Saturday 31 August 2019

Manipur declares drought-like situation after crop failures in over 70 blocks due to scant rain; seeks relief from Centre

Imphal: The cabinet of Manipur chief minister N Biren Singh has declared a drought-like situation in the state owing to scant rain that have led to crop failures in over 70 blocks of the state, a government release said.

File image of N Biren Singh. PTI

File image of N Biren Singh. PTI

The decision was taken on Saturday to seek relief from the Centre, the statement by N Geoffrey, secretary to the chief minister, said. "Rain deficit this year has affected crops in over 70 blocks of the state. Villages that have witnessed crop failures ranging between 33 percent and more than 50 percent have been categorised as moderately and severely affected," it said.

Prior to the cabinet meeting, the chief minister chaired a high-level emergency meeting with cabinet ministers, MLAs, top officials, deputy commissioners of 16 districts and representatives of agricultural institutes to discuss the situation, it said.



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IMD predicts heavy rain in isolated pockets of Odisha, coastal Karnataka; squally weather over north Andaman Sea

New Delhi: The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has predicted that isolated pockets over Odisha and Coastal Karnataka are likely to receive heavy rainfall on Sunday.

Representational image. PTI

Representational image. PTI

Besides, some of the areas of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Haryana, Chandigarh, Delhi, Rajasthan and West Madhya Pradesh are also expected to witness  heavy downpour throughout the day, the IMD stated in its All India Weather Warning Bulletin.

"Vidarbha, Chhattisgarh, Gangetic West Bengal, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Assam and Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura, Madhya Maharashtra, Konkan and Goa, Coastal Andhra Pradesh and Yanam, Telangana and South Interior Karnataka," the IMD said on Sunday.

Thunderstorm accompanied by lightning over Bihar, Jharkhand and Gangetic West Bengal, it said. Strong winds, speed reaching 45 to 55 kilometres per hour, are very likely to prevail over west-central and southwest Arabian Sea, central and adjoining southeast Bay of Bengal.

Squally weather is likely to prevail over the north Andaman Sea. The organisation has advised fishermen are not to venture into these areas.



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GDP falls to 5%: Urgent economic reforms needed, but Centre's attention fixed on Ayodhya, Assam and Kashmir

India’s GDP growth fell to 5 percent in the second quarter of this year, the lowest in six years. Manufacturing, the crown of Make in India, has grown under 1 percent. This is the second quarter where we have not touched 6 percent and the growth calculations are based on the revised method the government uses which many, including the former economic advisor himself, think are incorrect and optimistic.

Representational image. Reuters.

Representational image. Reuters.

There is a lot of work ahead of the government to first think and then execute a way out of this. Unless very high growth is revived, India’s journey towards eliminating poverty and dependence will halt. This is something that concerns all of us no matter which part of India we live in and what our language and religious background.

A lack of adequate GDP growth is not an academic exercise: A few months ago we learned that India’s unemployment rate is the highest in 50 years. This has actually risen further and shows no sign of moving in the positive direction. It would not be an exaggeration to say that there is a limited amount of time available to us to think about our economy and how to fix it.

Then there are gigantic challenges that are ahead of us at the species level, like climate change, in addition to all of our national challenges. Unfortunately, however, the government will have most of its attention focussed elsewhere for the rest of this year and the next year and well into the foreseeable future.

This is because of actions and decisions of its own choosing in Assam, Kashmir and  Ayodhya.

The final National Register of Citizens (NRC) is out and India has excluded 19 lakh people from it. This happened through a flawed process, whose details we will not get into. The result is that we have chosen to go down a route and this choice leads to consequences.

The first is that this set of people will be disenfranchised, meaning they will lose the right to vote despite having a voter ID card. There are BJP MPs, like Subramaniam Swamy, who have for many years advocated that all Indian Muslims must lose the right to vote.

The second consequence will be that, like the 1,000 or so who have previously been declared foreigners in Assam, we will have to jail these 19 lakh people who have committed no crime.

The families will be separated and women — daughters, sisters, mothers and wives — will be in different jails from the men and will have no contact with them. Children in these jails will face the prospect of a life behind bars.

The rest of India did not pay much attention to the first 1,000 who have been jailed. It is unlikely that concentration camps of the size required to hold 19 lakh will go unnoticed.

In Kashmir, it is approaching a month since we decided to incarcerate a whole population. Under permanent curfew, with no means of communications, no avenue to express protest and no voice in decision-making, we have made it easy for our enemies to say that we are an "occupying power".

The reason that we have locked up everyone, including those who once supported India, is because what is to come will not be pretty.

We will have years of hostile protests to look forward to there. Just like in Assam, where the first 1,000 prisoners were forgotten, Kashmir’s internal violence is not among our most pressing concerns because it has gone on for so long.

However it will be less easy for India to ignore what is going on there because of the scale of what will happen when we are forced to unlock them.

The third place we will have to be forced into action will be with respect to the temple in Ayodhya. It is possible the courts will send down a judgment on this matter before the end of this year.

I have a good idea what the ultimate decision will bring, and looking around, this is not hard to imagine.

However no matter what the judgment, given that we have had so much violence already occur on this issue means that a revival of the subject should be dreaded. Like Assam and Kashmir, Ayodhya was on the back burner for a long time and forgotten in the national memory and consigned to a non-priority.

This will change. It has changed for all three of these colossal issues that are unravelling before our eyes. In terms of national attention and emotion, we will have to invest very heavily in them. More than we have before.

Those of us who are opposed to the way the Indian State has behaved with its own people will be unable to stand aside and watch the continued persecution. Those whose passions are lit by the idea of "traitors and foreigners and anti-nationals" will be just as inflamed on the other side.

As a nation we are tearing ourselves apart through decisions we have chosen to take. And the rest of the world will make it difficult for us to pretend that all of our persecutions are legitimate because they are India’s internal matters.



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IRCTC to levy service charge of Rs 15 on non-AC and Rs 30 on air-conditioned class e-tickets from today

New Delhi: E-tickets bought through IRCTC will get costlier as the Indian Railways has decided to restore service charges from 1 September, according to an order.

Representational image. AFP

Representational image. AFP

The IRCTC will levy a service charge of Rs 15 per ticket for non-AC classes and Rs 30 for AC classes, including first class, according to the 30 August order issued by IRCTC. Goods and Services Tax (GST) will be applicable separately.

The service charges were withdrawn three years ago to promote digital payments, a pet project of the Narendra Modi-led BJP government. IRCTC used to levy a service charge of Rs 20 on every non-AC e-ticket and Rs 40 for every AC ticket before it was withdrawn.

Earlier this month, the Railway Board had given its approval to the Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) to restore the mechanism of charging service charge from passengers booking online tickets.

In a letter dated 30 August, the Board had said the IRCTC, railways ticketing and tourism arm, had made a "detailed case" for the restoration of service charge on booking of e-ticket and the matter has been examined by the "competent authority".

It further said the finance ministry has contended that the scheme of waiving of service charges was a temporary one and that the railway ministry could begin charging e-tickets.

Officials say that after service charges were discontinued, IRCTC saw a 26 per cent drop in Internet ticketing revenue in financial year 2016-17.



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Mumbai-Surat AC ferry service likely to begin weekly operations from November; cruise ship to ply between Hazira port and Bandra

Ahmedabad: Approval has been given for a ferry service between Mumbai and Surat and operations are likely to begin in November this year, the Gujarat government said in a release on Saturday.

Representational image. Reuters

Representational image. Reuters

The air-conditioned passenger ferry service, with 20 rooms and with a capacity of 300 passengers, will operate between Hazira port in Surat and Bandra in Mumbai once a week to start with, and its frequency will be increased depending on public response, it added.

"As per in principal approval, the service will begin from November this year, with the ship initially operating once a week. Its frequency will be increased in the future based on the passenger traffic," the released said.

"Initially, the cruise ship will start from Bandra at 7 pm Thursday, and will arrive at Hazira port at 9 am on the next day. Its return journey will begin at 6 pm Friday from Hazira, reaching Bandra at 8 pm Saturday," it said.

The Gujarat government operates a Roll on-Roll off (Ro-Ro) passenger cum cargo ferry service between Dahej in Surat and Ghogha in Bhavnagar district under a public-private partnership (PPP) mode.

In another development, the release said the state will get a Rs 45 crore early warning dissemination system for early information on cyclones along its 1,600-km coastline.

The system will be built by the Gujarat State Disaster Management Authority under National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project, a joint undertaking of National Disaster Management Authority and World Bank, the government said.

The state has provided Rs 20 crore its operation and maintenance for the first five years, it said.



