8 OPPN MPS SUSPENDED FOR ‘UNRULY BEHAVIOUR’ ON SUNDAY IN RS
The face-off between the govt and the Opposition over the passage of two key
farm Bills in Rajya Sabha escalated on Monday with Chairman M Venkaiah Naidu
suspending eight MPs “for the remaining part of the current session” on a
motion brought in by the govt citing “unruly behaviour”.
The suspended MPs — Congress’s Rajeev Satav, Syed Naseer Hussain and Ripun
Bora; Trinamool CongressÂ’s Derek OÂ’Brien and Dola Sen; AAPÂ’s Sanjay Singh;
and CPI(M)’s K K Ragesh and Elamaram Kareem – refused to leave the House,
leading to ruckus and multiple adjournments.
After Rajya Sabha was adjourned for the day, the suspended MPs sat on a
dharna in front of the Gandhi statue at Parliament, where they continued to
protest through the night.
Eighteen parties have written to President Ram Nath Kovind asking him not to
give his assent to the farm Bills. They have also sought an audience with
him. In a detailed memorandum, they have recounted the events that unfolded
in Rajya Sabha Sunday and the reason for moving a no-confidence resolution
against Deputy Chairman Harivansh.
With both the govt and the Oopposition refusing to budge, the rest of the
monsoon session faces the threat of a washout as far as Rajya Sabha is
concerned.
The Congress Monday said it will launch a nationwide agitation against the
farm bills, and also initiate a campaign to collect two crore signatures of
farmers and the poor against these proposed legislations.
The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has announced its full support to the farmersÂ’
strike on September 25 against agriculture Bills passed in Parliament and
has directed all its leaders and volunteers to for human chains across
Punjab on September 24.
The DMK and its allies on Monday decided to stage protests across Tamil Nadu
on September 28 to urge the Centre to take back the farm Bills. A meet held
at DMK headquarters, presided by the Dravidian party chief M K Stalin, said
the protest is to condemn the ruling AIADMK govt as well which is lending a
helping hand to the Centre on the matter. The passage of the Bills has once
again put a question mark on “federalism” besides pushing poor farmers, a
resolution adopted at the meeting said.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday alleged that the two
farm Bills passed in Rajya Sabha would deprive farmers of MSP and will lead
to famine in the country.
FARM BILLS: GOVT ON FRONT FOOT
In the face of intensifying protests against its contentious farm Bills
ahead of the Bihar elections, the Govt and the BJP have kickstarted a
campaign to counter Opposition claims that the laws are “anti-farmer”.
In the Lok Sabha Monday, Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar
announced an increase in Minimum Support Price (MSP) for six rabi crops. He
said the decision proves the Govt is committed to retaining the MSP
mechanism and “clearing the lie” spread by the Opposition.
“I want to tell farmers that when the Bills for agrarian reforms came,
Congressmen across the country said that after their passage, the MSP will
be abolished and APMC will be abolished. I want to tell the country that the
MSP will continue, the APMC will continue,” Tomar told Lok Sabha.
TomarÂ’s announcement came hours after Prime Minister Narendra Modi
reiterated, during a virtual address at a foundation event for highway
projects in Bihar, that the Farm laws were “historic and necessary”. Taking
a swipe at the Congress, he said: “After these historic changes in the
agriculture sector, after such a big system change, some people saw that it
is slipping out of their grip. So now, these people are trying to mislead
farmers on MSP.”
Following widespread protests by farmers in Punjab and Haryana, BJP has
asked its MPs, leaders and functionaries to go on the offensive and explain
the salient features of the Bills.
MARATHON LAC TALKS WITH CHINA
Eleven days after their Foreign Ministers reached an agreement in Moscow to
“continue dialogue” and “quickly disengage” troops to “ease tensions” along
the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh, Indian and Chinese military commanders
returned to the talks table Monday to try and resolve the situation.
Until late in the night, the meeting which began in the morning — the sixth
round of discussions at the Corps Commander-level since the start of the
standoff early May — was still on at Moldo, the border meeting point on the
Chinese side near Chushul.
