Monday, 31 May 2021

Petrol, diesel price news (1 June, 2021): Petrol costs Rs 100.72/litre in Mumbai, Rs 94.49 in Delhi

Fuel prices have witnessed a rise across all four metro cities on Tuesday, 1 June, with petrol costing more than Rs 100 per litre in parts of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, including Mumbai.

Since 4 May, the prices of fuel have been increased for the 17th time. The fuel rates or charges in the country are decided by Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL), Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL).

The revised or fresh fuel rates are decided at 6 am every day after aligning them with the global crude oil prices.

Fuel charges differ in parts of the country because of the addition of other charges like local taxes, value-added tax (VAT) and freight rate.

In Delhi, the petrol price has been raised by 26 paise from Rs 94.23 to Rs 94.49 and diesel price by 23 paise from Rs 85.15 to Rs 85.38 per litre.

The price of petrol in Mumbai has been raised by 25 paise to Rs 100.72 a litre, and diesel by 24 paise to Rs 92.69 per litre for the same quantity.

In Kolkata, petrol costs Rs 94.50 per litre while the same quantity of diesel can be purchased for Rs 88.23. In Chennai, the price of petrol per litre is Rs 95.99 and diesel can be bought at Rs 90.12 for the same quantity.

As per the Indian Oil Corporation website, petrol is currently the costliest at Rs 105.52 per litre in Rajasthan's Sri Ganganagar district, where diesel costs Rs 98.32.



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Global Day Of Parents 2021: History, importance and challenges of parenting during COVID-19 pandemic

Every year on 1 June, the world celebrates Global Day Of Parents. It is a day to celebrate the contribution of parents in the upbringing of their children. The day also acknowledges that the development of children is the primary responsibility of the family. Children should live in a family environment for their personality to grow completely.

The UN states that the day gives us an opportunity to appreciate all parents for the selfless commitment they have towards children and the lifelong sacrifices they make to nurture their relationship with children.

Global Day Of Parents History

In 2012, the United Nations adopted 1 June as the Global Day of Parents. However, the focus on families and the role they play in the development of children started long before that.

The Commission for Social Development had requested the Secretary-General of the UN to increase the awareness of policymakers towards the problems faced by families in a resolution in 1983.

In a 1989 resolution, it was declared that the year 1994 is the International Year of the Family. Years later, in 1993, the UN General Assembly decided that 15 May will be celebrated as the International Day of Families.

Global Day Of Parents during COVID-19

In its official blog, the UN mentions that families are facing difficulties due to the COVID-19 pandemic and parents are primarily responsible for the well-being of their children. The support of parents is required for the emotional and physical well-being of children who would otherwise be at risk.

The organisation has released a set of family-friendly workplace policies. In order to provide support to their employees, workplaces should adopt these policies.



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Sensex jumps over 250 points in early trade; Reliance Industries and SBI track gains

Mumbai: Equity benchmark Sensex jumped over 250 points in early trade on Tuesday, tracking gains in index-heavyweights HDFC twins, Reliance Industries and SBI amid a mixed trend in other Asian markets.

The 30-share BSE index was trading 271.72 points or 0.52 percent higher at 52,209.16 in initial deals, and the broader NSE Nifty rose 69.70 points or 0.45 percent to 15,652.50.

Bajaj Auto was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rising more than 2 percent, followed by SBI, HDFC, Bajaj Finance, L&T, Reliance Industries and IndusInd Bank.

On the other hand, Infosys, TCS, Nestle India, Dr Reddy’s were among the laggards.

In the previous session, Sensex ended 514.56 points or 1 percent higher at 51,937.44, and the broader NSE Nifty surged 147.15 points or 0.95 percent to its fresh closing record of 15,582.80.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were net buyers in the capital market as they bought shares worth 2,412.39 crore on Monday, as per provisional exchange data.

"The ongoing bull run in the market has taken even the incorrigible optimists by surprise. FIIs, regarded as smart investors, have been caught on the wrong foot," said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

Their sustained selling from early April to mid-May has proved to be a wrong strategy and, therefore, now they are making amends through heavy purchases. Massive FII buying in the cash market is an indication of the likely direction of this market, he added.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Hong Kong and Seoul were trading in the positive territory in mid-session deals, while Shanghai and Tokyo were in the red.

Equities on Wall Street closed higher in the overnight session.

International oil benchmark Brent crude was trading 1.20 percent higher at $70.15 per barrel.



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COVID-19 pandemic: Union labour ministry announces additional benefits under EPFO, ESIC schemes

New Delhi: The Ministry of Labour and Employment on Sunday announced additional benefits for workers through social securities schemes run by the EPFO and the ESIC amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

These benefits include pension for dependents of insured persons with Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) who died due to COVID-19 and hike in maximum sum assured under the group insurance scheme Employees' Deposit Linked Insurance Scheme (EDLI), run by Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO), to Rs 7 lakh from Rs 6 lakh.

"The Ministry of Labour and Employment has announced additional benefits for workers through ESIC and EPFO schemes to address the fear and anxiety of workers about wellbeing of their family members due to increase in incidences of death due to COVID-19 pandemic," a ministry statement said.

Enhanced social security is sought to be provided to the workers without any additional cost to the employer, it added.

Currently, for the insured persons (IPs) under the ESIC, after death or disablement of the IP due to employment injury, a pension equivalent to 90 per cent of average daily wage drawn by the worker is available to the spouse and widowed mother for life long and for children till they attain the age of 25 years.

For the female child, the benefit is available till her marriage.

To support the families of IPs under the ESIC scheme, it has been decided that, all dependent family members of IPs who have been registered in the online portal of the ESIC prior to their diagnosis of COVID disease and subsequent death due to the disease, will be entitled to receive the same benefits and in the same scale as received by the dependents of insured persons who die as a result of employment injury, subject to two conditions, it explained.

First condition is that the IP must have been registered on the ESIC online portal at least three months prior to the diagnosis of COVID disease resulting in death.

Secondly, the IP must have been employed for wages and contributions for at least 78 days should have been paid or payable in respect of deceased IP during a period of one year immediately preceding the diagnosis of COVID disease resulting in death.