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Lalu Prasad’s health isn’t stable, kidneys not functioning properly, says doctor; jailed RJD chief undergoing treatment in Ranchi

Ranchi: The condition of jailed RJD chief Lalu Prasad is not stable as his kidneys are not functioning properly, and blood sugar and blood pressure are fluctuating, a senior doctor attending to him said on Saturday.

File image of Lalu Prasad Yadav. AFP

File image of Lalu Prasad Yadav. AFP

Prasad, 71, is undergoing treatment at the Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences in Ranchi. He has been in jail since 2017 after his conviction in fodder scam cases.

"His kidneys are not functioning properly. The GFR (glomerular filtration rate) has dropped. His blood sugar and blood pressure are also fluctuating. We can say he is not stable," Dr Umesh Prasad, one of the attending doctors, told PTI.

"His diet has also decreased compared to earlier. We are giving him medicines now," he said. The former Bihar chief minister and ex-Union minister is undergoing treatment for multiple ailments.



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Mumbai-Surat AC ferry service likely to begin weekly operations from November; cruise ship to ply between Hazira port and Bandra

Ahmedabad: Approval has been given for a ferry service between Mumbai and Surat and operations are likely to begin in November this year, the Gujarat government said in a release on Saturday.

Representational image. Reuters

Representational image. Reuters

The air-conditioned passenger ferry service, with 20 rooms and with a capacity of 300 passengers, will operate between Hazira port in Surat and Bandra in Mumbai once a week to start with, and its frequency will be increased depending on public response, it added.

"As per in principal approval, the service will begin from November this year, with the ship initially operating once a week. Its frequency will be increased in the future based on the passenger traffic," the released said.

"Initially, the cruise ship will start from Bandra at 7 pm Thursday, and will arrive at Hazira port at 9 am on the next day. Its return journey will begin at 6 pm Friday from Hazira, reaching Bandra at 8 pm Saturday," it said.

The Gujarat government operates a Roll on-Roll off (Ro-Ro) passenger cum cargo ferry service between Dahej in Surat and Ghogha in Bhavnagar district under a public-private partnership (PPP) mode.

In another development, the release said the state will get a Rs 45 crore early warning dissemination system for early information on cyclones along its 1,600-km coastline.

The system will be built by the Gujarat State Disaster Management Authority under National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project, a joint undertaking of National Disaster Management Authority and World Bank, the government said.

The state has provided Rs 20 crore its operation and maintenance for the first five years, it said.



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Daily Bulletin: 19 lakh excluded from final NRC list in Assam, Bumrah's hat-trick, Texas shooting; today's top stories

Final NRC list excludes 19 lakh names in Assam

The updated final National Register of Citizens (NRC), which validates bonafide Indian citizens of Assam, was released on Saturday, with the NRC authority shutting out the citizenship claims of over 19 lakh applicants who now face an uncertain future. A total of 3,30,27,661 people had applied to be included in the NRC. Of them, 3,11,21,004 have been included in the document and 19,06,657 excluded.

Those who have been excluded from the NRC have 120 days to appeal against it at the 'foreigners' tribunals'. If not satisfied with the verdict of the tribunals, they will have the option to move the respective high court and the Supreme Court for redress. In order to assuage the fears of those who could be excluded from the final list, the Assam government has already ruled out their detention "in any circumstances" till the time a foreigners' tribunal declares them foreigners.

An NRC centre in Assam. Reuters

An NRC centre in Assam. Reuters

Notwithstanding apprehensions about disquiet in the wake of the release of the NRC list, Assam was calm with no incident of violence or protests reported from anywhere, PTI reported. Prohibitory orders under section 144 CrPC were in force in several areas of the state, including Guwahati and Dispur, with over 20,000 central paramilitary forces besides personnel of the state police patrolling the streets in towns and villages.

 

Five dead, 21 injured in Texas shooting 

At least five persons were killed and 21 injured in the US state of Texas as a shooter targeted random people after being pulled over by traffic officials on Saturday, reports said. The incident occurred in the area of Odessa and nearby Midland and police said the gunman was shot dead at the Cinergy movie theatre after a chase. However, police did not identify the shooter by his name.

The man, who was in his 30s, opened fire around 3 pm (local time) after he was pulled over. He shot at the trooper who stopped him and began shooting people at random, local media quoted Chief Michael Gerke of the Odessa Police Department as saying.

Jasprit Bumrah leaves West Indies struggling

Jasprit Bumrah starred for India on Day two of the second Test against West Indies in Jamaica on Saturday, claiming six wickets which included his first hat-trick in Test cricket. The speedster registered figures of 6-16 to trouble the hosts, who finished the day on 87-7, trailing by 329 runs.

The 25-year-old pacer became the third Indian to claim a hat-trick in Test cricket when he got wickets of Darren Bravo, Shamarh Brooks and Roston Chase in the ninth over. Mohammed Shami took the only other wicket. Earlier, a maiden century from Hanuma Vihari and a first Test fifty for Ishant Sharma had powered India to 416 in their first innings.

After losing Jason Holder and Shimron Hetmyer, Jahmar Hamilton and Rahkeem Cornwall will look to give something for the hosts to cheer about when they resume batting on Day three on Sunday.

Bodybuilder Franco Columbu dies at 78

Franco Columbu, the two-time Mr Olympia champion, has died aged 78, reports Daily News. A bodybuilder by profession, Columbu was Terminator star Arnold Schwarzenegger's longtime friend.

Columbu died while he was swimming off the coast of his native Sardinia. Columbu has made several Hollywood appearances which include features like Conan the Barbarian, The Terminator and The Running Man.

Schwarzenegger wrote a personal note as tribute to Columbu. "I will always remember the joy you brought to my life, the advice you gave me, and the twinkle in your eye that never disappeared. You were my best friend," said the actor.

New laws under Motor Vehicles Amendment Act to be implemented

The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways on Wednesday notified the provisions of the Motor Vehicles Amendment Act, 2019 that will be applicable with effect from Sunday. These are provisions which require no further amendments in the Central Motor Vehicles Rules 1989, read a statement.

"For the remaining provisions, the Ministry has initiated the process of formulating draft rules. As and when the process is completed, the relevant provisions would be notified for implementation," it added.

The 63 clauses deal with penalties, licenses, registration and National Transport Policy, among others. The new law enhances the penalty for unauthorised use of vehicles without licence to Rs 5,000 from up to Rs 1,000. Besides, the penalty for driving without license will go up from up to Rs 500 to Rs 5,000.

The new rules also enhance the penalty for drunken driving to imprisonment up to 6 months and/or fine up to Rs 10,000 for first offenc, and imprisonment up to 2 years and/or fine of Rs 15,000 for second offence. Besides, the new rules enable state governments to designate any person/agency as the enforcement agency to detect and impose penalty on overloaded vehicles.



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Arun Jaitley's statue to be installed in Bihar, announces Nitish Kumar; ex-FM's birth anniversary to be celebrated as state function

Patna: Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar on Saturday announced that a statue of former finance minister late Arun Jaitley will be installed in the state.

The chief minister also said, while speaking at the SKM hall in Patna, that Jaitley's birth anniversary will be celebrated as a state function every year.

Jaitley passed away in New Delhi on 24 August at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS). He was 66. He was cremated with full state honours at the Nigambodh Ghat in the national capital on 25 August.



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Govt will provide legal support to citizens left out of NRC, says Assam minister; 200 new foreigners’ tribunals to open from Monday

Guwahati: The Assam government Saturday claimed many genuine Indian citizens have been left out of the final National Register of Citizens (NRC), but said they do not need to panic as they have option to appeal in the Foreigners Tribunal (FT).

Speaking to PTI, Assam Parliamentary Affairs Minister Chandra Mohan Patowary, said the government will provide legal support to the Indian citizens not finding place in the NRC list. "One thing is sure that many genuine Indians were left out of the NRC. However, they don't need to panic and worry. They can appeal in the FTs," Patowary said.

People stand in a queue to check their names on the final list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) outside a Gaon Panchayat office in Assam. PTI

People stand in a queue to check their names on the final list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) outside a Gaon Panchayat office in Assam. PTI

If the genuine Indians, who were not included in the NRC, require assistance in appealing in the Tribunal, the government will assist them, he added. "We have increased the number of FTs to 300 from 100 earlier. The additional FTs will start functioning from Monday. So people can result approach the FTs," said Patowary, who is also the spokesperson of the Assam government.

When pointed out to the allegation of the AASU that less number of exclusions was due to government's inaction, the senior minister said that the entire exercise was carried out under the direct supervision of the Supreme Court.

