such as the one with the UAE whose armed forces will now also be flying Rafale jets.”

Alongside, the hardening of public opinion against China has also enabled India’s leadership to take concrete steps vis-à-vis its relationship with the US that though falls short of a formal alliance yet has “some characteristics of an alliance”. To quote Brookings scholar Tanvi Madan in War on the Rocks, “Faced with Beijing’s increasing assertiveness and the recognition that it cannot tackle this challenge on its own, Delhi has chosen to deepen ties with partners that can help it build Indian capabilities, offer alternatives in the Indo-Pacific, and maintain a favorable balance of power in the region. The United States is seen as particularly useful…”

It is evident that in the New Year, in an Asia that it defines as multipolar, India will not be just a rule-taker, it will strive to become a rule shaper. From that prism, India will continue to leverage its external partnerships to buy time for internal development and seek to meet the China challenge on its own terms.

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Thursday, December 30, 2021

From 350 to 961: India’s Omicron tally rises by over 600 cases in just six days

The new highly-mutated variant of coronavirus, Omicron, is rapidly spreading in India and there’s nowhere to hide.
As of 30 December, the nation’s Omicron case tally has risen to 961, with 263 cases in Delhi and 252 in Maharashtra. Of the 961 cases, 320 Omicron cases have recovered or been discharged.

With Punjab reporting its first Omicron case after a 36-year-old man, who came from Spain earlier this month tested positive for the new variant, the number of states and union territories where this highly contagious strain has been detected rose to 22.

With the Omicron spread, India’s COVID-19 tally has also risen exponentially and on Thursday, the caseload had seen a jump of 13,154. The last time the daily rise in cases was over 10,000 was on 26 November — with 10,549 infections.
Take a look at where the country stands in regards to coronavirus and the new variant.

New Delhi: Delhi on Wednesday reported a massive jump in daily COVID-19 infections with 923 fresh cases, the highest since May 30 and 86 percent up from a day earlier.

After six months, the positivity rate crossed 1 per cent as it was recorded at 1.29 per cent. On December 20, there were only 91 COVID-19 cases in the national capital and the figure climbed to nearly 1,000-mark with fresh 923 infections on Wednesday.

The city also recorded 238 Omicron cases on Wednesday. There were 165 cases of the new variant a day earlier.
For those still wondering about the rise in cases, here's a simple fact: In a week's time, the positivity rate of coronavirus cases jumped to 1.29 per cent from 0.19 per cent in Delhi.

The spike in cases has also led the authorities to impose a 'yellow alert' in the national capital, which has led to the closure of schools and education institutions, restaurants to function at half capacity, closure of cinema halls and theatres and public transport such as the Metro to function at 50 percent seating capacity.

Incidentally, six days ago, Delhi's Omicron count stood at 67 and the overall daily COVID-19 count was 180.

Maharashtra: The western state reported 85 fresh cases of the Omicron variant of coronavirus, the highest single-day tally recorded so far by any state in the country, taking the overall count to 252.

Mumbai has seen an uptick in COVID-19 cases for the past few days and Wednesday was no different. Mumbai reported 2,510 fresh COVID cases, the highest daily addition since 8 May, and one death, taking its tally to 7,75,808 and toll to 16,375, a civic official said.

The spike in the country's financial capital has got pronounced since 20 December, when just 283 cases were reported. Tuesday had witnessed 1,377 cases in the metropolis, and Wednesday's figure was a jump by over 80 percent, an official pointed out.

Gujarat: Officials in the state are on high alert after it reported 548 new COVID-19 cases crossing the 500-mark for the first time after more than six-and-a-half months, raising its overall tally to 8,30,505, while one more patient succumbed to the infection in the state.

Gujarat has witnessed a sharp jump in its daily COVID cases over the last few days, recording 177 infections on Sunday, 204 on Monday, 394 on Tuesday and now 548. Also, the state ranks third in regards to Omicron infections — 97.

Karnataka: Karnataka recorded 566 new cases of which, Bengaluru alone accounted for 400, pushing the total number of active cases in the state to 7,771.

The state's Omicron count also stands at 43 after five new cases were detected on Wednesday.

The spike in cases has forced authorities to clamp down on New year celebrations after 10 pm in public places.

Punjab: The state reported its first Omicron case. According to officials, Punjab's positivity rate stands at 0.3 percent and has increased slightly over the past few days.

Tamil Nadu: Tamil Nadu reported 739 new COVID-19 cases on Wednesday, an increase from 619 cases on Tuesday. Additionally, with 11 more infections, the state's Omicron count is now at 45.

With inputs from agencies

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