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  • J&K govt arranges special trains to bring back its residents stranded across country

    The Jammu and Kashmir government is arranging special trains for its residents stranded across the country due to the lockdown and will bear the cost of the tickets, even as 30,000 people have so far returned there with proper regulation, the Home Department said on Friday.

    “Train services are being arranged for stranded persons of J-K, particularly from far off places. These trains will start arriving shortly and necessary coordination with the sending states as also with Railway authorities is going on,” a statement from the J&K Home Department said.

    It said the Jammu and Kashmir government has decided to bear the cost of the tickets.

    –PTI

  • SC asks states to consider online sales, home delivery of liquor

    The Supreme Court Friday asked states to consider non-direct contact or online sales and home delivery of liquor during the lockdown period to prevent the spread of coronavirus on account of crowding at the shops. A bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, Sanjay Kishan Kaul and B R Gavai, which took up the matter through video conferencing, disposed of the plea challenging the guidelines issued by Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on May 1, allowing sales of liquor through direct contact sales during the lockdown period.

    The Bench directed that States may consider allowing non-direct contact sales or online sales or home delivery of liquor during these times, advocate Sai Deepak, appearing for petitioner Guruswamy Nataraj said after the hearing.

    –PTI

  • Disinfection drive at Srinagar Civil Secretariat after employee tests positive for COVID-19

    An entire floor of the Civil Secretariat in Srinagar was cleared and disinfected after an employee posted there tested positive for COVID-19 two days ago, officials said on Friday.

    The employee, a resident of the Safapora area in Ganderbal district, was found COVID-positive on Wednesday, prompting the authorities to clear the floor where he was working, they said.

    A disinfection drive was carried out in the secretariat building, which houses offices of the top brass of administration and bureaucracy of Jammu and Kashmir.

    Deputy Commissioner, Srinagar, Shahid Iqbal Chaudhary dismissed reports in some sections of the media about the Civil Secretariat being closed.

    –PTI

  • Covid-19 | J&K’s suspension of mobile services hits contact tracing

    Non-availability of mobile Internet, calling impacts COVID-19 relief in the Valley

    Peerzada Ashiq

    The Jammu & Kashmir administration’s suspension of calling and Internet services on mobile phones for the second consecutive day on Thursday impacted COVID-19 related relief work and the contact tracing of infected patients in the Kashmir valley.

    “The blanket ban on the communication network has badly interrupted our operations,” Javid Parsa, a volunteer with the non governmental organisation (NGO), Social Reform Organization (SRO), told The Hindu . “We have lost contact with families who were expecting help in the next few days. How can someone ask for help now? It’s not a good idea to shut mobile network and Internet amid a global pandemic,” he added.

    The SRO has been distributing ration kits among stranded labourers and needy people, who are not able to earn their livelihood due to the lockdown, in the Valley.

    “We had a meeting with volunteers on Thursday to find alternate ways to reach out and continue with our relief work,” said Mr. Parsa.

    The NGO has already witnessed a dip in the daily donations made by locals to sustain the food distribution. “We request those who had committed donations from their salaries and have access to the Internet to deposit money in our account so that our material supplies don’t get affected,” said Mr. Parsa.

    About a dozen NGOs are working on relief and supply in the Valley since the novel coronavirus outbreak, including on-call ambulance services for ferrying patients and the mortal remains of the deceased to far-off areas.

    “We would supply Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), masks and medicine on a need basis,” said a volunteer with another NGO. “We would even get calls from front-line health workers for protective gear. But in the absence of call facility, no delivery could be made on Thursday,” the volunteer added.

    Amjaz Rizvi, a volunteer with NGO Ehsaas, said, “Our organization would receive distress calls where people are having just nothing to break their fast or have sehri (pre-dawn meals) in Ramzan. We had prepared special ration kits at a cost of ₹1,800 to feed a family for about a month. But the distribution has been hit badly due to non-availability of communication lines,” added Mr. Rizvi.

    Meanwhile, a senior official said the contact tracing of recently tested positive patients had also been impacted due to calling facility being snapped.

    “As and when any person tested positive at the Shri Maharaja Hari Sigh Hospital (SMHS) testing centre, we would immediately call those who were in touch with him,” said a senior doctor at the SMHS, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “Mobile came handy to trace and alert the contacts. Contact tracing has been impacted,” the doctor added.

