GUIDELINES ISSUED FOR GRADED LIFTING OF CURBS FROM APRIL 20
The centre on Wednesday issued guidelines effective April 20 lifting
restrictions on a range of activities in the rural and agriculture sector,
manufacturing in SEZs and industrial zones, and e-commerce operations.
Strict restrictions will, however, continue in COVID-19 containment zones
notified by respective states.
A close reading of the guidelines indicates the government's keenness to
support the rural poor and urban migrant workers who have suffered the most
due to stringent lockdown curbs.
Clearly, almost all activities in rural areas have been approved - MNREGA
works, MSMEs, food processing, construction of roads, buildings, irrigation
and industrial projects, work in factories outside the limits of
municipalities and municipal corporations, brick kilns, highway dhabas, tea,
coffee and rubber plantations, gaushalas, and Common Service Centres. Even
within the limits of municipalities, construction projects where workers are
available on site, have been permitted.
Given that the trajectory of the pandemic is different for each state, they
have been given more control of Covid containment measures to be followed.
States will have the liberty to notify Covid containment zones depending
upon their assessment of the scale of the outbreak in an area or region.
This would be judged on the basis of number of cases in an area or growth
rate of the infection.
In allowing these new activities, the MHA has asked certain social
distancing and hygiene norms to be followed. These include no more than 50
per cent workers or employees to be allowed in factories or manufacturing
units, all equipment entering the premises to be sanitised, premises to be
disinfected regularly, no overlapping of shifts and staggered lunch breaks.
It has also asked all factories to provide medical insurance to all workers.
"Manufacture of IT hardware and of essential goods and packagings are also
allowed. Coal, mineral and oil production are permitted activities. It is
expected that the industrial and manufacturing sectors will see a revival
with these measures, and will create job opportunities while maintaining
safety protocols and social distancing.
Services provided by self-employed people, including electrician, IT
repairs, plumbers, motor mechanics and carpenters will also remain
operational.
The activities prohibited across the country include travel by air, rail and
road; operation of educational and training institutions; industrial and
commercial activities; hospitality services; all cinema halls, shopping
complexes, theatres, etc., all social, political and other events, and
opening of all religious places/ places of worship for members of public,
including religious congregations.
NO NATIONAL PLAN FOR COVID-19 IN PLACE, SC NEEDS TO STEP IN: KAPIL SIBAL
Arguing that it is not known whether the government has prepared or
activated a national plan to deal with the coronavirus outbreak as mandated
by the Disaster Management Act of 2005, Congress leader and former Law
Minister Kapil Sibal on Wednesday said it is time for Supreme Court to step
in and ask the government to disclose what it has done under the Act.
In the absence of a plan, he said there is confusion and ad hocism.
"The mere announcement of the Prime Minister to say that people must
sacrifice.people will sacrifice provided you provide them with livelihood.
People can't sacrifice in a vacuum. They are stranded, students are stranded
in Kota. People are now coming on to the streets in Surat and in Bandra. we
hear horrendous, heart-rending stories about people going without food and
they're desperate to go back to their families. The address of the Prime
Minister is not going to resolve all those issues. Not words but action on
the ground is what will resolve issues," he said.
He said the preparation of the government could be gauged by the fact that
senior officials were quoted as saying in the second week of March that the
epidemic is not a health emergency. "And then on March 24, without
consultation with the state governments, the PM announced a national
lockdown."
"I don't think they were prepared for it. After all, they did not screen
anybody from flights that were coming from other parts of the world. They
only stopped the flights from China.," Sibal said.
'STOP ADDING RELIGIOUS COLOUR': INDIA SLAMS US BODY
India on Wednesday came down hard on the US Commission on International
Religious Freedom for its criticism of the country based on a "misguided"
report that Covid-19 patients in a hospital in Ahmedabad were segregated on
the basis of their religious identities.
The US Commission expressed concerns over the way India is fighting the
coronavirus pandemic following a media report that a government-run hospital
in Ahmedabad segregated the infected patients on the basis of their
religions.