The Indian team, led by XIV Corps Commander Lt General Harinder Singh,
included Lt General PGK Menon from Army headquarters. He is tipped to take
charge of the Leh-based Corps in October, when the former retires.
Also in the team was Naveen Srivastava, Joint Secretary (East Asia) in the
Ministry of External Affairs. He has been dealing with his Chinese
counterparts at the meetings of the Working Mechanism for Consultation &
Coordination on India-China Border Affairs (WMCC) to dial down tensions.
This is the first time that an official of the MEA is part of the military
talks between the two sides.
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
======================
75TH U.N. ANNIVERSARY: SECY GEN LISTS ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES
On Monday morning, the 193 members of the United Nations adopted a
Commemorative declaration marking 75 years since the victors of World War II
met in San Francisco to bring the organization into being. Speaking at the
United NationsÂ’ 75th anniversary commemoration, Secretary General António
Guterres said the world had a surplus of multilateral challenges but not
enough multilateral answers to these.
“Never in modern history have we gone so many years without a military
confrontation between the major powers, this is a great achievement of which
Member States can be proud and which we must always strive to preserve,”
U.N. Secretary General António Guterres said.
Guterres said much remained to be done, however. He called gender inequality
the “greatest single challenge for human rights” globally. Biodiversity
“collapsing”, hatred that was engendering geopolitical tensions and
increasing the threat from nuclear weapons, were among the challenges the
Secretary General listed.
“And the COVID-19 pandemic as laid bare the world's fragilities. We can only
address them together today. We have a surplus of multilateral challenges
and the deficit of multilateral solutions,” Gutteres said.
Addressing the General Assemble, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on that
the original aim with which the United Nations was built still remains
incomplete as it needs ‘reformed multilateralism’ to address today’s
challenges. “The declaration acknowledges the need for reform in the United
Nation itself. You cannot fight todayÂ’s challenges with outdated
structures,” the PM said.
TRUMP, REPUBLICANS KEEN ON A NEW JUDGE BEFORE ELECTIONS
President Donald Trump said Monday he expects to announce his pick for the
Supreme Court on Friday or Saturday, after funeral services for Ruth Bader
Ginsburg and just days before the first presidential election debate.
Trump told “Fox & Friends” that he is pushing for a confirmation vote before
Election Day. Democrats have howled in protest, pointing to the hypocrisy of
Republicans for rushing through a pick so close to the election after
refusing to do so for President Barack Obama in 2016.
Democratic nominee Joe Biden has urged a delay in a nomination, declaring
that the next president should fill the seat.
Trump disparaged reports that Ginsburg had told her granddaughter it was her
wish that a replacement justice not be confirmed until the inauguration of a
new president. Trump said he thought his Democratic political foes were
behind the report.
The president and his fellow Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell who will control the timing of the confirmation hearings and
vote, have pushed back against the 2016 comparison, noting that Trump could
win again and saying that, unlike four years ago, the same party controlled
both the White House and the Senate.
“We have the presidency and the Senate and we have plenty of time,” Trump
said. “I think that would be good for the Republican Party and I think it
would be good for everybody to get it over with.”
Trump allowed that he would accept a vote in the lame duck period after
Election Day but made clear his preference would be that it occur by Nov. 3.
THE REST
========
EIGHT CHILDREN AMONG 16 DEAD IN BHIWANDI BUILDING COLLAPSE
At least 16 people, including eight children, were killed after a portion of
a three-storey building in Bhiwandi, 50 km from Mumbai, collapsed early
Monday.
As many as 20 people were pulled out of the rubble by rescue workers.
Officials believe 26 people are still trapped.
Commissioner of Bhiwandi-Nizampur Municipal Corporation, Pankaj Aashiya,
said rescue operations are likely to continue on Tuesday for which back-up
teams have been called from Mumbai and Pune.
Officials from the Bhiwandi-Nizampur Municipal Corporation said the building
was structurally unstable and notices had been served to the residents in
the past but they refused to vacate it.
DELHI RIOTS CONSPIRACY CHARGESHEET: ‘OBJECTIVE WAS TO UPROOT ELECTED GOVT’
“From the day that the results of the 2019 Parliamentary elections were
declared, the tone and tenor of the public utterances of the key
conspirators of the present case has shown a clear streak of affinity
towards violence which had started playing out in their minds.”
