COMMANDERS IN TALKS OVER DIFFERENCES: INDIAN ARMY ON LAC SITUATION
Indian Army Sunday said Indian and Chinese military commanders have been in
talks to address differences over the boundary in eastern Ladakh where
tensions have been running high between the two sides. India has built up
its reserves in depth, besides deploying sufficient troops and equipment,
against the Chinese troops on the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
The Army statement came in the wake of a video clip doing the rounds of
social media, which showed an exchange between Indian and Chinese troops.
Asserting that the video "was not authenticated", it urged the media "not to
air visuals that are likely to vitiate the current situation on the
borders".
"Differences are being addressed through interaction between military
commanders, guided by established protocols on management of borders between
the two countries. We strongly condemn attempts to sensationalise issues
impacting national security. The media is requested not to air visuals that
are likely to vitiate the current situation on the borders," it stated.
NEPAL GOVT TABLES BILL IN PARLIAMENT TO AMEND CONSTITUTION FOR NEW MAP
The Nepal government on Sunday tabled a Constitution amendment Bill in
Parliament aimed at altering the country's map amid a border dispute with
India. Minister for Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs Shivamaya
Tumbahangphe, on behalf of the government of Nepal, tabled the Bill, a day
after the main Opposition Nepali Congress also backed the legislation.
Nepal recently released the revised political and administrative map of the
country, laying claim over the strategically key areas of Lipulekh, Kalapani
and Limpiyadhura.
India reacted angrily to the move saying such "artificial enlargement" of
territorial claims will not be acceptable and asked the neighbouring country
to refrain from such "unjustified cartographic assertion".
MANN KI BAAT: PM MODI LAUDS PEOPLE-DRIVEN CAMPAIGN AGAINST COVID-19
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday stressed on keeping up the vigil
against coronavirus even though there is a gradual easing of lockdown
restrictions, underlining, that the combat against the pandemic would be a
long haul.
In his monthly radio programme, 'Mann Ki Baat', Modi said that the disease
and its concomitant challenges are new and gigantic to the world community,
including India. He commended the people of India for fighting the disease
unitedly with a fortitude which has helped contain it in a country as
diverse and big as India.
"There is no section in our country unaffected by the difficulties caused by
the affliction - the most gravely affected by the crisis are the
underprivileged labourers and workers. Their agony, their pain, their ordeal
cannot be expressed in words. Who amongst us cannot understand and feel what
they and their families are going through," Modi said.
"The campaign against the disease is people-driven," Modi said, adding that
ennobling and admirable features of the Indian society have surfaced starkly
during the national health crisis.
TWO PAK OFFICIALS CAUGHT SPYING, ASKED TO LEAVE
The government on Sunday said that two officials at the Pakistan High
Commission in New Delhi were caught spying and have been asked to leave the
country within 24 hours.
This is the first time after four years that such an incident of expelling
officials of the Pakistan High Commission has taken place. In October 2016,
India and Pakistan had expelled officials from each other's missions for
spying.
"The Government has declared both these officials persona non grata and
asked them to leave the country within 24 hours," the MEA statement said.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry condemned the Indian government's decision and
said, "Two staff members of the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi were
lifted by the Indian authorities today (May 31) on false and unsubstantiated
charges. They were, however, released on intervention by the High
Commission. We condemn the detention and torture as well as threatening and
pressuring of the diplomatic officials to accept false charges."