"As if its peremptory commentary on religious freedom in India is not
enough, the USCIRF is now spreading misguided reports on the professional
medical protocols followed to deal with spread of Covid-19 in India," MEA
Spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said. He said no segregation of patients is
being done in the civil hospital on the basis of religion as clarified by
the Gujarat government.
Srivastava said the USCIRF "must stop adding religious colour to our
national goal of fighting the pandemic and distract from larger efforts".
COVID-19 DASHBOARD - (Nos. IN INDIA / Nos. WORLDWIDE)
(Indian data from covid19india / and World Data from
worldometers.info/coronavirus/ )
Total Cases 12,370 (+883) / 20,83,304 (+85,166)
Total Deaths 422 (+29) / 1,34,616 (+8,009)
Total Recovered 1,508 (+147) / 5,10,341 (+31,600)
Active Cases 10,440 (+707) / 14,38,347 (+45,557)
Serious / Critical Cases (Not Available) / 51,142 (-466)
Top 6 impacted nations so far: (Country / Total No of cases / Deaths)
USA 6,44,089 / 28,529
Spain 1,80,659 / 18,812
Italy 1,65,155 / 21,645
France 1,47,863 / 17,167
Germany 1,34,753 / 3,804
UK 98,476 / 12,868
Top 15 impacted Indian States so far: (Total No. of Confirmed case / No. Of
Deaths)
Maharashtra 2,916 / 187
Delhi 1,578 / 32
Tamil Nadu 1,242 / 14
Rajasthan 1,076 / 11
Madhya Pradesh 938 / 53
Gujarat 766 / 33
Uttar Pradesh 735 / 11
Telangana 650 / 18
Andhra Pradesh 525 / 14
Kerala 387 / 2
Jammu and Kashmir 300 / 4
Karnataka 279 / 12
West Bengal 213 / 7
Haryana 204 / 3
Punjab 186 / 13
Bihar 72 / 1
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
======================
CHINA DIDN'T WARN PUBLIC OF LIKELY PANDEMIC FOR 6 KEY DAYS
In the six days after top Chinese officials secretly determined they likely
were facing a pandemic from a new coronavirus, the city of Wuhan at the
epicenter of the disease hosted a mass banquet for tens of thousands of
people; millions began traveling through for Lunar New Year celebrations.
That delay from January 14 to January 20 was neither the first mistake made
by Chinese officials at all levels in confronting the outbreak, nor the
longest lag, as governments around the world have dragged their feet for
weeks and even months in addressing the virus.
President Xi Jinping warned the public on the seventh day, Jan. 20. But by
that time, more than 3,000 people had been infected during almost a week of
public silence, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated
Press and expert estimates based on retrospective infection data.
"This is tremendous," said Zuo-Feng Zhang, an epidemiologist at the
University of California, Los Angeles. "If they took action six days
earlier, there would have been much fewer patients and medical facilities
would have been sufficient. We might have avoided the collapse of Wuhan's
medical system."
Other experts noted that the Chinese government may have waited on warning
the public to stave off hysteria, and that it did act quickly in private
during that time.
ONLY A COVID-19 VACCINE WILL ALLOW RETURN TO 'NORMALCY', SAYS UN CHIEF
A Covid-19 vaccine may be the only thing that can bring back "normalcy," UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Wednesday, hoping for just that
before the end of the year.
"A safe and effective vaccine may be the only tool that can return the world
to a sense of 'normalcy,' saving millions of lives and countless trillions
of dollars," he added during a video conference with the 50 or so African
countries that are members of the United Nations.
He called for its accelerated development and accessibility to all, adding
it must have a "universal global benefit" and "allow us to control the
pandemic."
"We need an ambitious effort to ensure that international stakeholders
operate through a harmonized, integrated and leveraged approach to maximize
the speed and scale needed for the universal deployment of such a vaccine by
the end of 2020," he insisted.
THE REST
========
170 DISTRICTS ARE HOTSPOTS, ANOTHER 207 POTENTIAL AS CASES NEAR 12,000 MARK
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare on Wednesday listed 170 districts
across the country as COVID-19 hotspots or 'red zone' areas - 123 districts
with "large outbreaks", 47 with "clusters".