"In the entire process, we provided the logistic support. We had no other role. Even the NRC State Coordinator was directly reporting to the SC and did not share any information with us," he added.

Patowary said that from the 41 lakh excluded in the complete draft of the NRC, those who applied with proper documents were verified and included. "Because of the less number of exclusions and wrongful inclusions, we had filed an affidavit in the SC seeking sample re-verification of 20 per cent of the names. But the SC did not agree to our request," he added.

The state and the central governments had appealed the top court twice for sample re-verification to find out wrongful inclusions, especially in districts bordering Bangladesh, and exclusions in the NRC. The apex court in strong words earlier this month said the entire NRC exercise cannot be ordered to be re-opened on the basis of certain parameters.

The final NRC was published on Saturday by excluding 19,06,657 persons. A total of 3,11,21,004 names were included out of 3,30,27,661 applicants.



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JNUSU polls: Election committee issues show cause notice to NSUI over Hardik Patel's presence at campus event

New Delhi: The Congress-affiliated NSUI was issued a show-cause notice on Saturday by the JNU's election committee after Hardik Patel attended one of its poll events.

The model code of conduct is in place currently for the upcoming Jawaharlal Nehru University Students' Union (JNUSU) polls and according to the rules, no outsider can canvass for the parties.

File image of Hardik Patel. News18

File image of Hardik Patel. News18

Sources said the JNU unit of the National Students' Union of India (NSUI) had sought permission to invite Patel, a Congress leader from Gujarat, for their "Mashal Juloos", but it was declined by the election committee.

The party took out the "Mashal Juloos" from Ganga Dhaba to Chandrabhaga Hostel on the university campus on Saturday. The NSUI had even circulated invites for the event, which said it would be addressed by Patel.

The first show-cause notice was issued to the party on Friday and it replied to it, saying it was not aware how Patel was present there, an election committee member said.

"The reply was not found to be satisfactory and we issued them a second show-cause notice on Saturday. They have to reply to it within the next 24 hours. If their reply is not found satisfactory, their nomination will be cancelled," he added.

The poll committee member said the parties signed a declaration stating that they would not invite outsiders to canvas for them for the JNUSU polls.

"They (NSUI) have violated the declaration. In their reply to the notice, they said they were not aware about how he (Patel) came, but the event was held under the banner of the party and the organiser was responsible for it. Even the candidates of the party were present," he said.

Meanwhile, Sunny Mehta, in charge of the JNU NSUI unit, said, "Hardik Patel was there to drink tea at one of the dhabas and he met us for just 20 seconds. He is friends with one of our members and just happened to be there. Many people from outside come to JNU."

He said the party was doing well and this had scared the Left as well as the right-wing parties. The NSUI is only contesting the polls for the JNUSU president's post this time. Last year, it had fielded candidates for all the four posts.

The JNUSU polls will be held on 6 September and the results will be declared on 8 September.



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War not an option to deal with Kashmir issue, says Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi

Islamabad: Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said that war is not an option to deal with the Kashmir issue amidst fresh India-Pakistan tensions over New Delhi revoking Jammu and Kashmir's special status.

His remarks came at a time when Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan has been repeatedly threatening the possibility of a nuclear war with India over Kashmir after his efforts to internationalise the matter failed to gain any traction.

File image of Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi. Reuters

File image of Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi. Reuters

Asserting that abrogation of Article 370 was its internal matter, India has strongly criticised Pakistan for making "irresponsible statements" and provocative anti-India rhetoric over issues internal to it.

In an interview to BBC Urdu published on Saturday, Qureshi said Pakistan never followed an aggressive policy and always preferred peace, adding that the current government of Pakistan has repeatedly offered India to start talks because the two nuclear armed neighbours cannot take the risk of going on a war.

War was not option to deal with the issue of Kashmir, the Pakistani foreign minister emphasised. He reiterated that Kashmir is an international issue and not just a bilateral affair between Pakistan and India.

Tensions between India and Pakistan spiked after India abrogated provisions of Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke Jammu and Kashmir's special status and bifurcated it into two Union Territories.

In an opinion piece in The New York Times on Thursday, Khan again warned that if the world does nothing to stop India's decision on Kashmir, the two nuclear-armed countries will get ever closer to a "direct military confrontation".

Khan said when he was elected prime minister last August, one of his foremost priorities was to work for lasting and just peace in South Asia. But he says that all his efforts to start a dialogue for peace were rebuffed by India.

India has not been engaging with Pakistan since an attack on the Air Force base at Pathankot in January of 2016 by Pakistan-based terrorists, maintaining that talks and terror cannot go together.

Earlier this year, tensions flared up between India and Pakistan after a suicide bomber of Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM) killed 40 CRPF personnel in Kashmir's Pulwama district on 14 February.

Amid mounting outrage, the Indian Air Force (IAF) carried out a counter-terror operation, hitting the biggest JeM training camp in Balakot, deep inside Pakistan on 26 February.



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Mobs thrash six over child-lifting rumours in three separate incidents in UP; attacks occurred despite police warning on invoking NSA

Lucknow: Mobs thrashed six people, including a Delhi resident and a woman beggar, over rumours of child-lifting in three fresh incidents in Uttar Pradesh, despite the police warning to invoke the National Security Act against those spreading such canard.

Attacks over rumours of child-lifting have increased over the past week in the state. On Thursday, Director General of Police OP Singh said 82 people have been arrested for spreading rumours about child theft, but incidents of public thrashing have continued.

Singh had warned authorities will invoke NSA against rumour mongers. Under the Act, a person can be detained for as long as required and authorities need not disclose the grounds of detention.

On Saturday, police said a Delhi resident was attacked in Muzaffarnagar when he was on a personal visit to the district. They said Anandpuri area residents suspected him to be a child lifter and thrashed him on Friday but an investigation found he was innocent.

Representational image. PTI

File image of Uttar Pradesh Police. PTI

In Ballia, a mob physically assaulted a woman beggar on Friday, suspecting her of being a child lifter in Kotwali Police Station area. The woman was rescued by police.

In Banda, four labourers were beaten up in Atarra township.

Police said the labourers were taking rest at Lohia canal bridge when rumours of them being child lifters spread. A mob soon gathered and beat them up. The labourers were handed over to police, which allowed them to leave after three-hour questioning.

Police said action will be taken against people who beat the labourers after their identity is established.

Four such incidents were reported from Rae Bareli, including one in which an engineer working in a private telecom firm was attacked by 50 people, and one from Kanpur on Friday.

Some villagers were arrested in the Rae Bareli incident.

Senior Superintendent of Police, Bulandshahr, Santosh Kumar Singh told PTI at least 40 people have been arrested in the district in cases of violence related to child-lifting rumours.

On Thursday, a Delhi Police team in plain clothes, visiting Bareilly to probe a dowry case, was mistaken for child lifters. They escaped mob fury after local police rescued them.

False cases of child-lifting incidents have also been reported. A 19-year-old man was arrested on Friday for reporting a false case of child lifting in a Noida village, police said.

Before that on Wednesday, police arrested a man from Wajidpur village for allegedly spreading rumour about lifting of three children by car-borne men in Sector 135 of Noida.

The same day, a health department team was attacked by a violent mob of around 150 people in Fatehpur district after they suspected the officials to be child lifters. In another incident, 10 people, including two policemen, were injured when a group of locals pelted stones at them in Khesahan village under Ghazipur police station area.

On Tuesday in Sambhal, a 40-year-old man escorting his seven-year-old ailing nephew was lynched by a mob on suspicion of he being a child lifter.

On Monday, four people were arrested for allegedly thrashing a 50-year-old woman in Etah district on suspicion of her being a child-lifter, an official said.



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DK Shivakumar appears before ED for second consecutive day of questioning in money laundering case

New Delhi: Senior Karnataka Congress leader DK Shivakumar appeared before the Enforcement Directorate (ED) on Saturday for the second straight day in a money laundering case, officials said. He appeared at the ED headquarters in the national capital, they said.

The investigating officer of the case had grilled him for over four hours on Friday and recorded his statement under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), the officials said. Shivakumar is expected to be put through documents and queries through the day with a lunch break in between.

File image of DK Shivakumar. News18

File image of DK Shivakumar. News18

While making his first appearance on Friday, after he arrived by air from Bengaluru, the Kanakapura MLA had said he will cooperate with the ED probe. "It is my duty (to appear)... I have to respect the law. We are lawmakers and law abiding citizens. They (ED) have summoned me... I don't know why they have called me under Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA)," he said.