The IPs, who fulfil the eligibility conditions, and have died due to COVID disease, their dependants will be entitled to receive monthly payment at the rate of 90 percent of average daily wages of the insured person during their life.

The scheme will be effective for a period of two years from March 24, 2020.

Under the EPFO's Employees' Deposit Linked Insurance (EDLI) scheme, all surviving dependent family members of the members of this scheme are eligible to avail benefits of EDLI in case of death in harness of the member.

At present under this scheme, the benefits extended in case of death of a worker are no requirement of minimum service for payment of Gratuity, family pension is paid as per provisions under EPF & MP Act, sickness benefit of 70 per cent of wages for 91 days in a year is paid in the event of worker falling sick and not attending office.

A notification issued by the ministry has made certain amendments in the scheme.

Firstly, amount of maximum benefit has been increased from 6 lakh to 7 lakh to the family members of deceased employee.

Secondly, the minimum assurance benefit of Rs 2.5 lakh to eligible family members of deceased employees who was a member for a continuous period of 12 months in one or more establishments preceding his death in place of existing provision of continuous employment in the same establishment for 12 months.

It will benefit contractual/casual labourers were losing out on benefits due to condition of continuous one year in one establishment, the ministry explained.

The ministry has also restored provision of minimum 2.5 lakh compensation retrospectively, i.e., from 15th February 2020.

In coming three years, the actuary has estimated that eligible family members will get an additional benefit of Rs 2,185 crore from EDLI fund in the years 2021-22 to 2023-24.

The number of claims on account of death under the scheme has been estimated to be about 50,000 families per year including increase in claims taking into account estimated death of about 10,000 workers, which may occur due to Covid, it said.

These welfare measures will provide the much needed support to the families of workers who have died due to the COVID-19 disease and will protect them from financial hardships in these challenging times of pandemic, it said.



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India’s GDP grows by 1.6% in Q4, but contracts to 7.3% in 2020-21

New Delhi: India's economy grew by 1.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2020-21, restricting the full-year contraction to 7.3 percent, official data showed on Monday.

The fourth quarter growth was better than the 0.5 percent expansion in the previous October-December quarter of 2020-21.

The gross domestic product (GDP) had expanded by 3 percent in the corresponding January-March period of 2019-20, according to data released by the National Statistical Office (NSO).

In 2020-21, the Indian economy contracted by 7.3 percent against 4 percent expansion in 2019-20, showing the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The NSO had projected a GDP contraction of 7.7 percent in 2020-21 in its first advance estimates of national accounts released in January this year.

The NSO, in its second revised estimates, had projected a contraction of 8 percent for 2020-21.

China has recorded a 18.3 percent growth in January-March 2021.



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Coronavirus Live News Updates: Bihar, Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh extend COVID-19 lockdowns to curb second wave

09:00 (IST)

Coronavirus News Updates

Four states extend COVID-19 rstrictions to curb spread

Bihar, Uttarakhand and Chhattisgarh on Monday extended COVID-induced lockdown or curfew though there will be some relaxation in curbs. Andhra Pradesh has decided to continue with curfew till 10 June, while the complete shutdown in Lakshadweep will remain till 7 June.

Almost all states and Union Territories have extended the curbs which they first started imposing in mid-April as the second COVID wave hit the country.

"In view of the corona outbreak, a decision has been taken to extend the lockdown by a week, till June 08. However, some extra concessions will be made for business activities," Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar tweeted in Hindi.

Coronavirus Live News Updates: Bihar, Uttarakhand and Chhattisgarh on Monday extended COVID-induced lockdown or curfew though there will be some relaxation in curbs.

Andhra Pradesh has decided to continue with curfew till 10 June, while the complete shutdown in Lakshadweep will remain till 7 June.

Almost all states and Union Territories have extended the curbs which they first started imposing in mid-April as the second COVID wave hit the country.

"In view of the corona outbreak, a decision has been taken to extend the lockdown by a week, till June 08. However, some extra concessions will be made for business activities," Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar tweeted in Hindi.

As per the revised guidelines, which would come into effect from 2 June, shops dealing in essential items like grocery, vegetables, dairy products, meat and fish, will be allowed to do business from 6 am to 2 pm.

Similar relaxations have also been announced by other states. Shopping malls, cinema halls, gyms, stadiums, clubs and swimming pools will, however, remain closed.

Restrictions also remain on the number of people who could attend weddings and funerals.

The Chhattisgarh government said that the lockdown, which was scheduled to end on Monday, will continue with some relaxation in restrictions in those districts where the COVID-19 case positivity rate is less than five percent.

The Rajasthan government also issued guidelines on Monday to start the "unlock" process by easing certain restrictions from 2 June.

According to the guidelines for the modified lockdown, exemption for various activities will be given only in areas where the positivity rate is less than 10 percent or the use of oxygen, ICU and ventilator beds is less than 60 percent.

Uttarakhand Chief Secretary Om Prakash said the COVID curfew has been extended in the state till 8 June. The period of the ongoing curfew in the state was scheduled to come to an end at 6 am on Tuesday morning.

The Lakshadweep administration announced the extension of the complete shutdown for seven more days, beginning 31 May.

The complete shutdown was first announced on May 24 for a week.

The Andhra Pradesh government decided to extend the COVID curfew till June 10, with the same set of restrictions.

The curfew, which was first clamped from May 5 as the coronavirus cases were on a steep upward spiral, was supposed to end on May 31.

Meanwhile, the Uttar Pradesh government extended the relaxations announced in the coronavirus curfew to six more districts from June 1, allowing shops and markets outside the containment zones to open for five days a week.

The relaxations will apply to a total of 61 districts from Tuesday, while 14 districts with an active COVID-19 caseload of over 600 have been kept outside the purview of the order for the time being.

The 14 districts where there would be no relaxation in curbs are Meerut, Lucknow, Saharanpur, Varanasi, Ghaziabad, Gorakhpur, Muzaffarnagar, Bareilly, Gautam Buddh Nagar, Bulandshahr, Jhansi, Lakhimpur-Khiri, Jaunpur and Ghazipur, the spokesperson said.