    Meanwhile, Inspector General of Police, Kashmir, Vijay Kumar said the Internet and calling facility was snapped “to stop rumour mongering after Hizbul Mujahideen ‘commander’ Riyaz Naikoo’s killing” in an encounter on Wednesday.

    “As and when the situation improves further, a review will be held and the services will be restored soon,” said Mr. Kumar.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Coronavirus | India is taking all possible steps to save lives, says PM Modi

    Country is also fulfilling global obligations, notes PM Modi

    PTI

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said India was taking all possible steps to save lives during the COVID-19 pandemic as well as responding to calls for help from other countries.

    “Today, India is making every effort to save the life of every Indian and is also fulfilling its global obligations equally seriously,” he said.

    Mr. Modi was delivering the keynote address during a virtual Buddha Purnima celebration organised by the Culture Ministry and the International Buddhist Confederation.

    He said the teachings of Buddha were more relevant today as the world went through an upheaval. “The message and resolve to remove the difficulty of every life have always shown direction to India’s civilization and culture. Lord Buddha has further enriched this culture of India…Buddha is synonymous with service and dedication…And look at the good fortune of all of us, at this time we are seeing many people around us who serve others, treat a patient, feed a poor person, clean a hospital, maintain law and order on a road… they are all working round the clock. In India, outside India, every such person deserves a salute, a tribute.”

    Buddha’s teachings were “even more relevant” today when there was “turmoil in the world”, he noted and and cited those related to mercy, compassion and acceptance.

    “You are also seeing today that India is standing firmly in selflessness, without any distinction, with the person in distress, both in the country and throughout the world. Beyond the profit and loss, able and unable, for us, this hour of crisis is to help others as much as possible to forward the hand of help,” he said.

  • U.S. President Trump says will be tested for coronavirus daily

    A military aide of Mr. Trump, whom officials described as a personal valet, tested positive for coronavirus

    PTI

    After his military aide tested positive for coronavirus, U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would undergo the COVID-19 test every day.

    A military aide of Mr. Trump, whom officials described as a personal valet, tested positive for coronavirus. The President said he had very little contact with him.

    “I have had very little contact, personal contact, with this gentleman. I know who he is. Good person. But I have had very little contact. (Vice President) Mike (Pence) has had very little contact with him. But Mike was tested and I was tested. We were both tested,” Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office of the White House.

    Responding to questions, Mr. Trump said he, the Vice President and other staff of the White House would be tested for coronavirus every day.

    “I just had a test. In fact, I had one yesterday and one today, and it is negative. Mike just had a test and it is negative,” he said.

    “But they do the tests and it just shows you that the fallacy — it is what I have been saying — testing is not a perfect art. No matter what you do, testing is not a perfect art. So we test once a week. Now we are going to go testing once a day. But even when you test once a day, somebody could — something happens where they catch something,” the President said.

  • Civilian killed in clashes yesterday laid to rest in Pulwama

    Pulwama: The killing of a civilian was reported from south Kashmir’s Pulwama district. A police officer confirmed the killing of the civilian during a protest and said that he was buried on Wednesday evening.

    Pertinently, mobile internet service and calling facility has been suspended in Kashmir after the Hizb commander Riyaz Naikoo was killed in his native Beighpora village.

    Sources said that after the killing of Riyaz Naikoo, 18 persons were injured in violent clashes. Four protesters sustained bullet injuries while 14 suffered pellet wounds.

    Sources said that one of the youth, Jahangir Yousuf Wani (32) son of Muhammad Yousuf, a resident of Uthmula, was hit by a bullet in his neck after government forces opened live ammunition on the protestors near the encounter site.

    Jahangir, who died on the spot, is survived by two children and a wife.

    Meanwhile, government forces foiled an attempt from the family of Riyaz Naikoo to erect a tent for visiting mourners. Reports said that forces didn’t allow the family to erect a tent for the mourners.