"But, let me see, hear them. I am ready to face them (ED)," he had told reporters outside the ED office.

Shivakumar had to appear before the agency after the Karnataka High Court on Thursday dismissed his petition challenging the summons issued to him by the ED.

Earlier on Friday in Bengaluru, Shivakumar indicated that his "instrumental role" in ensuring safe stay of Gujarat Congress MLAs in a Karnataka resort during the Rajya Sabha polls in 2017, amid allegations that the BJP was trying to poach them, was the reason for the I-T searches and subsequent ED action against him.

The central agency had in September last year registered a money laundering case against Shivakumar, Hanumanthaiah, an employee at Karnataka Bhavan in New Delhi, and others.

The ED case has been filed based on a charge sheet (prosecution complaint) filed by the Income-Tax Department against him last year before a special court in Bengaluru on charges of alleged tax evasion and hawala transactions worth crores.

The I-T department has accused Shivakumar and his associate SK Sharma of transporting huge amount of unaccounted cash on a regular basis through 'hawala' channels with help of three other accused.



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Pakistan's Punjab govt forms committee to negotiate with Sikhs, ensure calm after 'abduction, forced conversion' of girl

Lahore: Under pressure, the government in Pakistan's Punjab province has constituted a high-level committee to negotiate with Sikhs angry over the abduction and forced conversion of a teenage girl from the community.

Jagjit Kaur's family alleged that she was converted to Islam at gunpoint and forced to marry a Muslim boy. Her family says she is 18-year-old.

A Sikh gilr in Pakistan's Punjab was allegedly forcibly converted and married to a Muslim man, leading to furore in the community.

A Sikh gilr in Pakistan's Punjab was allegedly forcibly converted and married to a Muslim man, leading to furore in the community.

An FIR has been registered against six people in the case, said Muhammad Jamil, Nankana City Police Investigation Officer. Police have arrested one of the suspects named Arsalan, a friend of the prime accused Mohammad Hassan who married the Sikh girl.

The girl has been sent to a shelter home in Lahore on Friday on the court's order.

The incident sparked tensions between the Sikh and Muslim communities.

Some reports said that the Sikh community in Nankana Sahib, some 80 kilometers from Lahore, has announced a ban on the entry of Muslims in gurdwaras including Gurdwara Janamasthan, the birth place of Guru Nanak Dev, until the girl is reunited with her family and action is taken against the culprits.

The Punjab government has formed a high-level committee led by Punjab law minister Raja Basharat which has been sent to Nanakana Sahib to calm the situation. The committee will negotiate with a 30-member committee formed by Pakistan's Sikh community over the incident.

Pakistan's Gurdwara Parbhandik Committee secretary general Ameer Sigh told PTI that the situation in Nankana Sahib has been under control. "Hopefully this matter will be resolved amicably," Singh said and clarified that the Sikh community had not banned Muslims entry to gurdwaras in Nankana Sahib.

"This is against the teaching of our religion. Sikhs welcome any person of other religion to its worship place," he said.

According to a memorandum sent to Inspector General of Police (IGP) Punjab by the District Police Officer (DPO) of Nankana Sahib, an FIR was filed in the Nankana police station on 28 August against six people who were accused of abducting and forcefully converting the Sikh girl.

The DPO, in his memorandum, attached the "relevant documentary and video proof of the marriage and the girl's conversion to Islam". Copies of the documents from the National Database and Registration Authority, which show that Kaur is 19 years of age, and the nikahnama were also attached.

The DPO informed the IGP that the Sikh community was "agitating against the incident.

The police were contacted by Sheikh Sultan, Kaur's advocate, who told them she had embraced Islam and her name was changed to Ayesha,. The girl then contracted a marriage with Mohammad Hassan — the prime accused in the case — on her own will.

Sultan further said that he had filed a writ petition in the Lahore High Court on Kaur's behalf against her family and local police, accusing them of "illegal harassment". The girl also submitted a written statement in the court, stating that she had converted to Islam and married Hassan of her own will. She also accused her family of "wanting to kill her".

Following the girl's statements in the court, the Sikh community has demanded that the police bring her back to her parents' house irrespective of the conversion being forced or consensual.
India on Friday said it has raised with Pakistan the issue of a Sikh girl being abducted and forced to convert to Islam in that country.

Ministry of External Affairs Spokesperson Raveesh Kumar in New Delhi said the ministry has received a number of representations from various quarters of civil society in India, including Sikh religious bodies, at the "reports of the incident of abduction and forced conversion of a minor Sikh girl in Pakistan".

"We have shared these concerns with the government of Pakistan and asked for immediate remedial action," he said.



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Assam NRC final list: Original petitioner in SC says document is 'flawed' as apex court rejected reverification plea

Guwahati: The Assam Public Works (APW), the original petitioner in the Supreme Court which led to the updation of the National Register of Citizens six years ago, said the final NRC turned out to be a "flawed document" because its prayer for reverification of the draft list was rejected by the apex court.

The NGO also wondered whether the software used in the updation exercise was capable to handle so much data and if it was examined by any third party Information Technology expert, APW president Abhijeet Sharma said.

People stand in a queue to check their names on the final NRC list at Morigoan, Assam. PTI

People stand in a queue to check their names on the final NRC list at Morigoan, Assam. PTI

"The final NRC has made it obvious that the problem of illegal immigration will never be resolved in Assam. Had it been completed flawlessly, it would have been a golden chapter in Assam's history," Sharma told reporters after the final NRC was released, excluding names of over 19 lakh applicants.

The APW, as the primary petitioner, had submitted five memoranda in the Supreme Court requesting re-verification of the draft NRC but they were rejected, he said.

"The 27 per cent re-verification done by him (NRC State Coordinator Prateek Hajela) is a mystery. No one knows whether or not it was 100 per cent flawless," Sharma said.

He also expressed "strong doubt" on the software used as names of many doubtful voters had entered the draft NRC. "Was it due to the flaws of the software that members of 39 families of 'D' (doubtful) voters of Morigaon district are included in the draft NRC as mentioned by the then district dommissioner?" the APW president asked.

In 2009, the APW filed a petition in the Supreme Court praying that names of 41 lakh foreigners be deleted from the electoral rolls of Assam and the NRC updated. In response to the petition, the Centre told the apex court that the 1951 NRC was being updated.

The Supreme Court in 2013 took up the APW petition and directed both the Central and state governments to begin the process for updating the NRC and the actual work began two years later.



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Himanta Biswa Sarma, AASU seek re-verification of final Assam NRC list; Owaisi slams BJP, says 'myth' of illegal immigrants busted

As the much-awaited updated final National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam was published on Saturday (31 August), excluding names of over 19 lakh applicants, the outcome didn't go down well with BJP's Himanta Biswa Sarma and All Assam Students’ Union (AASU), both expressing dissatisfaction and urging the Supreme Court to allow re-verification for "a correct and fair NRC."

"A total of 3, 30,27,661 people had applied to be included in the NRC. Of them, 3,11,21,004 found mention in the document while 19,06,657 individuals were excluded," a statement from the NRC State Coordinator's office said in Guwahati.

People wait in a queue to check their names on the final draft of the state's National Register of Citizens after it was released, at an NRC Seva Kendra, in Morigaon on Monday, July 30, 2018. (PTI Photo) (PTI7_31_2018_000038B)

People wait in a queue to check their names on the final draft of the state's NRC after it was released, at an NSK in Morigaon on 30 July, 2018. PTI

The status of both inclusion and exclusion can be viewed online in the official NRC website – www.nrcassam.nic.in.

Expressing little faith in the final list that intended to identify legal residents and weed out illegal immigrants from the northeastern state, Sarma said, "We have lost hope in the present form of the NRC" adding that the saffron party was already mulling a "fresh strategy on how to drive out the illegal migrants."

The BJP minister claimed that names of Indian citizens who migrated from Bangladesh prior to 1971 as refugees were not included while "many names got included because of manipulation of legacy data as alleged by many." "In districts bordering Bangladesh, like South Salmara and Dhubri, the rate of exclusion is the lowest and in Bhumiputra district, it's high. How it can be? We are not interested in this NRC anymore," Sarma further said.

He also urged the Supreme Court to take cognisance of the matter and allow a 20 percent re-verification for bordering districts and 10 percent for remaining districts for a "correct and fair NRC".

Follow LIVE updates on Assam NRC final list publication here

The president of All Assam Students' Union Dipankar Kumar Nath indicated a similar disappointment over the release of the final NRC document and avowed to approach the apex court to file appeal for "rectification of these mistakes".