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WHO names COVID-19 variants found in India 'Kappa' and 'Delta', says move aimed at aiding public discussion

Geneva: The B.1.617.1 and B.1.617.2 variants of the COVID-19, first identified in India, have been named as 'Kappa' and 'Delta' respectively, the World Health Organisation (WHO) announced on Monday as it named various variants of the coronavirus using Greek alphabets.

"Today, @WHO announces new, easy-to-say labels for #SARSCoV2 Variants of Concern (VOCs) & Interest (VOIs). They will not replace existing scientific names, but are aimed to help in public discussion of VOI/VOC," Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO's technical Covid-19 lead, tweeted on Monday.

The UN health agency named the B.1.617.1 variant of the COVID 19 as 'Kappa' while the B1.617.2 variant was dubbed 'Delta.' Both the variants were first found in India.

The WHO's move came nearly three weeks after India objected to the B.1.617 mutant of the novel coronavirus being termed an "Indian Variant" in media reports with the Union Health Ministry pointing out that the UN's top health organ has not used the word "Indian" for this strain in its document.
On 12 May, the ministry dismissed as "without any basis and unfounded" media reports that have used the term "Indian variant" for the B.1.617 mutant strain, which the WHO recently said was a "variant of global concern".

"Several media reports have covered the news of the World Health Organisation (WHO) classifying B.1.617 as a variant of global concern. Some of these reports have termed the B.1.617 variant of the coronavirus as an 'Indian Variant'," the ministry said in a statement in New Delhi.

"These media reports are without any basis, and unfounded," it said.

In a statement, the UN health agency said on Monday that an expert group convened by WHO has recommended labeling using letters of the Greek Alphabet, i.e., Alpha, Beta, Gamma, which will be easier and more practical to discuss by non-scientific audiences.

"The established nomenclature systems for naming and tracking SARS-CoV-2 genetic lineages by GISAID, Nextstrain and Pango are currently and will remain in use by scientists and in scientific research, it added.

It said the WHO and its international networks of experts are monitoring changes to the virus.

"If significant mutations are identified, we can inform countries and the public about any changes needed to react to the variant, and prevent its spread, it added.

Globally, systems have been established and are being strengthened to detect signals of potential variants of concern (VOC) and interest (VOI) and assess these based on the risk posed to global public health. National authorities may choose to designate other variants of local interest/concern, it added.



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Rajasthan wasted 11.5 lakh doses of coronavirus vaccines, alleges Union minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat

Jaipur: Union Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat on Monday alleged that Rajasthan wasted 11.5 lakh doses of coronavirus vaccine.

The state government, however, said the wastage of vaccine in Rajasthan is less than 2 percent, which is below the national average of 6 percent and permissible limit of 10 percent.

Principal secretary medical and health Akhil Arora refuted a media report about the wastage of vaccines. He, however, directed the district collectors concerned to conduct a special audit of vaccination at the places highlighted in the news report.

Referring to news reports that vaccine vials were thrown into garbage dumps, the union minister said Rajasthan should learn from Kerala which has done a good job of vaccination and wasted very few doses.

Shekhawat also attacked the Ashok Gehlot-led government over the vaccination drive.

"The state government first asked for permission to vaccinate 18 years and above age group at its own level. Then creates a drama of global tender. When they were unsuccessful, the Congress government started blaming the Centre," he told reporters in a virtual press conference.



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Hemant Soren asks Centre for free COVID-19 vaccine doses to inoculate 18-45 age group

Ranchi: Jharkhand chief ninister Hemant Soren wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday and sought free COVID-19 jabs for the 18-44 age group, saying the state was unable to incur nearly Rs 1,100 crore on it due to stressed resources.

Soren said the state was battling a deadly second wave of COVID-19 with its limited resources.

"The financial burden on the state for vaccination of the age cohort of 18-44 years is likely to be more than Rs 1,100 crore considering 1.57 crore eligible beneficiaries. With vaccine being available for age cohort of 12-18 years and below, the mentioned financial burden will further increase by around Rs 1,000 crore.

"It will be extremely difficult to spare as much resources from the resource pool of the state which is already stressed during Covid times," the letter said.

He said the abysmal supply of vaccine as compared to the state's requirement is the foremost impediment to the ongoing vaccination drive.

Terming the mandate for states to procure medicines as against cooperative federalism, Soren said, "This is probably for the first instance in the history of independent India that the states have been mandated to procure vaccines on their own."

Such a mandate, under the challenging and unprecedented circumstances where the entire nation is struggling for over a year, stands against the principle of cooperative federalism, he said.

Soren said with the emergence of the second wave of COVID-19 in the country, the state experienced an unexpected outbreak of the pandemic and existing medical infrastructure of the state was put under unparalleled strain.

He mentioned that it is now well established that timely and full vaccination of all the eligible beneficiaries is the only sustainable measure against the spread of COVID-19 infection and to control mortality on account of it.

"Better preparedness and response to a possible third wave in the near future will hinge on the extent of vaccination coverage across the country. The State of Jharkhand is taking all possible measures to ensure maximum coverage in the least possible time frame," he said.

Stating difficulties in procuring vaccines, the chief minister said as mandated by the central government, Jharkhand is putting all efforts to procure COVID-19 vaccine directly from the available manufacturers for the age cohort of 18 to 44 years.

"However, the supplies against the orders placed continue to remain extremely limited and it ultimately depends on the allocations made by the central government. On account of scarce supplies, the overall pace of vaccination is not as desired and defeats the very purpose of vaccination drive for this age cohort," he stressed.

Further, Soren mentioned that Jharkhand like other states has always received vaccines free of cost from the central government for pulse polio and routine immunisation.

Also, he said that rates specified by the central government for procurement of vaccines by the state for the age cohort of 18 to 44 years are significantly higher than the rates at which vaccine is being procured by the central government for the beneficiaries in the age cohort of 45 years and above.

"This dichotomy will not stand the scrutiny of reasonable classification under the fundamental principles of the Constitution of India," Soren who earlier hit out at PM Modi for "launching vaccination drive without preparedness" said.

"Further, the inherent diversity in our country creates various peculiarities specific to the states concerned. Every State has its own high risk groups depending on the geographical, cultural and traditional heterogeneity. As such, a common framework defined by the Central

Government with regard to prioritizing of beneficiaries across the country is not desirable," the letter mentions.