This is how the Delhi Police Special Cell concludes its 2,695-page “final
report” in the chargesheet filed against 15 people under the stringent UAPA
in a case of alleged conspiracy related to the February riots in Northeast
Delhi.
The chargesheet includes the names of former AAP councillor Tahir Hussain,
Pinjra TodÂ’s Devangana Kalita and Natasha Narwal, former DU student
Gulfisha, Jamia Millia Islamia PhD student Meeran Haider and Jamia
Coordination Committee media coordinator Safoora, among others.
The final report states that “internationally, terrorist activity is defined
as the use of violence to force a govt to accept/submit to political
demands”.
It then goes on to explain how a “terrorist act” is defined in the Indian
context as per section 15 of the UAPA. “In this case, the use of firearms,
petrol bombsÂ… causing death of a police personnel and grievous injuriesÂ…
with intention to overawe the state and force the central govt to withdraw
CAA, NRC clearly falls in the definition of terrorist activity,” it states.
The report concludes that the “end objective of all the conspirators had
conspired was to uproot a lawfully elected govt by sheer use of engineered,
vicious and visceral communal violence”.
The report also claims that a “select group of digital media houses” created
a media frenzy.
AREN’T WE CURBING FREE SPEECH IF WE TAKE ‘UPSC JIHAD’ SHOW OFF AIR — SC ASKS
PETITIONERS
The Supreme Court Monday sought to know from those opposing the telecast of
Sudarshan News’ controversial program ‘Bindas Bol‘ whether a blanket
injunction could be issued against the remaining episodes of the show that
claims to expose “infiltration of Muslims” in the civil services. “Can we
issue a blanket injunction? If it is done, then arenÂ’t we restraining a
person from expressing views protected as free speech under the
Constitution?” the court wondered.
A three-judge bench, led by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, posed the query to
advocate Shadan Farasat when he argued in favour of a permanent injunction
against the show.
Appearing for three students of Jamia Millia Islamia, Farasat said ‘Bindas
Bol‘ insinuated that the participation and success of Muslims in the civil
services and the society in general was a terror operation to take over the
bureaucracy.
Four episodes of the Bindas Bol series had already been aired before the
apex court blocked its telecast. There are 10 episodes left to be aired in
the series.
The central govt has, meanwhile, filed a fresh affidavit before the top
court, asserting that any endeavour to regulate television channels or
series has to begin with the role of “uncontrolled” digital media. The print
and electronic media “rarely cross the line” by the very nature of their
composition but the digital media is “completely uncontrolled” and “remains
unregulated” by and large, the Centre said.
FCRA BILL PASSED IN LOK SABHA, CIVIL SOCIETY SAYS IT WILL THROTTLE NGOs
The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2020, was passed by
the Lok Sabha on Monday, even as civil society organisations asked the govt
to stop looking suspiciously at them.
Amid concerns raised by various Opposition members about the Bill, Minister
of State for Home Nityanand Rai said the legislation was not against any
religion or NGO.
Replying to the discussion on the Bill, the minister asserted that
legislation is necessary for an Atmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliant India) and
that it will help curb misuse of foreign funds.
The Bill seeks to make it mandatory for office bearers of any NGO to provide
their Aadhaar numbers at the time of registration.
Among other provisions, the Bill proposes to enable the Centre to allow an
NGO or association to surrender its FCRA certificate, capping administrative
expenses at 20 per cent, from the current 50 per cent. It also seeks to
mandate civil society organisations to have SBI accounts at a Delhi branch
(to be notified later) to receive foreign funds, and prohibits one
FCRA-registered society to transfer funds to another which is also
recognised by the Act.
Biraj Patnaik, executive director at National Foundation for India, said:
“The FCRA Bill is an emergency era law.”
In a statement, Voluntary Action Network India, the body representing Indian
voluntary development organisations, urged the Centre to refer the Bill to a
select or a standing committee of Parliament.