COVID-19 DASHBOARD - (Nos. IN INDIA / Nos. WORLDWIDE)
(Indian data from covid19india / and World Data from
worldometers.info/coronavirus/ )
Total Cases 1,90,611 (+8,795) / 62,63,064 (+1,06,636)
Total Deaths 5,408 (+223) / 3,73,858 (+2,940)
Total Recovered 91,855 (+4,919) / 28,46,523 (+1,11,745)
Active Cases 93,348 (+3,653) / 30,42,683 (-8,049)
Serious / Critical Cases - N.A. / 53,409 (-97)
Top impacted nations so far: (And some of India's Neighbours)
Country, Total Cases / Total Deaths / Recovered Cases / Active
Cases
1 USA 18,37,170 / 1,06,195 /
5,99,867 / 11,31,108
2 Brazil 5,14,849 / 29,314 /
2,06,555 / 2,78,980
3 Russia 4,05,843 / 4,693 /
1,71,883 / 2,29,267
4 Spain 2,86,509 / 27,127 /
1,96,958 / 62,424
5 UK 2,74,762 / 38,489 / N/A
/ N/A
6 Italy 2,32,997 / 33,415 /
1,57,507 / 42,075
7 India 1,90,609 / 5,408 /
91,852 / 93,349
8 France 1,88,882 / 28,802 / 68,355
/ 91,725
9 Germany 1,83,494 / 8,605 /
1,65,200 / 9,689
10 Peru 1,64,476 / 4,506 /
67,208 / 92,762
11 Turkey 1,63,942 / 4,540 /
1,27,973 / 31,429
12 Iran 1,51,466 / 7,797 /
1,18,848 / 24,821
18 Pakistan 69,496 / 1,483 / 25,271
/ 42,742
21 Bangladesh 47,153 / 650 / 9,781
/ 36,722
98 Sri Lanka 1,633 / 10 / 801
/ 822
Top 18 impacted Indian States so far: (Total No. of Confirmed case / No. Of
Deaths)
State / Confirmed Cases / Active Case / Recovered /
Deceased
Maharashtra 67,655 / 36,040 / 29,329 /
2,286
Tamil Nadu 22,333 / 9,400 / 12,757 /
176
Delhi 19,844 / 10,893 / 8,478 / 473
Gujarat 16,794 / 5,837 / 9,919 / 1,038
Rajasthan 8,831 / 2,604 / 6,032 /
195
Madhya Pradesh 8,089 / 2,897 / 4,842
/ 350
Uttar Pradesh 8,075 / 3,015 / 4,843 /
217
West Bengal 5,501 / 3,027 / 2,157 /
317
Bihar 3,807 / 2,264 / 1,520 / 23
Andhra Pradesh 3,571 / 1,169 / 2,340
/ 62
Karnataka 3,221 / 1,950 / 1,218 /
51
Telangana 2,698 / 1,188 / 1,428 /
82
Jammu and Kashmir 2,446 / 1,491 / 927 /
28
Punjab 2,263 / 231 / 1,987 / 45
Haryana 2,091 / 1,023 / 1,048 /
20
Odisha 1,948 / 813 / 1,126 / 9
Assam 1,340 / 1,147 / 186 / 4
Kerala 1,270 / 670 / 590 / 10
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
======================
US CITIES UNDER CURFEW AFTER FRESH ANTI-RACE PROTESTS, LOOTING
Authorities imposed curfews in the capital Washington and other major US
cities Sunday to prevent fresh rioting after anti-racism protestors again
took to the streets to voice their fury at police brutality.
As the Trump administration branded instigators of five nights of rioting
domestic terrorists, there were more confrontations between protestors and
police and fresh outbreaks of looting.
Local leaders appealed to citizens to give constructive outlet to their rage
over the death of an unarmed black man, while night-time curfews were
imposed in cities such as Washington, Los Angeles, Houston and Minneapolis,
which has been the epicenter of unrest.
In the Los Angeles suburb of Santa Monica, looting was reported at stores in
a popular beachside shopping center with people running out of stores that
had been broken into.
Officials in LA -- a city scarred by riots over the police beating of Rodney
King nearly three decades ago -- imposed a curfew from 4:00 pm Sunday until
dawn.
The sight of protesters flooding streets fueled a sense of crisis in the
United States after weeks of lockdowns due to the coronavirus pandemic,
which has seen millions thrown out of work and has disproportionately
affected minority communities.
The closely packed crowds and many demonstrators not wearing masks sparked
fears of a resurgence of COVID-19, which has killed more than 100,000
Americans.
President Donald Trump yesterday blamed the protests on Antifa, a loosely
organized leftist movement that is a frequent target of conservative
critics, and said he would declare the group to be terrorists. His political
advisers believe the move pressures his re-election challenger, former Vice
President Joe Biden, to either agree with the president -- splitting with
the demonstrators -- or side with people that some White House officials
regard as rioters.
SPACEX DELIVERS ASTRONAUTS TO SPACE STATION
SpaceX delivered two astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA
on Sunday, following up a historic liftoff with an equally smooth docking in
yet another first for Elon Musk's company.
With test pilots Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken poised to take over manual
control if necessary, the SpaceX Dragon capsule pulled up to the station and
docked automatically, no assistance needed.
It was the first time a privately built and owned spacecraft carried
astronauts to the orbiting lab in its nearly 20 years. NASA considers this
the opening volley in a business revolution encircling Earth and eventually
stretching to the moon and Mars.