Urging the PM to provide to the State free vaccine for beneficiaries of all age groups and also give freedom to define priorities for vaccination coverage, Soren said this would help the state in achieving the target of full vaccination in a timely manner which would go a long way in ensuring effective tackling of the anticipated third wave.

He said the State and the people of Jharkhand shall be ever grateful for support under such difficult times.

Facing delay in vaccine supplies, Jharkhand which could not launch vaccination drive for 18-44 age group on May 1 ultimately launched a free drive on May 14 but has been stressing on constraints in supply.

Hitting out at the Centre on vaccine distribution, the CM in an interview to PTI on Sunday had said a state like Jharkhand has almost exhausted doses for people in the 18-44 years age group.

Accusing the Centre of "no transparency in vaccine allocation", Soren said under the circumstance he was left with no other option than to appeal to the companies operating in the state to come forward for vaccination of communities in their areas.

Jharkhand's COVID-19 tally soared to 3,36,943 on Monday as 703 more people tested positive for the infection, while 19 fresh fatalities pushed the state's coronavirus death toll to 4,977.



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Cyclone Yaas damaged 2.21 lakh hectares of crops in West Bengal, says Mamata Banerjee

Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday said that the state has incurred a total loss of more than Rs 20,000 crore due to Cyclone Yaas which battered the state last week and around 2.21 lakh hectare of crops were damaged.

The chief minister said that the state has opened around 1200 relief camps in which 2 lakh odd people have taken shelter following the cyclone which made landfall in neighbouring Odisha on 26 May.

"Around 2.21 lakh hectare of crops and 71,560 hectare of horticulture have been damaged in West Bengal by Cyclone Yaas. The state has incurred a total loss of more than Rs 20,000 crore," she told reporters at the secretariat.

Banerjee on 28 May submitted a report to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the damages caused by the cyclone, and sought a Rs 20,000-crore package for redevelopment of the worst-affected areas.

The Public Health Engineering Department has supplied piped and pouches of water to the affected villages, she said.

The chief minister said that repair works for 305 embankments out of the 329 damaged ones have been started.

On the Duare Tran (Relief at doorstep) scheme, she said, "Only those who have been affected by the cyclone have to apply in person. The camps (for the scheme) will be held in schools, colleges and other public buildings and not in ward offices," she said.

Banerjee also assured the people living near Deocha Pachami coal block in Birbhum district that the state government would not acquire any land from them unless they are fully compensated.

With an estimated reserve of 2.1 billion tonnes, Deocha Pachami is the world's second-largest coal block.

Allocated to West Bengal by the Centre in June 2018, the coal block has the potential to bring in investments to the tune of Rs 12,000 crore over a period of time.

"We are not acquiring land from anybody at this moment. The vacant land which the state government has will be used first. And if I need land, I want to assure my brothers and sisters of the scheduled tribe and caste there that it will be taken only after they are fully compensated," Banerjee said.

Banerjee assured local people that they need not worry as she will act as their custodian. "In the first phase, we will not take any land from you. In the second phase, we will not forcibly acquire the land. We will only do that after providing you with a job," she added.

Banerjee advised the people not to pay heed to any instigation.

"All will be employed. Do not fall into any trap. I was ready to sacrifice myself during my movement in Nandigram and Singur," she said.

The state will be highly benefited once the project is completed, she said.



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West Bengal Health Department Recruitment: Walk-in-interviews to be conducted on 3 June; check wbhealth.gov.in

The West Bengal Health and Family Welfare Department has invited applications for the walk-in-interviews, to be conducted in June, for various posts of health workers.

The vacancies have been notified in an advertisement available on the official website wbhealth.gov.in.

The recruitment is being done for the posts of Staff Nurse, Medical Officer General Duty, Lab Technician, CC Technician, Specialist Medical Officer- Medicine, Specialist Medical Officer Respiratory Medicine, Medical Officer CCU/HDU, and Specialist Medical Officer Anesthesia.

The hiring of these COVID-19 volunteers will be done on a contractual basis for a time period of two months. Interested candidates can appear for the interview to be held on 3 June at 11 am. They can visit the official website to check the eligibility criteria and other important details related to the recruitment drive.

While appearing for the walk-in, aspirants have to bring in all the required documents.

Vacancy details:

Staff Nurse – 52

Medical Officer General Duty – 14

Lab Technician – 6

CC Technician – 6

Specialist Medical Officer- Medicine – 6

Specialist Medical Officer Respiratory Medicine – 6

Medical Officer CCU/HDU – 5

Specialist Medical Officer Anesthesia - 4

Age limit:

For Technician and Staff Nurse posts: 40 years as of January 1, 2021

For Medical Officers and Special MO posts: 60 years as of Jan 1, 2021

Applicants will be shortlisted on the basis of merit and interview round. Candidates will be called for the interview to be held at the Meeting Hall of the CMOH Office, Bankura District.



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India reports 1.52 lakh new COVID-19 cases; lowest tally in 50 days, says Centre

New Delhi: India reported the lowest daily new coronavirus infections in 50 days with 1,52,734 cases, taking India's total tally to 2,80,47,534, while the active caseload further declined to 20,26,092, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Monday.

The death toll climbed to 3,29,100 with 3,128 daily deaths, the data updated at 8 am showed. Recoveries continued to outnumber the daily new cases for the 18th consecutive day.

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The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 2,56,92,342, with 2,38,022 patients having recovered in a span of 24 hours, while the case fatality rate stands at 1.17 percent, the data stated.

Also, 16,83,135 tests were conducted on Sunday, taking the total cumulative tests conducted so far in the country to 34,48,66,883, while the daily positivity was recorded at 9.07 percent . It has been less than 10 percent for seven consecutive days, the ministry said.

Weekly positivity rate has declined to 9.04 percent.

The active cases have further reduced to 20,26,092, comprising 7.22 percent of the total infections, while the national COVID-19 recovery rate has improved to 91.60 percent.

India's COVID-19 tally had crossed the 20-lakh mark on 7 August, 30 lakh on 23 August, 40 lakh on 5 September and 50 lakh on 16 September.

It went past 60 lakh on 28 September, 70 lakh on 11 October, crossed 80 lakh on 29 October, 90 lakh on 20 November and surpassed the one-crore mark on 19 December.