It said: “The Bill throttles the spirit of cooperation that had been ushered
in earlier this year by the positive role played by development
organisations in mitigating the lockdown and the Covid-19 pandemic by
virtually making it impossible for NGOs to function.” These amendments
assume that all NGOs receiving foreign grants are guilty, unless prove
otherwise, it said.
FIRST STUBBLE FIRES START TO SHOW UP ON NASA MAP
Farmers have begun burning crop residue in parts of Punjab and Haryana,
satellite images from the United States space agency Nasa has shown,
suggesting an early start to a practice that plunges much of the region,
including Delhi, into a pollution crisis in the run up to the winter.
The practice is linked to paddy farming in both these states. As a cheap and
quick solution, farmers set fire to vast spreads of crop residue in order to
turn their farm around for winter sowing.
But this spews clouds of smoke in the atmosphere, which coupled with typical
pre-winter conditions – slow, cooling winds that settle down closer to
settlement – covers cities in a thick blanket of toxic smoke. The problem
has turned into a public health crisis in recent years, with vulnerable
people being advised to stay indoors.
This year, it is likely to exacerbate Covid-19 outbreak. Research from
Italy, one of the first coronavirus hot spots, showed that air pollution was
linked to worse mortality rates. The virus, in severe cases, causes
respiratory distress -- a condition that can be made worse to exposure to
polluted air.
TAJ MAHAL REOPENS FOR TOURISTS AFTER SIX MONTHS
More than six months after it was closed down for visitors due to Covid-19,
the Taj Mahal Monday finally opened its door for the tourists again.
Keeping the ongoing pandemic in mind, the number of visitors per day has
been restricted to 5000 by authorities. The tourists are also allowed to be
taken in two-shifts of 2,500 each with the tickets being sold online or
through the ASI phone app only.
An official from the ASI said that as many as 500 tourists visited the
monument during the first shift on Monday. Visitors were also asked to
follow all guidelines issued by the Centre such as social distancing and
hand sanitisation and were thermally screened before they were allowed to
enter the premises.
RICHA CHADHA REFUTES PAYAL GHOSHÂ’S ALLEGATIONS
Actor Richa Chadha on Monday issued a statement after actress Payal Ghosh
mentioned her name in the #MeToo allegations against filmmaker Anurag
Kashyap. In her statement issued through her advocate, Richa has “condemned
the act of her name being dragged into the controversy”. “No woman should
misuse the liberty to harass other women with unsubstantial or non existent,
false and baseless allegations,” Richa said.
While accusing Anurag Kashyap of sexual harassment in 2014-15, Ghosh rnamed
Richa Chadha, claiming that “Anurag told her that it was fine and some 200
actresses who worked with him were also intimate with him.
IPL: DEBUTANT PADIKKAL, CHAHAL GET RCB OFF TO WINNING START
Young opener Devdutt Padikkal starred on debut before Yuvzvendra Chahal
produced a crafty spell to set up a 10-run win for Royal Challengers
Bangalore in their opening IPL contest against Sunrisers Hyderabad here on
Monday.
Padikkal (56 off 42, 8 fours) displayed his highly rated talent with a
half-century before AB de Villiers (51 of 30) provided the much needed final
flourish to take RCB to 163/5 after they were sent in to bat.
Chasing 164 for a win, SRH were all out for 153 in 19.4 overs.
The Sunrisers were on course for a comfortable chase with Jonny Bairstow (61
off 43) looking in ominous touch. Chahal (3/18) removed the Englishman and
Vijay Shankar in successive balls in the 16th over to tilt the game
decisively in his team's favour.
INDICATORS
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55.41, Aus$- Rs. 53.29
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/US$
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Silver (Rs. Per KG) 67,800
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
You can't have a better tomorrow if you are thinking about yesterday all the
time. - Charles F. Kettering
OFF TRACK
A new business was opening and one of the owner's friends wanted to send him
flowers for the occasion.
They arrived at the new business site and the owner read the card, "Rest in
Peace."
The owner was angry and called the florist to complain.
After he had told the florist of the obvious mistake and how angry he was,
the florist replied, "Sir, I'm really sorry for the mistake, but rather than
getting angry, you should imagine this... somewhere there is a funeral
taking place today, and they have flowers with a note saying,
'Congratulation on your new location.'''
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