The state governments have been asked to implement containment measures in
these areas.
Another 207 districts have also reported COVID-19 cases, but are not
hotspots yet. Health Ministry Joint Secretary Lav Agarwal said the district
authorities have been told to implement cluster containment plans in these
areas as they could develop as potential hotspots.
Asked about the categorisation as hotspots, Agarwal said these are districts
where either the number of cases or the rate of growth is high.
While 28,941 samples were tested in the last 24 hours, a total of 2,74,599
samples have been tested so far.
GOVERNMENT OFFICES TO REOPEN WITH SENIOR STAFF FROM APRIL 20
All central ministries and departments and their subordinate offices will
start functioning from April 20 with 100 per cent attendance of officials in
the rank of Deputy Secretary and above, while 33 per cent of the rest of the
staff are to be present in the offices, as per new norms of relaxation of
Covid-19 lockdown rules issued by the government Wednesday.
In states, departments like police, home guard, fire department, prisons,
municipal bodies, civil defence, will also function with 100 per cent
attendance without any restrictions.
The notification, however, clarifies that delivery of public services are to
be ensured and whatever staff is needed for that should be deployed.
SLOW TESTING PIPELINE AS BIG A WORRY AS KIT DELAY
India carried out close to 27,000 Covid-19 tests on Wednesday and added 22
new labs in the last two days, ramping up efforts to speed up a process that
is crucial to determine the extent of the outbreak but has suffered from
long delays due to several bottlenecks.
Almost as much as kits, capacity and protocols -- which have been areas of
debate and concern for India right through the last month when Covid-19
cases began to rise -- speed of testing is a critical area where India may
be falling behind, with a large backlog of tests awaiting results at the end
of every working day.
India's testing relies at the moment on the RT-PCR process, which is the
most definitive diagnostic test for the virus that causes Covid-19. This
involves swabbing a person for samples, which is then processed at a lab to
if it matches the molecular signatures established with the virus.
The process is meant to take 7-8 hours. But collecting the sample and
collation of results - including accounting for all negative results as well
- leads to about 24-36 hours from when a person's samples are collected to
the result reflecting in the official tally. In some cases, as the number of
tests grow and testing centres get backed up, it can take up to 2-3 days for
a result to get reported in certain states.
Quick testing is key to India's containment strategy, according to experts,
and will eventually determine when and what parts of the country are
exempted from a lockdown that has halted economic activity and stranded
hundreds of thousands of migrant workers.
17 HELD IN UP'S MORADABAD FOR ATTACK ON QUARANTINE TEAM
Seventeen people were arrested in Uttar Pradesh's Moradabad city on
Wednesday after health workers and policemen were attacked in Nawabpura
locality while trying to quarantine the family members of a patient who died
of COVID-19.
Seven people - a doctor, three medical workers and three policemen - were
injured in the attack labelled an "inhuman crime" by Chief Minister Yogi
Adityanath.
UP CM Yogi Adityanath said the attackers would be booked under the National
Security Act (NSA). "The attack on the members of the health, police and
sanitation department in Moradabad is an inhuman crime which is condemnable.
Action under NSA will be taken against them," he said, adding that the
police had been directed to identify the attackers, and that the "cost of
property damage will also be recovered from the accused".
'MIGRANT WORKERS' STIR PART OF CONSPIRACY TO DISLODGE UDDHAV GOVT,' SAYS
MAHARASHTRA MINISTER
The Maha Vikas Aghadi ruling coalition in Maharashtra has alleged a
political conspiracy behind the protest by migrant workers outside Mumbai's
Bandra railway station on Tuesday.
"We are investigating as to who was behind the protests. There is also a
social media campaign holding the blame it on the government and a call for
the imposition of President's Rule in the state," Public Works Department
Minister Ashok Chavan said in a video conference with journalists.
He added that the migrant workers were misled into holding the protests.
Revenue Minister Balasaheb Thorat, who also addressed the video conference,
said the railways added to the confusion by allowing people to book tickets
even during the lockdown.
The Maharashtra Government also filed a FIR against Rahul Kulkarni, Marathi
news channel ABP Majha's correspondent in Osmanabad for flashing the news
about train services being started in major stations of the country.