India crossed the grim milestone of 2 crore on 4 May.

The cumulative number of COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in the country has exceeded 21.31 crore.

A total of 21,31,54,129 doses have been administered through 30,28,295 sessions, according to the provisional report till 7 am on Monday.
The 3,128 new fatalities include 814 from Maharashtra, 493 from Tamil Nadu, 381 from Karnataka, 186 from Kerala, 142 from West Bengal, 138 from Uttar Pradesh and 127 from Punjab.

A total of 3,29,100 deaths have been reported so far in the country, including 94,844 from Maharashtra, 28,679 from Karnataka, 24,151 from Delhi, 23,754 from Tamil Nadu, 20,346 from Uttar Pradesh, 15,410 from West Bengal, 14,432 from Punjab and 13,016 from Chhattisgarh.

The Health Ministry stressed that more than 70 percent of the deaths occurred due to comorbidities.

"Our figures are being reconciled with the Indian Council of Medical Research," the ministry said on its website, adding that state-wise distribution of figures is subject to further verification and reconciliation.



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In Uttarakhand, displacement of Van Gujjars has brought perks for some in the community, and chaos and disruption for others

By Radhika Gupta

In Uttarakhand, there is a strong drive to displace the nomadic pastoral tribe of Van Gujjars in order to protect wildlife. ‘Van’ means forest. It was an identity conceived by a group belonging to the larger Gujjar community, to protect land rights during the formulation of the Rajaji National Park in 1992.

At the same time, there is an expanding road network, an upsurge of wildlife and religious tourism and more recently, talks to withdraw the conservation status of the Shivalik Elephant Reserve. Yet it is the Van Gujjar community that is blamed for increased pressure on wildlife through the overgrazing of their buffaloes.

The relation of Van Gujjars with the forest may have been often romanticised. Pernille Gooch, a retired senior professor from Lund University in Sweden, who has studied the forest pastoralists in the Indian Himalayas, believes this ideological set-up of Van Gujjars in harmony with nature might have actually worked against them. “But not being allowed to move up and leave during summer (due to enforcement of conservation rules), meant that they already knew that the forest will not survive. It meant that they are surviving but as something else than Gujjars...”

Gulam Rasul, a Van Gujjar stands by his purhal or purchased haystack, strewn over by an elephant. Elephant dung can be seen laying to his left. He is nonchalant as they do not cause excessive damage. Yet, the fact that he is a Van Gujjar, leaves him hanging with an uncertain future. Photo by Radhika Gupta.

Long ignored minorities

The constant accusation of overgrazing is unfair, according to Manshi Asher of Himdhara, an environment research and action collective. “Over the years, it is industrialisation and urbanisation that has forced Van Gujjars to become sedentary and limited their access to smaller forest patches, manifesting as overgrazing”. It is paradoxical, she says, that both development and conservation have acted to dispossess the communities of their resources.

Bivash Pandav, an elephant expert at the Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, disagrees with the notion of disruption of old migratory routes. “They have entered the market economy from the barter economy. Restriction is only an excuse.” According to him, staying in one place ensures regularity of income, without the need to move through difficult mountainous terrain.

The ‘voluntary relocation’ of Van Gujjars first commenced in 2002, in order for the continued protection of the Rajaji National Park. On the contrary, significantly intrusive steps are being deliberated. Uttarakhand’s 5400 square-metre Shivalik Elephant Reserve is being assessed for withdrawing its conservation status, partially to expand the Jolly Grant airport for international travel.

This raises questions of whether conservation is valued only at the cost of marginalised and minority communities. According to a report by the Rights and Resources Institute, an estimated 136 million people worldwide have been displaced to formally protect land. The report states, “Conservation’s colonial history has contributed to a growing list of human rights abuses, displacements, and increasingly militarized forms of violence in the pursuit of protecting biodiversity.”

Insecurity over land

Displacement has absolved community ownership of the pastures, and provided individual land for a renewed life outside of protected forest areas. A young Gujjar woman of Diyawali in Uttarkhand is hopeful that soon it will be their turn to relocate. “When the janglaat (Forest Department) will give us land, we will be happy to move. There is lack of connectivity and no education for my daughter here.”

A young Van Gujjar mother of Diyawali village in the forest, is hopeful that her family will be resettled with new land so that she can send her daughter to school. Photo by Radhika Gupta.

Social science experts and activists believe that the need for a secure piece of land is a coping mechanism for harassment and constant jostling by the forest department. “If you ask them, they will say, we want land. Because they feel so horribly insecure… the forest cannot take so many buffaloes. The whole system of buffalo herding was fine-tuned to the seasons and movement. There is added and mounting external pressure on forest resources from people who do not share the same relation with the forest as the Gujjars,” said Gooch.

The harassment, despite legal rights to land, is well documented. Under The Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act 2006 or the Forest Rights Act (FRA), the Van Gujjar are specifically entitled to, ‘…seasonal use of landscape in the case of pastoral communities, including reserved forests, protected forests and protected areas such as Sanctuaries and National Parks to which the community had traditional access.’ In reality, though, this is often ignored.

The FRA was meant to address repeated discrimination faced by the hundred million forest dwellers across India. Instead, there is a clear emphasis to further disempower them, according to political ecologist Trishant Simlai of Cambridge University. He studies the impacts of ‘social sorting’ on vulnerable communities in the Corbett Tiger Reserve of Uttarakhand. He said, “Surveillance by the Forest Department is particularly intensified where Van Gujjars and other scheduled tribes lop trees and graze cattle, through the use of camera traps and drones.”

The chaotic relocation

An entire population of Van Gujjar has battled with adaptation and loss of identity. Masardin Gujjar was moved to Gendi Khata when he was 20 years old. His family does not have legal rights to the land they were assigned. “We came here quite suddenly and most of our buffaloes died. There was no place to keep them. We were told we will be given land in our name and a house. If we try to collect wood for fire or building purposes, they snatch it from us.”

An old woman in Gendi Khata remarked, “The officials said this land is now a park for the animals. So, you need to leave the park.” She is anxious – “Who knows if one day the government will kick us out from here as well?”