"There are faults in the latest NRC. AASU is disappointed with the document. When AASU wanted only 10 documents to be given for re-verification, the Centre and the state governments insisted on 15 in the Supreme Court. Officers who were diligent working were transferred out. The NRC is incomplete but we have complete faith in the judiciary. We will approach the Supreme Court to appeal for rectification of these mistakes," Nath said at a press conference in Guwahati.

AASU general secretary Lurin Jyoti Gogoi accused the government of failure in providing the indigenous people of the state a "foreigner-free NRC".

"Since the Central and state governments failed to update the NRC for the past six decades since 1951 such mistakes have crept into the latest documents. Had it been done every 10 years it would not have been so. The political parties have failed to fulfil their responsibility. We demanded that re-verification be done using government agencies but it was not done. However, we have faith in the Supreme Court and we will approach it. Only due to the apex court things at least this took a shape. The Assam government failed to avail the opportunity to hand the people of the state a foreigner-free NRC. In fact in the last one year only 75 people were referred to the Foreigners' Tribunal," said Jyoti Gogoi.

The chief adviser of the state's student union body, which was formed in the backdrop of massive refugee influx and Indian government's support in settling them in the state, Samujjal Bhattacharya was surprised at the gap between initial estimate of illegal immigrants and the actual names excluded.

"In the last 40 years, six years of Assam Agitation and 34 years after that Assam has been demanding identification and expulsion of illegal migrants. It was decided that all people who were not in India before 24 March, 1971, will be identified and expelled. We were hopeful of a positive result because it was done under the supervision of the Supreme Court. It is surprising that the final number of exclusion is much less than it was originally estimated," said AASU's Bhattacharya addressing the media in Guwahati.

Also exhibiting unhappiness was former chief minister Tarun Gogoi. He said that many Indians had been excluded and a large number of foreigners were included. "This will lead to much more problem now" he said, adding, "The Home Ministry has miserably failed to prepare the NRC. Now they are trying to hoodwink the people."

Meanwhile, AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi said that Saturday's verdict on NRC list would serve as a lesson to the BJP, adding that the "so-called myth of illegal migrants has been busted."

Reacting to the final NRC list, Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said, "There is a thin line between nationalism and xenophobia — besides, hatred of the foreigner could later turn into a hatred of Indians different from oneself" — Rabindranath Tagore. The prescience of a great man!"

Also read: Assam NRC final list published: From 1947 to 2019, a look at blighted history of state's struggle against influx of immigrants through porous border



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Big Pharma, squeezed by govt crackdown and mounting lawsuits, eyes India's burgeoning opioid market

Pain, like death, is a universal phenomenon.

The sour grimace on the woman’s face, registering her bodily complaints to Dr GP Dureja in his East Delhi office, would be recognised anywhere. Slouched shoulders, pinched forehead. She wore a willowy black kurta and cast a disapproving glance at the five pain physicians-in-training huddled behind Dureja, founder of Delhi Pain Management Centre and one of India’s pioneering pain physicians.

The five trainees, participants in the center’s acclaimed pain fellowship programme, recorded the woman’s consultation on their smartphones, eager to see India’s famous pain doctor do his work. After their fellowships, they will return home to Chennai, Kashmir, Rajasthan, ready to forge careers in India’s exploding pain industry.

pharma

Representational image. Reuters

The woman had been under Dureja’s care for some time; he diagnosed her with fibromyalgia, a chronic neurological disorder of mysterious origin that causes pain throughout the body. But the regimen of paracetamol and tramadol, an opioid analgesic, was not working and she was beyond fatigued. She wanted more relief.

Indians once thought of pain relief as an indulgence of the West, Dureja said after the woman left his office gripping her new prescriptions. The old way of thinking was “nobody has time to complain about pain in our country. But I’m getting five to seven new patients per day”, he added.

Storefront for-profit pain clinics like Delhi Pain Management Centre are opening by the score across Mumbai, Kolkata, Bengaluru and other cities in this teeming nation. After decades of stringent narcotics laws, borne of debilitating opium epidemics of centuries past, India is a country ready to salve its pain.

And American pharmaceutical companies — architects of the opioid crisis in the United States and avid hunters of new markets — stand at the ready to feed and fuel that demand.

For Indian cancer patients who once writhed in agony, there are fentanyl patches from a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson.

For the country’s vast army of middle-class office workers wracked with back and neck pain, there is buprenorphine from Mundipharma, a network of companies controlled by the Sackler family, owners of Connecticut-based Purdue Pharma.

And for the hundreds of millions of aging Indians with aching joints and knees, there are shots of tramadol from Abbott Laboratories.

Palliative care advocates, who recount stories of patients enduring excruciating cancer pain or dying in agony, have persuaded reluctant government officials to allow high-powered opioid painkillers into doctors’ offices and onto chemists’ shelves in this nation of 1.37 billion people.

But what began as a populist movement to bring inexpensive, Indian-made morphine to the diseased and dying poor has given rise to a pain management industry that promises countless new customers to American pharmaceutical companies facing a government crackdown and mounting lawsuits back home.

The lure of a pain-free life is a revelation in a country where incomes are rising for many city dwellers and 300 million to 400 million are approaching the middle class. Like other markers of the country’s post-colonial sprint into modernity, newly-minted pain doctors promise aspiring Indians that life has more to offer in a body free from pain, and foreign brands are worth the extra rupees.

Dr. G.P. Dureja instructs members of his pain management training program in his East Delhi office. Sarah Varney/KHN

Dr GP Dureja instructs members of his pain management training programme in his East Delhi office. Sarah Varney/KHN

“Don’t listen to your forefathers,” Dureja said, a mantra for the shifting mindset. “They said you should tolerate pain, you should not complain, you should not take painkillers. Now, everybody wants a better quality of life, and everybody wants to get rid of pain early.”

As major pharmaceutical companies look to capitalise on the opportunity, the playbook unfolding in India seems eerily familiar. Earnest advocates share heartbreaking stories of suffering patients; physicians and pharmaceutical companies champion pain relief for cancer patients and persuade regulators to grant greater access to ever more powerful opioids; well-meaning pain doctors open clinics; shady pain clinics follow; and a spigot of prescription opioids opens: First addressing legitimate medical uses but soon spilling into the streets and onto the black market.

A looming deluge of addictive painkillers terrifies some medical professionals, who are keenly aware that despite government regulations most drugs are available for petty cash at the chemist shops that occupy nearly every city block and village center.

“Are people going to figure out every trick in the game to make [opioid painkillers] widely available?” asked Dr Bobby John, a leading Indian public health expert based in New Delhi. “Of course it will happen.”

‘The market for pain is good’

The headquarters of the Pain Clinic of India operates out of a closet-size office in Chembur, a tree-lined suburb in eastern Mumbai. The company’s presence on the internet is so prominent that Dr Kailash Kothari, the clinic’s founder, has turned down requests from people in South Africa, Australia, Europe and the United States seeking prescription opioids.

Down an alleyway, the clinic’s small white-red-and-blue sign is difficult to spot. Around the side of a faded-pink building is a larger sign showing a shirtless, muscular white man gripping his back, another gripping his neck, another clutching his knee; a white woman with an excruciating headache presses her forehead and another grabs her shoulder. Back pain. Neck pain. Headache. Knee pain. Shoulder pain. Cancer pain. The sign promises “Towards Pain Free Life.”

One of the principal architects of pain medicine in India, Kothari runs several clinics in Mumbai, consults at numerous hospitals and flies to his Goa clinic once a week. He co-founded the Indian Academy of Pain, an educational branch of the Indian Society for the Study of Pain that aims to create standardised training for pain medicine, in part by offering qualifying exams to prospective physicians. “This programme is going to change the scenery of what we have in pain management,” Kothari said.

Asserting control over who can call themselves a “pain medicine doctor” in this fledgling industry is an urgent question. Spread across the subcontinent are nearly 10 million licensed physicians and a massive number of untrained medical providers (in rural India, 70 percent of health care providers have no formal medical training).

Storefront for-profit pain clinics like Delhi Pain Management Centre are opening by the score across Mumbai and other cities in India. After decades of restrictive narcotics laws, India is a country ready to salve its pain. Sarah Varney /KHN

Storefront for-profit pain clinics like Delhi Pain Management Centre are opening by the score across Mumbai and other cities in India. After decades of restrictive narcotics laws, India is a country ready to salve its pain. Sarah Varney /KHN

“General practitioners have started prescribing these drugs,” Dureja said. “And we’re not educating the population on when to use and not to use.”