    Pertinently, Naikoo along with his associate was killed in a fierce gunfight. At least, 4 residential houses were razed to ground by the forces during the operation. (KNT)

  • Indian medical students in Bangladesh to be evacuated in special flight on May 8

    They were stranded in the neighbouring country because of lockdown

    A large group of Indian medical students stranded in Bangladesh because of the lockdown will be evacuated shortly in a first special flight from Dhaka. The 167 students hailing from Kashmir are enrolled in medical schools in Dhaka and were stuck after India declared the lockdown on March 24.

    The special Air India flight will leave at 11 a.m. on Friday from Dhaka’s Shahjalal International Airport and will reach Srinagar by afternoon. Bangladesh has around 550 medical students from Kashmir who study in various government and private medical colleges in Dhaka and Mymensingh. 67 medical students had tried to leave Bangladesh through the Benapole-Petrapole crossing in West Bengal on March 24 but were not allowed to enter as India had sealed all land borders with neighbouring countries to fight the novel coronavirus.

    India and Bangladesh have been in a state of lockdown to fight the COVID-19 pandemic and sources among the students said that they were looked after by the medical schools even though the institutes had ordered students to return home to deal with the crisis. An Indian student from a private medical school in Mymensingh informed that other evacuation flights are being planned to airlift the rest of the group to Kashmir.

    The flights are part of India’s regional and global evacuation operation, which began on Thursday evening with the departure of an aircraft from the United Arab Emirates for Kerala.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Fifteen migrants were killed after being run over by a goods train

    15 migrant workers run over by goods train in Maharashtra.

    The migrants were walking to Bhusawal from Jalna.

    Fifteen migrants were killed and one injured after being run over by a goods train near Aurangabad early on Friday.

    The Indian Railways said about 20 people were sleeping on the tracks and “14 persons were run over/died and two persons sustained injuries… between Badnapur-Karmad railway stations of Aurangabad Post jurisdiction of Nanded Division”.

    Two injured were taken to a government hospital. However, one of them later died.

    The migrants were labourers from Umarya and Shahdol (in Madhya Pradesh) and worked at SRG Company in Jalna, Maharashtra.

    According to the survivors, the Railways said, they had left Jalna at around 7 in the evening and walked on road initially up to Badnapore and later started walking on the tracks towards Aurangabad. After walking for about 36 km, they sat on the tracks to rest and gradually slept.

    “14 persons sat on the track, two members adjacent to the track, and three members away from track,” the Railways said.

    “Extremely anguished by the loss of lives due to the rail accident in Aurangabad, Maharashtra. Have spoken to Railway Minister Shri Piyush Goyal and he is closely monitoring the situation. All possible assistance required is being provided,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted.

    Railways Minister Piyush Goyal tweeted that relief work was going on and an inquiry had been ordered into the incident.

    “Deeply saddened to learn about the loss of lives in a train mishap in Aurangabad, Maharashtra. My heartfelt condolences to bereaved families,” Vice-President M. Venkaiah Naidu tweeted.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • India has slid from being a global showcase of liberal democracy to a majoritarian state in economic despair

    Manmohan Singh

    It is with a very heavy heart that I write this.

    India faces imminent danger from the trinity of social disharmony, economic slowdown and a global health epidemic. Social unrest and economic ruin are self-inflicted while the health contagion of COVID-19 disease, caused by the novel coronavirus, is an external shock. I deeply worry that this potent combination of risks may not only rupture the soul of India but also diminish our global standing as an economic and democratic power in the world.

    Delhi has been subjected to extreme violence over the past few weeks. We have lost nearly 50 of our fellow Indians for no reason. Several hundred people have suffered injuries. Communal tensions have been stoked and flames of religious intolerance fanned by unruly sections of our society, including the political class. University campuses, public places and private homes are bearing the brunt of communal outbursts of violence, reminiscent of the dark periods in India’s history. Institutions of law and order have abandoned their dharma to protect citizens. Institutions of justice and the fourth pillar of democracy, the media, have also failed us.

    Charred soul of the nation

    With no checks, the fire of social tensions is rapidly spreading across the nation and threatens to char the soul of our nation. It can only be extinguished by the same people that lit it.

    It is both futile and puerile to point to past instances of such violence in India’s history to justify the present violence in the country. Every act of sectarian violence is a blemish on Mahatma Gandhi’s India. Just in a matter of few years, India has slid rapidly from being a global showcase of a model of economic development through liberal democratic methods to a strife ridden majoritarian state in economic despair.