“This is a very smart move by the government to not allocate land in their name” according to Bivash Pandav. “Otherwise, they will immediately sell it off and get back to the forest.” He believes that forests with Gujjars have no future as far as wildlife is concerned. “In fact, the land that they receive is something they cannot earn even for ten generations. The package is obviously lucrative, which is why only about a hundred families remain in the forest.”

Over 1,390 families have been relocated from Motichur and Ranipur areas of the Rajaji National Park to Patri and to Gendi Khata villages. They were expected to build houses, find access to water and establish new livelihoods on an empty piece of land, but without being able to claim ownership. Another estimated 1,300-1,600 relocated families have nowhere to go and have built temporary shelter by river banks. They were not given any land for residence due to missing documents or miscounting of family heads, depending on who you ask.

Section 4 of the FRA mandates that the process of notifying a Critical Wildlife Habitat require the involvement of local people, as well as a scientific assessment to prove that co-existence is not possible, and exercising rights would lead to irreversible damage to the habitat or species. “The FRA does not take a position that communities can never be evicted from protected areas. It is meant to be a lawful and inclusive process of exploring co-management by involving local communities and consent-based relocation as a last resort,” says Sharachchandra Lele, an expert in environmental policy and governance at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment.

A focus on “keeping forests pristine” is unscientific, he added. It eliminates the possibility of human-wildlife coexistence.

Fragmented forests

Wild animals are rarely restricted within the virtual boundaries of parks. Around Rajaji, there are increasing instances of human-wildlife conflict. Between 2016-17 alone, 222 wild animals were killed due to speeding vehicles on National Highway 74 in the Haridwar forest division.

For example, elephants regularly leave the Shyampur forest range at dusk to cross the river into town and return by dawn. Across the river are fields of sugarcane that they devour through the night.

A male Asian elephant crossing the National Highway 74 Haridwar-Najiabad, Uttarakhand. Photo by Rajeev Mehta, former honorary wildlife warden Rajaji Tiger reserve.

“As soon as the munji (rice) season ended, they now come for ganna (sugarcane). They take a round at least once in fifteen days,” said Bahuguna Jeevanan, one of the many farmers whose fields are raided by elephants.

Jeevanan is worried that visits from elephants and other wild animals may increase in the future and he could lose access to grazing his cattle in the forest. “This area has already been declared as a buffer zone [for conservation]. When and if the Forest Department decides to relocate the Gujjars, the forest will become void of humans and their cattle. Soon, the traffic of wild animals to our fields will increase.” He says that about 15,000 affected residents of Shyampur and Lal Dhang have made protests in the past.

Exclusionary conservation

The key question that remains unanswered is ‘Conservation for whom’? Is it for tourists who drive in, or fly in, with the roads and airports eating into forests? Is nature merely a spectacle, or is it something that communities like the Van Gujjar or the farmers near protected areas, can find a way to participate in?

“It is so rare to see knowledge that challenges power. Most often, it is seen as the role of critical social scientists. It is funny that the ecologists and conservation biologists over the years who have looked at the impact of Van Gujjars on the forest, are not as vocal when it comes to the impacts of large-scale infrastructure, tourism-related land grabs, or the Kumbh Mela,” said Simlai of Cambridge University.

Bahuguna Jeevanan of Peeli Padav village stands between his sugarcane field destroyed by elephants. Photo by Radhika Gupta.

***

This article was originally published on Mongabay.com.

Mongabay-India is an environmental science and conservation news service. This article has been republished under the Creative Commons license.



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Ahilyabai Holkar Birth Anniversary: Why Maratha ruler was named 'philosopher queen of Malwa'

The 296th birth anniversary of Ahilyabai Holkar, one of the celebrated female rulers in Indian history, is observed on 31 May. Popularly known as ‘Maharani Ahilya Bai Holkar,’ she ruled for nearly three decades and touched new heights of success.

Holkar was given the title of 'The Philosopher Queen' by British historian John Keyas. In her praise, Keyas stated that “Ahilyabai Holkar, the philosopher queen of Malwa, had been an acute observer of the wider political scene”.

Who is Ahilyabai Holkar?

Ahilyabai was born on 31 May, 1725 in the village of Chaundi in Maharashtra. Her father Mankoji Sindhia (Shinde) was the Patil of the village. He ensured that his daughter should read and write, especially at a time when women were not allowed to go to school.

When she was eight years old, Ahilyabai was appreciated by Malhar Rao Holkar (Army Chief of Maratha Peshwa Balaji Baji Rao) for service of feeding the poor and hungry at a temple. Impressed by her gesture, Rao Holkar married his son Khanderao to Ahilyabai in 1733.

Years later in 1745, Ahilyabai was blessed with a baby boy Male Rao, who passed away at the age of 19. Later in 1748, she took a big step by breaking societal norms when married to Yashwantrao, who was poor but a brave man.

At the young age of 29, her husband was killed in the battle of Kumbher, leaving Ahilyabai as a widow in 1754. When she tried to commit sati, she was stopped by her father-in-law (Malhar Holkar) who later became her pillar of support and strength.

After the death of Malhar Holkar and Male Rao, Ahilyabai took charge as the ruler in 1767. She was a lauded administrator and during that time the city witnessed a historic rise under her rule. To help the poor section, she built structures like water tanks, roads, ghats and rest houses.

Ahilyabai, renowned to fight on the back of an elephant, kept her territory safe for many years from Bhils and Gonds (who staged many attacks on her land).

Following her rule for nearly 30 years, Ahilyabai passed away on 13 August, 1795 at the age of 70.



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Fuel prices rise again today: Petrol hiked by up to 29 paise; rates now above Rs 100 in Mumbai

The fuel prices have increased again across all four metro cities today, 31 May. According to a report by MoneyControl, the Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) have raised the petrol prices by 28-29 paise/litre and diesel prices by 26-28 paise/litre.

Fuel prices have been raised by Rs 3.83/litre for petrol and Rs 4.42/litre for diesel since 3 May after repeated price hikes over the month. Also, the prices have been increased for the 16th time since 4 May, reports NDTV.

The fuel rates or charges in the country are decided by Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL). They all are state-run oil marketing companies that are known for the brand and trust among consumers.