The docking occurred just 19 hours after a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket blasted
off Saturday afternoon from Kennedy Space Center, the nation's first
astronaut launch to orbit from home soil in nearly a decade.
THE REST
========
FINALLY, CHARTERED FLIGHTS FOR CREW CHNAGE ARE APPROVED
In a major breakthrough, the government has allowed ship and crew managers
to send and bring back Indian seafarers on chartered flights to facilitate
staff swap on board ships at foreign ports.
A 189-seater SpiceJet plane took off from the Chhatrapati Shivaji
International Airport in Mumbai last evening for Doha, carrying 63 seafarers
of six companies. From Doha, they will fly out to different destinations to
join ships.
Doha and Colombo will be the hub airports through which Indian seafarers
will be sent to join ships or repatriated after signing off from ships.
Colombo has agreed to allow Indian seafarers to stay for five days if they
are travelling to Colombo to join a ship, and seven days if they are
travelling out of Colombo on a chartered flight, provided flights are
confirmed.
Qatar has permitted seafarers a 22-hour stay at the airport, but the short
stay time is insignificant as Qatar is connected to 39 countries, which are
in turn connected to several other places.
Captain Sanjay Prashar, Managing Director, V R Maritime Services, who pushed
the government for permission to run chartered flights for the shipping
companies, said: "The government has streamlined the procedures for
chartered flights; now, this will be the norm". "It is up to the shipping
companies and their associations to come together and ensure that resources
are fully utilised so that the per ticket cost for travellers is
reasonable," he said.
Due to the delay in getting approvals, the Mumbai-Doha-Mumbai flight on
Sunday will return empty. The chartered flight operators have offered to
carry 180 Indian nationals from Doha free of cost in order to utilise
capacity and resources.
STATES DIFFER ON INTER-STATE TRAVEL, SO CONFUSION PERSISTS
After the Centre allowed lifting of restrictions on inter-state movement of
people, states like Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, and those in the Northeast
on Sunday decided to continue with the curbs.
Several others like Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana and Telangana announced they
are allowing inter-state movement as part of easing of restrictions under
the ''Unlock-1'' after such travel was banned for over two months due to the
coronavirus lockdown, though some of them have put their own conditions.
The Karnataka government, while allowing inter-state movement, said separate
orders will be issued by Health and Family Welfare Department for people
coming to the state.
The UP government said there is no ban on interstate travel but left it to
the district administrations of Ghaziabad and Noida to take a call on the
movement of people from adjoining Delhi. The state has not restarted its
inter-state bus service.
The Punjab government said there would be no restriction on inter-state
movement of people and it would require no separate permission or e-permit.
In a televised address, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan
said people won''t need e-passes for inter-state travel in personal vehicles
from Monday but a decision on re-starting inter-state public transport will
be taken on June 7.
In neighbouring Chhattisgarh, the state government said inter-state travel
without requisite permission from authorities will continue to remain
prohibited.
The Odisha government said it has initiated the process to pave way for
resumption of inter-state bus services. Letters have been sent to all the
states with which Odisha has bus connectivity seeking their response for
resumption of inter-state services.
The discordant stance taken by the states on the issue is similar to the
confusion that prevailed when the Centre allowed resumption of domestic air
services on May 25, as the states came out with their own set of rules for
passengers.
GUJARAT HIGH COURT NOW PRAISES STATE GOVT: 'WE WOULD HAVE BEEN DEAD'
Just over a week after a division bench of the Gujarat High Court made some
scathing observations on the state government's handling of the Covid-19
situation, a bench headed by Chief Justice Vikram Nath has said that "if the
state government would not have been doing anything, as alleged, then
probably, by now, we all would have been dead".
On May 22, a division bench headed by Justice J B Pardiwala, and including
Justice Ilesh Vora, had said the state government was trying to
"artificially control" the Covid-19 situation and called the Civil Hospital
in Ahmedabad "as good as a dungeon". This bench had been hearing a PIL on
Covid-related issues since May 11.
On May 28, a new bench - headed by Chief Justice Nath and including Justice
Pardiwala - was notified to hear the PIL.
A day later, this bench said: "Our message is loud and clear. All those who
cannot extend their helping hand in this difficult time. have no right to
criticise the functioning of the state government. If the state government
would not have been doing anything, as alleged, then probably, by now, we
all would have been dead. All that we are doing in this litigation is to
keep the state government conscious and active by reminding it of its
constitutional and statutory obligations".