    At a time when our economy is floundering, the impact of such social unrest will only exacerbate the economic slowdown. It is now well accepted that the scourge of India’s economy currently is the lack of new investment by the private sector. Investors, industrialists and entrepreneurs are unwilling to undertake new projects and have lost their risk appetite. Social disruptions and communal tensions only compound their fears and risk aversion. Social harmony, the bedrock of economic development, is now under peril. No amount of tweaking of tax rates, showering of corporate incentives or goading will propel Indian or foreign businesses to invest, when the risk of eruption of sudden violence in one’s neighbourhood looms large. Lack of investment means lack of jobs and incomes, which, in turn, means lack of consumption and demand in the economy. A lack of demand will only further suppress private investments. This is the vicious cycle that our economy is stuck in.

    Adding to these self-inflicted woes is the real threat of the COVID-19 epidemic that has originated in China. It is still unclear how far this global health hazard will spread and impact the world. But it is very clear that we should be fully prepared and ready to counter it. A health epidemic is one of the most dangerous threats that a nation can face. It is imperative that all of us collectively prepare to face this threat. We have not faced a public health crisis in contemporary times at the scale that the current crisis threatens to unfold. It is therefore important to launch a full-scale, mission-mode operation to counter this threat immediately.

    Dealing with COVID-19

    Nations across the world have sprung into action to contain the impact of this epidemic. China is walling off major cities and public places. Italy is shutting down schools. America has embarked aggressively both to quarantine people as well as hasten research efforts to find a cure. Many other nations have announced various measures to address this issue. India too must act swiftly and announce a mission critical team that will be tasked with addressing the issue. There could be some best practices we can adopt from other nations.

    Regardless of whether this virus will enter our shores on a large scale or not, it is now evident that the economic impact of COVID-19 will be very big. International bodies such as the World Bank and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have already pronounced a sharp slowdown in global economic growth. There are reports that China’s economy may even contract, which, if it happens, will be the first time since the Cultural Revolution of the 1970s. China today accounts for nearly a fifth of the global economy and a tenth of India’s external trade. The forecast for the world economy is quite dire. This is sure to impact India’s economic situation too. Millions of small and medium businesses in India that account for more than three-quarters of all formal employment are part of the global supply chain. In such an integrated global economy, the COVID-19 crisis can further slow India’s GDP growth by half to one percentage point, other things being constant. India’s economic growth was already tepid and this external health shock is bound to make things much worse.

    Bringing in reforms

    It is my belief that the government must quickly embark on a three point plan. First, it should focus all energies and efforts on containing the COVID-19 threat and prepare adequately. Two, it should withdraw or amend the Citizenship Act, end the toxic social climate and foster national unity. Three, it should put together a detailed and meticulous fiscal stimulus plan to boost consumption demand and revive the economy.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi must convince the nation, not merely through words but by deeds, that he is cognisant of the dangers we face and reassure the nation that he can help us tide over this as smoothly as we can. He must immediately provide details of the contingency plan for the threat of the COVID-19 scare.

    A moment of deep crisis can also be a moment of great opportunity. I recall that in 1991, India and the world faced a similar grave economic crisis, with a balance of payments crisis in India and a global recession caused by rising oil prices due to the Gulf War. But we were able to successfully turn this into an opportunity to reinvigorate the economy through drastic reforms. Similarly, the virus contagion and the slowing down of China can potentially open up an opportunity for India to unleash second -generation reforms to become a larger player in the global economy and vastly improve prosperity levels for hundreds of millions of Indians. To achieve that, we must first rise above divisive ideology, petty politics and respect institutional salience.

    It is not my desire to offer a dire prognosis or to exaggerate fears. But I believe it is our solemn duty to speak truth to the people of India. The truth is that the current situation is very grim and morose. The India that we know and cherish is slipping away fast. Wilfully stoked communal tensions, gross economic mismanagement and an external health shock are threatening to derail India’s progress and standing. It is time to confront the harsh reality of the grave risks we face as a nation and address them squarely and sufficiently.

    Dr. Manmohan Singh was the Prime Minister of India from 2004 to 2014

    With inputs from The Hindu