Every day at 6 am, the fresh or revised fuel rates are decided after aligning them with the global crude oil prices. However, any change in the foreign exchange rates is then considered to decide the domestic price of fuel.

Fuel charges differ in different cities because of the addition of other charges like local taxes, value-added tax (VAT) and freight rate.

Looking into today’s slot, in Delhi, the petrol prices have been raised from Rs 93.94 per litre to Rs 94.23 while diesel prices also increased from Rs 84.89 per litre to Rs 85.15 per litre.

The price of petrol in Mumbai has crossed the Rs 100 mark. Today, the revised price stands at Rs 100.47 per litre whereas diesel is retailed at Rs 92.45 per litre for the same quantity.

In Kolkata, the petrol price costs Rs 94.25 per litre while one litre of diesel can be purchased in the city for Rs 88.00. Looking into another major city in the country, Chennai, the price of petrol per litre is Rs 95.76 and the price of diesel is Rs 89.90 for the same quantity.

Few other cities where the petrol rates had already crossed the Rs 100-mark includes Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.



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Gold, silver futures on the rise; check out prices in major cities

Gold and silver MCX futures are on the rise on Monday, 31 May. At 10.33 am, the gold June futures on MCX increased by 0.18 percent to Rs 48,628. On the other hand, the silver July futures increased by 0.47 percent to Rs 71,950.

The rate of gold has gone up by Rs 2,000 in the month of May, with analysts saying MCX gold has support at Rs 48,200 and resistance at Rs 49,100.

The price of 22-carat-gold in New Delhi is Rs 46,870 per 10 gram while in Mumbai, the precious yellow metal is available at Rs 46,700. In Chennai, 22-carat-gold can be purchased at Rs 46,280 per 10 gram while in Kolkata, gold is available at Rs 48,280 for 10 grams.

In Bangalore, the price of 10 grams of 22-carat gold is Rs 45,900. In Jaipur and Lucknow, the same quantity and quality cost Rs 46,870.

One kilogram of silver is available for Rs 72,000 in New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Bangalore. However, in Chennai, the metal can be purchased at Rs 76,800.

At 1.22 am ET (10.52 am IST), the price of gold had increased by 0.11 percent to $1,905.60 per ounce after an increase of $2.10 in the international market.

The US consumer price data boosted gold as an inflation hedge, the LiveMint reported. Internationally, silver was priced at $27.94 per ounce after a gain of 0.2 percent.



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IMD, Skymet differ on monsoon arrival: A look at reasons behind divergent statements by two agencies

The India Meteorological Department and private weather forecasting agency Skymet Weather on Sunday gave divergent statements on whether the monsoon has arrived in Kerala.

While the IMD said that the arrival of the southwest monsoon over Kerala is likely to be delayed by two days, and is expected to make an onset over the state by 3 June, Skymet said that the monsoon has already arrived.

In recent years, the IMD and Skymet have often made differing predictions about the weather ahead, particularly the all-important monsoon. Last year as well, the official forecasting agency had said on 31 May that the monsoon had not arrived yet, while the private agency had said that it had arrived earlier than expected, as noted by Hindustan Times.

Here is a brief look at what lies beneath these differing opinions:

Official status of IMD, Skymet

The IMD is an agency under the Union Ministry of Earth Sciences. It is the principal agency responsible for meteorological observations, weather forecasting and seismology. Skymet Weather, on the other hand, is a private agency headquartered in Noida. It began giving forecasts in 2012.

While there have been controversies in the past over differing predictions, the two agencies' forecasts have often been largely similar. For example, in 2014, both of them said that India would get deficient rains and the country did end with a 'meteorological' drought, as noted by The Economic Times. In 2013, both agencies correctly predicted a good monsoon, although Skymet's prediction was more accurate.

Criteria to define 'onset'

Part of the reason for differing statements about whether the monsoon has arrived is the definition of the 'onset.'

According to the IMD, the onset of the southwest monsoon over Kerala depends on three parameters, as noted by PTI.

If after 10 May, 60 percent of 14 stations — Minicoy, Amini, Thiruvananthapuram, Punalur, Kollam, Allapuzha, Kottayam, Kochi, Thrissur, Kozhikode, Thalassery, Kannur, Kudulu and Mangalore — report rainfall of 2.5 millimetres or more for two consecutive days, the onset over Kerala can be declared on the second day, provided other two criteria are also in concurrence.

This has to be supplemented by the wind speed. The depth of westerlies should be maintained up to 600 hectopascal (hPa), in the box equator to Latitude 10-degrees north and Longitude 55 degrees to 80-degrees east. The zonal wind speed over the area bounded by Latitude 5 to 10-degrees north, Longitude 70-80-degrees east should be of the order of 15 20 knots at 925 hPa.

The Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) should be below 200 watt per square meter (wm-2) in the box confined by Latitude 5-10 degrees north and Longitude 70-75 degrees east.

Skymet has said all the IMD parameters are fulfilled to declare the onset of Southwest Monsoon over Kerala. The IMD, however, said the depth of westerlies is not as much as it is expected, and the rainfall parameters remain unfulfilled to declare onset of monsoon over Kerala.

With inputs from PTI



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CGBSE Class 12 board exam admit cards released; download hall ticket at cgbse.nic.in

The admit cards for Class 12 board exams of the Chhattisgarh Board of Secondary Education (CGBSE) have been released. This time, students will appear for the board exams from their homes. This new scheme has been adopted keeping in mind the prevailing pandemic conditions in the state. Candidates can check and download their hall tickets by visiting the official website.

Students appearing for the exams can follow these simple steps to download the admit card:

- Visit the website cgbse.nic.in

- On the homepage, click on Class 12 admit card link

- Type either your roll number or your name and father’s name

- Submit it. The admit card will appear on the screen

- Take a printout of the hall ticket and save a copy for later reference

Here’s the direct link to download the admit card:

All students appearing for their higher secondary board exams will be provided with question papers and exam sheets from their designated exam centres from 1 to 5 June. A student can submit the exam sheet within 5 days. This year, around 2.71 lakh students have registered themselves for the board exams.