At Dureja’s clinics, as at most medical offices in India, patients pay cash for services and prescriptions. Delhi Pain Management charges around Rs 700 for a consultation; around 700 for a Johnson & Johnson fentanyl patch; Rs 700 for a Mundipharma buprenorphine patch. Dureja’s office takes a 15 percent cut of sales.

There are hints of American pharma’s fingerprints in a glass cabinet in the waiting room of his East Delhi clinic: Awards from Johnson & Johnson honoring Dureja for symposia on pain management; a plaque for “his valuable contribution as a speaker” about tapentadol, an opioid marketed by Johnson & Johnson in 2009. The dispensing counter does a brisk business in Ultracet, branded tramadol tablets made by a Johnson & Johnson subsidiary.

Dureja’s training fellowships, like Kothari’s, are broadly considered on the level; but many others are shady, and none are regulated.

Each year, some 20 fellows attend Kothari’s three -to six-month training programmes, and by his calculation, he has trained 150 aspiring pain doctors. “There are more than 50 people who already have their pain clinics in different parts of India,” he said. Of those clinics, five or six “are training people, and it’s a chain reaction, which is going to benefit pain management as a specialty.”

Kothari remembers when only a few hospitals in Mumbai treated cancer patients and had access to opioids. “But every year, we are accessing more of these kinds of drugs,” he said. “Many chemists, hospitals and medical shops started acquiring the licenses for keeping these drugs, and availability is much, much better. Opioids are available in not just oral, but injectable, patches, syrups.”

Most large Indian hospitals have added pain management as a specialty in recent years. At the insistence of the professional societies that accredit hospitals in India, Kothari said nurses and doctors are now required to assess pain as a fifth vital sign along with pulse, temperature, breathing and blood pressure.

The pharmaceutical industry has kept pace. Twenty years ago only a few pharmaceutical companies marketed pain medicines in India, Kothari said. “Today, almost every company is having pain management as a separate division. In the past five years alone, I must have met more than 15 or 20 companies that have started separate pain management divisions.”

A salesman for Sun Pharma, India’s largest drugmaker by sales, echoed the point during an interview in Chandigarh. The market for pain medications “has totally changed” in the past five years, he said. He shifted nervously and agreed to speak frankly only if his name wasn’t published, for fear of losing his job.

“Now everyone has a car, and [they get] back pain, and now they take medication.” Growing obesity rates in India are also fueling demand, he said, as patients look for relief from weight-related knee and back pain. “So the market for pain is good,” he added.

Abbott Laboratories and Johnson & Johnson did not respond to requests for comment for this report.

Manmohan Singh, a vice president at Modi-Mundipharma in New Delhi, said opioid pain medications are an important therapeutic option, especially for cancer pain. He also said company promotions stress that physicians should familiarise themselves with product safety information. “Patients should be made aware of the clear treatment goals related to pain and function, as well as the potential opioid side effects and the potential for misuse, abuse and addiction,” he said in a written statement.

One false step

The ascendance of pain management in India comes at a fortuitous political moment. Ahead of his reelection earlier this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi invested heavily in health care.

Last fall, the Indian government launched Ayushman Bharat, the world’s biggest public health insurance programme. Dubbed “Modicare,” it guarantees half a billion poor Indians nearly Rs 5 lakh in hospital expenses, paid to private insurers, and, by 2020, the government is to open 150,000 primary care centers. The government has set aside $484 million to fund Modi’s signature programme.

None of this would have been possible without the loosening of India’s strict narcotics laws.

The International Narcotics Control Board, established in 1968, and the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act of 1985 codified the bureaucratic thicket for any doctor who wanted to prescribe opioid painkillers. Physicians feared fines, jail sentences and losing their medical license if they skirted regulations. While the government granted licenses to Indian farmers to grow poppies, most of the morphine produced from the crops was exported.

Dr MR Rajagopal was a young medical student in Thiruvananthapuram at the time and remembers a neighbour in late stages of cancer. “I [had] saw him screaming his way over weeks to death,” Rajagopal said. “It was horrendous, and there was nothing being done about it.” He chose to become an anesthesiologist because it was then the only specialty that focused on pain.

Rajagopal is widely viewed as the father of palliative care in India; whispers of a Nobel Prize follow him. For decades, he has worked assiduously to convince national and state lawmakers that opioid medicines are not an indulgence, but a humane refuge, and it is largely a function of his advocacy that morphine and other painkillers can be prescribed in India. “Two generations of doctors had not seen a tablet of morphine,” he said.

The Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, as amended in 2014, recognised that the need for pain relief was “an important obligation of the government.” The revised law created a class of medicines called the “essential narcotic drugs” list, which includes morphine, fentanyl, methadone, oxycodone, codeine and hydrocodone.

Rajagopal’s days are filled with the tedious work of building a movement: speaking at colleges and public forums, penning editorials and medical papers about palliative care and overseeing Pallium India, a nonprofit medical center and training institute that is singularly focused on palliative care.

Pallium’s pharmacy is a testament to Rajagopal’s persistence. Drugs once banned now fill the shelves: Fentanyl injections and patches, oral morphine and, most recently, methadone, approved for pain relief in 2018.

Rajagopal seems aware that one false step would invite the government to clamp down on the availability of opioids, reversing decades of work. He does not advise using oxycodone or hydrocodone, though they are included on the “essential narcotic drugs” list, and he does not accept funding from pharmaceutical companies, instead putting his hand out to temple trustees and donations from families cared for by Pallium’s home visiting teams.

But the pharmaceutical industry is a wily adversary. American activists made many of the same arguments decades ago as they sought relief for dying patients. Drugs now commonly prescribed for chronic pain first were approved for use by cancer patients. One of the first formulations of fentanyl, for example, was a lollipop because chemotherapy left cancer patients too nauseated to eat. In India, pain physicians now prescribe fentanyl patches to patients with chronic muscular pain.

Purdue Pharma’s international affiliate Mundipharma “is very good at co-opting regulators,” said Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University. “As happened in the US, they are easily converted into useful idiots.”

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

 



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Assam NRC final list published: From 1947 to 2019, a timeline of state's struggle against influx of immigrants through porous border

The final list of the government’s National Register of Citizens (NRC) was published on Saturday (31 August). It’s the list of all houses, alongside the names and number of people residing in them, and their assets ostensibly meant to filter out illegal immigrants who have percolated through state's porous border with Bangladesh.

On one hand, the publication of the NRC list marks the culmination of a process that practically started in May 2005 but had been stewing for much longer. On the other hand, it has impelled lakhs of Assam residents, who have been stripped off their citizenship by the stroke of a pen, into a legal quagmire. Those who are labelled 'outsiders' must defend their rights as Indian citizens in a court of law, or suffer deportation or detention.

People wait to check their names on the National Register of Citizens (NRC) draft list at a centre in Assam's Nagaon district. Reuters

Representational image. Reuters

This is when the Centre itself had admitted that there was a possibility that the process of determining the state resident's legal claim to citizenship may not have been foolproof. The Centre and the Assam government had sought permission for sample re-verification to find out wrongful inclusions and exclusions of persons in the NRC, which was to be published by 31 July. On 23 July, the top court had extended the deadline for publication of the final NRC by a month to 31 August while rejecting the pleas seeking permission for 20 percent sample re-verification.

The NRC, which is being updated in the state for the first time since 1951 following a long-standing demand from the indigenous population, is a result of the six-year-long Assam agitation in the 1980s, a massacre that claimed lives of almost 3,000 people (mostly Bengali Muslims), a bloody bout of violence in state that warranted imposition of controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act in state, a peace accord signed between indigenous people and the Union of India, and several nudges from the Supreme Court of India.

While civil rights activists labelled the exercise arbitrary and blatant subversion of human rights, indigenes argued that it cannot be judged based on reportage of selective events and a without proper historical context. Ridden with State excesses and several rounds of bloody communal violence, it's a long and blighted history.

19 July, 1948: This was the last date in accordance with Article 6 of the Constitution when people from Pakistan could immigrate to India post Partition and still claim all citizenship rights, subject to exceptions in the law.

1 March, 1950: The Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Act, 1950 was enacted on this day and although it extends to whole of India, it is common knowledge that the Act was worded in a way to check the influx of Muslim immigrants from East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh), while protecting the Hindu Bengalis who suffered persecution in the state and flowed in large numbers after anti-Hindu riots in East Pakistan. The law allowed the government to safeguard Hindu Bengalis interests while at the same time, deporting Bengali Muslims back into the Pakistani territory.