However, the reporter took to social media stating that his story was based
on the documents prepared by the railways.
ACTIVISTS CONDEMN "DISCRIMINATION AGAINST MUSLIM VENDORS"
The National Hawkers Federation, the National Coalition for Inclusive and
Sustainable Urbanisation and a group of activists, academics and lawyers on
Wednesday in a statement condemned the reported "discrimination against
Muslim vendors" during the lockdown.
"We are alarmed and disheartened to learn that hawkers continue to be
intimidated and physically attacked in various parts of the country...These
incidents seem to have been spurred by a maelstrom of disinformation and
propaganda campaigns being run by motivated agents and spread amongst people
through social media... The rumours and hoaxes particularly seem to be
targeting those belonging to the Muslim community," the statement read.
It said Muslim vendors were being discriminated against and being stopped
from selling fruits and vegetables in some non-Muslim localities.
"Such behaviour by citizens should be punishable by law as set forth in
Section 153(A) and Section 295(A) of the Indian Penal Code. To prevent this
there should be a dedicated police helpline number for Muslim vendors or
essential service providers so that they can launch complaints of
discrimination and prohibition," it said.
3,500 SIGN FOR DROPPING CHARGES AGAINST SCRIBE
Demanding the Uttar Pradesh Government to drop criminal charges against 'The
Wire' and its founding editor Siddharth Varadarajan, a statement by eminent
Indians yesterday urged the Central and state governments not to use the
pandemic as a cover to trample upon the freedom of media.
A statement signed by over 3,500 jurists, academics, actors, artists,
writers and people from all walks of life stated that a medical emergency
should not serve as a pretext for the imposition of a de facto political
emergency.
The Yogi government had filed two FIRs on April 1. The police had accused
The Wire of spreading panic with a report claiming that the Chief Minister
Yogi Adityanath attended a religious event on March 25 in Ayodhya on the
occasion of Ram Navmi, when a national lockdown was in force.
The Wire has held that his presence was a matter of public record and
knowledge. A sentence in an article in the portal had wrongly attributed a
statement made by Acharya Paramhans to the Chief Minister, which was
retracted and a corrigendum issued.
On April 10, a police team descended at Mr. Varadarajan's residence to serve
him a notice for appearance on April 14. "The manner in which the U.P.
government and its police have been pursuing this with a single-minded
agenda smacks of vindictiveness," the group said in a statement.
PICHAI, NADELLA AMONG 6 INDIAN-AMERICANS ON TRUMP'S LIST OF ECONOMIC
ADVISERS
US President Donald Trump has named six Indian-American corporate leaders,
including Sunder Pichai from Google and Satya Nadella from Microsoft, to his
Great American Economic Revival Industry Groups formed to revive the
American economy ravaged by the coronavirus pandemic.
Trump has roped in over 200 top American leaders from various industries and
sections to create nearly a dozen and half different groups, who will advise
him and offer recommendations on how to revive the American economy, which
has hit an unprecedented ebb in just a few weeks due to the deadly
coronavirus.
In addition to Pichai and Nadella, the president has named IBM's Arvind
Krishna and Micron's Sanjay Mehrotra to the Tech Group. Other members of the
group are Apple's Tim Cook, Oracle's Larry Ellison and Facebook's Mark
Zuckerberg.
Indian-American Ann Mukherjee from Pernod Ricard has been named to the
manufacturing Group, which among others include Caterpillar's Jim Umpleby
III; Tesla's Elon Musk, Fiat Chrysler's Mike Manley, Ford's Bill Ford and
General's Mary Barra.
Ajay Banga from Mastercard has been named to the Financial Services Group
along with, among others, Al Kelly from Visa, Blackstone's Stephen
Schwarzman; Fidelity Investment's Abigail Johnson and Intuit's Sasan
Goodarzi.
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THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
We speak of educating our children. Do we know that our children also
educate us? - Lydia Sigourney
OFF TRACK
Can you explain to me how this lipstick got on your collar?" the suspicious
wife sneered.
"No, I can't," the husband replied. "I distinctly remember taking my shirt
off."
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