It said that highlighting just the shortcomings of a government "only
creates fear in the minds of people." Saying that its orders "are being
misused for some oblique motive", the court asked everyone to "be very
careful" before commenting on its orders pertaining to the PIL.
GOVT GEARS UP FOR AUTOPSIES OF COVID-19 VICTIMS
India is finally gearing up for autopsies on patients succumbing to Covid-19
infection to understand the biology of the disease and the range of organ
damage it causes.
In all recent meetings of Covid-19 national task forces, the government is
learnt to have nudged the centres of medical excellence in India - AIIMS,
New Delhi, AIIMS-like institutes and PGI Chandigarh - to start conducting
postmortems on Covid-19 deceased and advance the knowledge on
pathophysiology of the infection.
The urgency stems from new knowledge acquired through postmortem
examinations in other countries that show Covid-19, primarily seen as a
respiratory illness, is now involving other organs, including the brain and
heart.
ICMR STANDS BY UTILITY OF HCQ
A new Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) study has found that a high
dosage of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) correlates with a lower Covid-19
infection rate in health care workers. Drawing from a government database of
about 1,000 healthcare workers (HCW) who have tested positive for the
infection, the study also found that there was no significant association
between HCQ and adverse drug reactions.
"Noticeably, six or more prophylactic doses of HCQ used by HCWs has a
remarkably high (>80%) protective effect against SARS-CoV-2 infection. The
potential anti-viral and anti-inflammatory properties of HCQ, together with
the low cost of therapy, excellent oral bio-availability, high tissue
concentrations in the lungs relative to the plasma levels and acceptable
safety profile lend support to this assertion."
The study stands in contrast to a recent WHO decision to halt their HCQ
trial because a study published in medical journal The Lancet found that the
drug had no therapeutic benefits and even increased mortality in Covid-19
cases.
Meanwhile, a letter signed by Shekhar Mande, Director-General, CSIR; Anurag
Agrawal, physician and Director, Institute of Genomics and Integrative
Biology - a CSIR institute - as well as Rajeeva Karandikar, Director,
Chennai Mathematical Institute, says the WHO's decision to suspend trials of
the drug was a "knee-jerk" reaction. "The observational data is sloppy, and
the statistics underlying them is faulty. There is no doubt that it will not
stand the test of time."
INSURANCE REGULATOR STEPS IN FOR STANDARD COVID-19 PRODUCT
With COVID-19 patients running up high bills in private hospitals, the
Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has asked
the General Insurance Council - the apex body of general insurers - to
arrive at a 'standardised cost structure' for treatment of the pandemic.
As of now, private hospitals which have Covid-19 wards charge high rates
with treatment costs ranging from Rs 3-8 lakh. "While government hospitals
do not have adequate bed capacity to deal with patient load, the common man
is unable to bear the expenses of a private hospital and especially a super
speciality for Covid-19 treatment.
The approximate cost for 15 days would be around Rs 3.5 lakhs - Rs 9.5 lakhs
depending on the grade of the hospital and city," the proposal said. There
have been instances when patients received bills of even upto Rs 16 lakh
bill for Covid treatment in private hospitals.
AKSHAY KUMAR DENIES FLYING SISTER, HER FAMILY AMID LOCKDOWN
Actor Akshay Kumar on Sunday dismissed reports that he booked a special
chartered flight for his sister's family amid the coronavirus-led lockdown
and threatened "legal action" against such misinformation.
There were reports that Akshay booked a flight for Alka Bhatia---"his sister
and her two kids, a daughter and a son, and her house help" to Delhi from
Mumbai, in which no one else was allowed to travel. Taking to Twitter,
Akshay dubbed the news as "fake" and said his sister hasn't travelled
anywhere since the lockdown was announced.
"This news about me booking a charter flight for my sister and her two kids
is fake from start to end. She has not travelled anywhere since the lockdown
and she has only one child!" the actor wrote rubbishing the reports.
"Contemplating legal action, enough of putting up with false, concocted
reports," he added.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
You can clutch the past so tightly to your chest, that it leaves your arms
too full to embrace the present. - Jan Glidewell
OFF TRACK
A guy had just returned from two weeks of vacation. He asked his boss for
two more weeks off to get married.
"What!" shouted the boss? "I can't give you more time now. Why didn't you
get married while you were off?"
"Are you nuts?" he replied. "That would have ruined my whole vacation."
Comments (0)