Follow LIVE updates on Final NRC publication here

07 April, 1950: However, matters were complicated after the introduction of the Nehru-Liaquat Pact, which gave minorities (Muslims in India's case) rights to return and reclaim their property. The partition of the subcontinent resulted in communal riots, following which Hindus from East Pakistan and Muslims from West Bengal crossed the borders; those he remained on the 'wrong side' were looked upon with suspicion. The prime ministers of the two countries then met in Delhi on, 2 April 1950 and signed an agreement to safeguard the rights of the minorities after several rounds of discussion. This pact, known as the Nehru-Liaquat Pact or Delhi Pact, states that those who return to India by 31 December 1950 were entitled to claim their properties back.

9 February, 1951: The first Census of India was initiated, the data collected from which became the basis for the first-ever National Register of Citizens. The 1951 NRC, not a public document, was created in the state from the census slips of 1951. It was nearly a year after the implementation of the Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Act.

30 December, 1955:  The Citizenship Act, 1955 was enacted. The legislation is basically the exhaustive law relating to citizenship in India.

24 October, 1960: The Assam official language Act was enacted amid fears that the influx of Bengali population will undermine the local Assamese language.

NRC

1960-61: The Bengali Language Movement protest peaks which oppose the decision of the Government of Assam to make Assamese the only official language of the state. It was in 1961 that Bengali was made the official language of Barak Valley following the Bengali Language Movement.

1964: Widespread riots against Hindu Bengalis spur more infiltration into Assam, Tripura and West Bengal.

23 September 1964: After the Registrar General of India in his report on the 1961 Census said 2,20,691 ‘infiltrants’ had entered Assam from East Pakistan – a fact backed by intelligence reports – a police drive was initiated in the border state in 1962 to detect and deport such infiltrators. This led to a hue and cry. Thus the Central Government set up the Foreigners Tribunals to provide a judicial remedy to people who were deemed illegal immigrants before the State could take any action against them.

8 August, 1967: The All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) was formed in the backdrop of massive refugee influx and Indian government's support in settling them in Assam.

1965-71: The border tensions rise and India-Pakistan war breaks out leading to even more infiltration of immigrants. Thousands of Bengali Hindus crossed the border escape atrocities unleashed by Pakistan Army in East Pakistan. Finally, The war of 1971 once again changed the complexity of implementing Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Act 1950 as the Indira Gandhi government decided not to deport people seeking refuge as a result of religious persecution.

19 March, 1972: Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman sign the Indira-Mujib agreement, determining various issues of the two countries, including 1971 as the cut-off year to identify the Bangladeshi infiltrators/refugees to India.

April, 1976: Government of India issues a notification to the state government following the prime ministers visit, wherein the state is instructed not to deport persons who came from Bangladesh to India prior to March, 1971.

1978: In 1978, Mangaldoi MP Hiralal Patowary died, necessitating a by-election. During the process of election, it was observed that the electorate had grown abnormally, giving rise to the fears that Bangladeshis have become 'kingmakers' in Assam. The All Assam Students Union demanded postponement of polls until the doubtful voters were struck off the electoral roll.

1979: Student leaders in 1979 came out in fierce protest demanding detention, disenfranchisement and deportation of illegal immigrants from Assam. The historic movement which came to be known as Assam Agitation or Assam Movement was initiated by All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) and All Assam Gana Sangram Parishad (AAGSP) and officially lasted a span of 6 years.

May 1980: The All Assam Minority Students Union was formed in 1980 to push back against the indenes' Assam movement, which it said was targeting Muslims of East Bengal origin, Bengali Hindus and Nepalis based on false propaganda.

18 February, 1983: The day of the infamous Nellie massacre. Close to 3,000 people in Nagaon district, most of them Muslims, were massacred. Many of those targeted were descendants of legal migrants to British India.

1983: The Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunal ) (IMDT) Act was an Act of the Parliament of India enacted in 1983 by the Indira Gandhi government in order to detect illegal immigrants (from Bangladesh) and expel them from Assam while protecting them against undue harassment due affected by the Assam Agitation. It has been alleged to be one of the main reasons for the rapid rise of the Muslim population and demographic change in Assam.

15 August, 1985: Officially culminating the six-year-long movement waged by indigenous people, the Government of India finally signed a Memorandum of Settlement with the leaders of the Assam Agitation. Assam Accord establishes: Persons who came to Assam prior to 1 January, 1966, "shall be regularised"; Persons who came to Assam between (inclusive) 1 January, 1966 and 24, March, 1971, must register themselves, have their names deleted from electoral rolls, and after 10 years, have their names restored to the electoral rolls; Persons who came to Assam after 24, March, 1971, shall be expelled; Persons who have been expelled and re-entered Assam, shall be expelled. The Assam Accord is for all practical purposes, the basis of the current updating of NRC.

1985: Parliament of India passes Amendment 6A to Citizenship Act, 1951, which inserts Assam Accord rules into the Citizenship Act.

1997: The Election Commission of India, while reviewing the electoral roll introduces a 'D' tag (Dubious voter or Doubtful voter). It is a category of voters in Assam who are disenfranchised by the state government for lack of proper citizenship credentials. They are barred from contesting elections and casting their votes. In 2011, the Gauhati High Court ordered the D voters to be transferred to Foreigners Tribunals and be kept in detention camps.

NRC All You Should Know3

2003: The Citizenship Act was amended to rule that: every person born in India, on or after the 26 January 1950, but before the 1 July 1987; on or after the 1 July 1987, but before the commencement of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003 and either of whose parents is a citizen of India at the time of his birth; on or after the commencement of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2003, where- both of his parents are citizens of India; or one of whose parents is a citizen of India and the other is not an illegal migrant at the time of his birth, are all Indian citizens.

5 May, 2005: The tripartite talk in the presence of then prime minister Manmohan Singh formally adopted resolution to update the NRC within September 2007. But nothing progressed beyond the talk.

12 July, 2005: Supreme Court Strikes down Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunal) Act, 1983 in Sarbananda Sonowal versus Union of India. As a result, all cases pending before the appellate tribunal were transfered before the tribunals formed under the Foreigners Act.  The IMDT Act reversed the burden of proof from individuals to State, made reference to tribunal more onerous, and indirectly made it harder to deport illegal immigrants.

Also read: Assam NRC: From D-voters to foreigners' tribunals, all you need to know about key aspects of National Register of Citizens

12 July, 2009Assam Public Work, an NGO files a case in Supreme Court claiming the names of 41 lakh foreigners have been included in the electoral rolls of Assam. In response to the APW case, the Centre tells the Supreme Court that the NRC 1951 is being updated to detect illegal foreigners so that Assam could have electoral rolls of genuine Indian citizens based on updated NRC. Later AASU became an intervener in the case and Supreme Court asks the government to expedite the process of updating NRC.

22 April, 2010: Then Union home secretary holds a tripartite meeting where the decision to conduct a pilot project to update NRC in Barpeta and Chaygaon revenue circles was taken. While the Chaygaon pilot project was successful, violence in July 2010 that claimed four lives halted the Barpeta project. Barpeta violence made the government shelve the entire NRC update. After Barpeta violence, AASU and 26 other ethnic organizations started joint movement for NRC update

2015: The process to update NRC starts in earnest after Supreme Court asks the government to expedite the process. It is said that the process gathered momentum only after the Supreme Court started monitoring it. The NRC authorities were given the deadline of 31 December, 2015 to complete the process. The deadline was missed.

31 August, 2015: This was the last date for people to submit applications to enroll their names in the updated NRC. About 3.2 crores of people submitted NRC applications.

31 December, 2017: The first draft of the NRC for Assam was published on the intervening night of 31 December, 2017 and 1 January, 2018, in accordance with the top court's direction. Names of 1.9 crore people out of the 3.29 crore applicants were then incorporated.

30 July, 2018: The final draft of the revised NRC list was finally published from which the names of more than 40 lakh residents are missing.

28 August, 2018: The Supreme Court orders re-verification of 10 percent sample data of NRC, from each district amid complaints of arbitrary exclusions and lack of proper procedure.

25 September, 2018: Those excluded from the list were given the opportunity to file objections until 23 November.

17 July, 2019: The Centre and the state government sought more time alleging wrongful inclusions and exclusions from NRC. They sought a direction for 20 percent sample re-verification of names included in the final NRC draft in the districts of Assam bordering Bangladesh and 10 percent sample re-verification of names included in the final draft in the remaining districts

23 July, 2019: The Supreme Court extends deadline for publication of the final National Register of Citizens in Assam to 31 August.

20 August, 2019: The Union Home Ministry increased from 60 to 120 days the time limit for filing appeals in Foreign Tribunals (FTs) regarding exclusion from the final National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam.

23 August, 2019: The government decided to make arrangements to provide legal aid to the needy people amongst those excluded from NRC. The three lists of the NRC published so far have left out over 41 lakh people out of 3.29 crore applicants.

31 August, 2019: All NRC exclusion will be published online on assam.gov.in, assam.mygov.in or nrcassam.nic.in



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Imran Khan pens NYT op-ed on J&K, says talks with India only after it reverses special status decision

Islamabad: Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan said that talks with India can happen only if New Delhi "reverses" its decision on revoking Jammu and Kashmir's special status, end the restrictions and withdraws its troops to the barracks. In an opinion piece in The New York Times on Thursday, Imran Khan again warned that if the world does nothing to stop India's decision on Kashmir, the two nuclear-armed countries will get ever closer to a "direct military confrontation."

File image of Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan. PTI

File image of Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan. PTI

Tensions between India and Pakistan spiked after India abrogated provisions of Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke Jammu and Kashmir's special status and bifurcated it into two Union Territories. Reacting to India's decision, Pakistan expelled the Indian High Commissioner after it downgraded the diplomatic ties with New Delhi. "On Kashmir, the dialogue must include all stakeholders, especially the Kashmiris," Imran says.

"But dialogue can start only when India reverses its illegal annexation of Kashmir, ends the curfew and lockdown, and withdraws its troops to the barracks," he says. Asserting that abrogation of Article 370 was its internal matter, India has strongly criticised Pakistan for making "irresponsible statements" and provocative anti-India rhetoric over issues internal to it.

Imran says that when he was elected prime minister last August, one of his foremost priorities was to work for lasting and just peace in South Asia. But he says that all his efforts to start a dialogue for peace were "rebuffed" by India. India has not been engaging with Pakistan since an attack on the Air Force base at Pathankot in January of 2016 by Pakistan-based terrorists, maintaining that talks and terror cannot go together.

With his efforts to internationalise Kashmir not gaining traction, Imran has been repeatedly trying to project a panic situation by raising the possibility of a military confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbours. "With the nuclear shadow hovering over South Asia, we realise that Pakistan and India have to move out of a zero-sum mind-set to begin dialogue on Kashmir, various strategic matters and trade," he says.
If the world does nothing to stop India's moves on Kashmir, he says, warning that "there will be consequences for the whole world as two nuclear-armed states get ever closer to a direct military confrontation."

Reacting to Pakistan raising the nuclear issue frequently, the External Affairs Ministry spokesperson earlier this month noted that Islamabad would like to project a "panic situation" in South Asia. "From their side, they would like to project a panic situation, the international community does not think there is a war like situation. It is a ploy to deflect attention," the MEA spokesperson said in New Delhi on 9 August.

Imran, in his article, also urged the international community that it is imperative that they "think beyond trade and business advantages."



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Imran Khan pends NYT op-ed on J&K, says talks with India only after it reverses special status decision

Islamabad: Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan said that talks with India can happen only if New Delhi "reverses" its decision on revoking Jammu and Kashmir's special status, end the restrictions and withdraws its troops to the barracks. In an opinion piece in The New York Times on Thursday, Imran Khan again warned that if the world does nothing to stop India's decision on Kashmir, the two nuclear-armed countries will get ever closer to a "direct military confrontation."

File image of Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan. PTI

File image of Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan. PTI

Tensions between India and Pakistan spiked after India abrogated provisions of Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke Jammu and Kashmir's special status and bifurcated it into two Union Territories. Reacting to India's decision, Pakistan expelled the Indian High Commissioner after it downgraded the diplomatic ties with New Delhi. "On Kashmir, the dialogue must include all stakeholders, especially the Kashmiris," Imran says.

"But dialogue can start only when India reverses its illegal annexation of Kashmir, ends the curfew and lockdown, and withdraws its troops to the barracks," he says. Asserting that abrogation of Article 370 was its internal matter, India has strongly criticised Pakistan for making "irresponsible statements" and provocative anti-India rhetoric over issues internal to it.

Imran says that when he was elected prime minister last August, one of his foremost priorities was to work for lasting and just peace in South Asia. But he says that all his efforts to start a dialogue for peace were "rebuffed" by India. India has not been engaging with Pakistan since an attack on the Air Force base at Pathankot in January of 2016 by Pakistan-based terrorists, maintaining that talks and terror cannot go together.

With his efforts to internationalise Kashmir not gaining traction, Imran has been repeatedly trying to project a panic situation by raising the possibility of a military confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbours. "With the nuclear shadow hovering over South Asia, we realise that Pakistan and India have to move out of a zero-sum mind-set to begin dialogue on Kashmir, various strategic matters and trade," he says.
If the world does nothing to stop India's moves on Kashmir, he says, warning that "there will be consequences for the whole world as two nuclear-armed states get ever closer to a direct military confrontation."

Reacting to Pakistan raising the nuclear issue frequently, the External Affairs Ministry spokesperson earlier this month noted that Islamabad would like to project a "panic situation" in South Asia. "From their side, they would like to project a panic situation, the international community does not think there is a war like situation. It is a ploy to deflect attention," the MEA spokesperson said in New Delhi on 9 August.

Imran, in his article, also urged the international community that it is imperative that they "think beyond trade and business advantages."



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Assam NRC final list released: Those excluded from citizenship list can approach Foreigners Tribunals, Gauhati High Court, SC

With the Assam government releasing the final National Register of Citizens (NRC) list on Saturday (31 August), those who found their names excluded might well find themselves concerned.

But take heart: No one can be labelled an illegal migrant or a non-citizen just because their names are excluded from the list. The right to pass a verdict on someone's citizenship only lies within the ambit of Foreigners Tribunals, a quasi-judicial body especially set up to solve matters of dubious citizenship.

Morigaon: People wait in a queue to check their names on the final draft of the state's National Register of Citizens after it was released, at an NRC Seva Kendra, in Morigaon on Monday, July 30, 2018. (PTI Photo) (PTI7_31_2018_000038B)

People wait in a queue to check their names on the final draft of the state's National Register of Citizens after it was released, at an NSK, on July 30, 2018. PTI

It is this body that residents should approach to dispute the exclusion of their names from the NRC.  Those excluded from the final NRC list can even approach the Gauhati High Court or even the Supreme Court in case they are unsatisfied with the response of the Foreigners Tribunals.

The state police on Thursday appealed to the public not to believe in rumours as some elements were trying to create confusion. "The government has ensured adequate safeguards for people, whose name may not appear in the final NRC," it said.

The force also issued a five-point advisory stating that persons whose names are not in the NRC will not be declared foreigners and can file an appeal to the Foreigners Tribunals as per the direction of the Union Home Ministry.

The time limit for doing so has been increased from 60 days to 120 days and the government will provide legal aid through the district legal service authority to the needy so that they can pursue their cases in Foreigners Tribunals and in higher courts.

Besides, the number of Foreigners Tribunals have been increased and are being set up at convenient locations.

Follow LIVE updates on Assam NRC final list publication 

"The fact that the extension of filing an appeal from 60 days to 120 days to the FT, will help all excluded persons to enjoy a level playing field", Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal said, adding, "Nobody will be subjected to any unnecessary harassment."

The home ministry had planned to set up a total of 1,000 Foreigners Tribunals in phases. For now, 100 Foreigners Tribunals are functioning in the state.

Sonowal on 23 August reviewed the law and order situation with the deputy commissioners and superintendents of police where he directed them to maintain close relations with the influential persons and opinion makers to ensure that there is no misunderstanding among the people about the NRC process.

Appealing to the people to maintain peace, the chief minister said, "A government is there in Assam to look after people's interest. All are living here with unity and honour ... We are confident that all sections of society will come forward to maintain peace and tranquility for all times to come".

NRC 2

Additional Chief Secretary (Home Political) Kumar Sanjay Krishna said the process to set up 200 such tribunals is ongoing and 200 more will be set up soon for the benefit of the excluded people.

"The tribunals will be established in convenient locations to ensure that filing and hearing of appeals is smooth and efficient," said Krishna.

"People left out of the final NRC can first approach the Foreigners Tribunals and subsequently move higher courts if not satisfied with the FT ruling," he said.

With inputs from agencies 

Also read: Assam NRC final list today: From 1947 to 2019, a look at blighted history of state's struggle against influx of immigrants through porous border

Also read: Assam NRC: From D-voters to foreigners' tribunals, all you need to know about key aspects of National Register of Citizens

Also read: Assam NRC final list released: State finds 3,11,21,004 individuals eligible for inclusion, debars over 19 lakh from National Register of Citizens



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