Important instructions for exams:

Students need to sign the attendance sheet when they will submit their exam sheets. They are required to mention all the mandatory details like roll number, roll code, name, subject’s name, subject code and signature on the first page of the answer sheet. Every student must wear a face mask and carry a sanitiser to the examination centre. No answer sheets will be accepted by post, courier or any other mode.

If any student is coronavirus positive, any family member can collect the question paper on his/her behalf from the examination centre. They need to provide the admit card and the COVID-19 positive report. At the time of submitting the answer sheet, a copy of the student's Aadhaar card is also required.



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Sunday, 30 May 2021

IAF AFCAT 2021: Recruitment for 334 vacancies begins on 1 June; visit afcat.cdac.in for details

The Indian Air Force (IAF) has released a notification for the Air Force Common Admission Test (AFCAT) 2 to recruit candidates at the flying branch and ground duties for both technical and non-technical posts.

The online registration process will begin from 1 June while the last date will be 30 June. Once the process begins, interested and eligible candidates can apply for the various vacancies by visiting the official website - afcat.cdac.in.

The online registration is for grant of Short Service Commission (SSC) in Flying Branch and Permanent Commission and Short Service Commission in Ground Duty (Technical and Non-Technical) branches. Meanwhile, applications are also invited for grant of Permanent Commission PC/ SSC for NCC special entry Scheme (for flying Branch) and for Meteorology branch entry.

This recruitment drive will fill up a total of 334 vacancies that have been notified.

Vacancy details

Out of 334, 96 vacancies are for SSC in the flying branch, 137 PC/SSC vacancies are in the Ground Duty Technical branch, 73 PC/SSC vacancies in the Ground Duty non-technical branch, and 28 PC/SSC vacancies in the Meteorology branch. However, for NCC special entry, 10 percent of seats out of CDSE vacancies are for PC and 10 percent of AFCAT vacancies for SSC.

Eligibility criteria

For Flying Branch Post: Applicants should be between 20 to 24 years of age as on 1 July, 2022. The upper age limit for interested candidates who are holding a valid and current Commercial Pilot License issued by DGCA (India) is relaxed for up to 26 years.

For Ground Duty (Technical / Non-Technical) Branches Post: Applicants should be between 20 to 26 years of age as on 1 July, 2022.

Exam Fee

Candidates should note that to register for AFCAT, they have to pay Rs 250. Meanwhile, applicants registering for NCC special entry and Meteorology department are excused from paying the fee.

Once the registration window opens, aspirants can follow these steps to apply:

Step 1: Visit the official website  -afcat.cdac.in
Step 2: On the homepage, go to the candidates’ login tab and click on AFCAT 02/2021 link
Step 3: Click on ‘New registration’ on the page and fill in all the required details
Step 4: Submit the information and save the registered id and password
Step 5: Use the credentials to log in and fill in the application form
Step 6: Pay the fee and submit the form. Download a copy of the form for future reference



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Delhi High Court refuses to stay work on 'vital and essential' Central Vista project

The Delhi High Court on Monday allowed the construction work of the Central Vista project to continue, saying it was a "vital and essential" national project.

A bench of Chief Justice DN Patel and Justice Jyoti Singh dismissed a plea seeking to halt the project during the coronavirus pandemic, saying the petition was "motivated" and "not a genuine PIL". It imposed a cost of Rs one lakh on the petitioners, according to LiveLaw.

Stating that the project is an essential project of national importance, the court said sovereign functions of parliament are also going to be conducted there and the public is vitally interested in this project, as per a report in The Indian Express. “Since the workers who are working at the project are staying on site and COVID-19 protocols are being adhered to, there is no question of issuing directions to suspend the work of Central Vista Avenue Redevelopment Project,” said the court, adding the DDMA in the 19 April order has not prohibited construction activity where labourers are residing on-site.

The court said under the contract awarded to the Shapoorji Pallonji Group, work had to be completed by November 2021 and, therefore, it should to be allowed to continue. It said the legality of the project was already upheld by the Supreme Court.

The court on 17 May had reserved its judgement in the case, which was being heard following a petition that voiced concern over the “super spreading potential and threat” posed by the continuing construction at the project site and the plight of the workers who are being exposed to COVID-19.

Centre had sought dismissal of the petition and termed it another attempt to stall the project. “Such attempts are going on since the inception of the project under one pretext or the other and in one name or the other,” the Centre’s reply to the petition had stated. Meanwhile, the petitioners’ counsel Sidharth Luthra had likened the project to “Auschwitz", a German concentration camp during the Second World War.

The project, which entails construction activities on Rajpath and the surrounding lawns from India Gate to Rashtrapati Bhawan, envisages building a new Parliament House, a new residential complex to house offices and the Prime Minister and the Vice President. It will also have new office buildings and a Central Secretariat to accommodate various ministries’ offices.



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COVID-19 in Kashmir: Amid pandemic surge in Valley, negligent handling of samples for virus test sets alarm bells ringing

Srinagar: Leak of COVID-19 virus at collection and testing laboratories in Kashmir for various reasons has triggered an alarm amid the surge in positive cases in the Valley.

The revelations have come as Kashmir is seeing an unprecedented surge of positive cases for the last several weeks. Official records reveal that COVID-19 samples collected from people in several districts didn't even bear the specimen numbers or names of blocks from where they were gathered which has also raised serious questions on the positive caseload numbers. In addition to that, leakage of the virus in the process has only compounded the problem.

The issue of sample leaks was brought to the fore in a meeting which was convened by divisional commissioner Kashmir on 15 April.

As per the note of the meeting, "Some of the districts are not putting in SRF numbers upon the samples for RT-PCR, many others are not sorting the samples block wise and some are sending leaky samples to the laboratories."

The real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests are being done at only a few hospitals in Kashmir where the test samples are dispatched from different districts. The leakage was also noticed as the health workers dispatched RT-PCR samples outside Jammu and Kashmir for testing due to the heavy load on the laboratories in the Valley, an official who preferred to remain anonymous, said.

According to the official, the specimen referral form (SRF) number for each COVID-19 sample was the only way to identify it. They added that while SRF labels were missing in several samples, virus leak was also detected in some viral transport medium (VTM) tubes that were used to collect COVID-19 samples.

Healthcare workers said that they have to fill up the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) form to generate SRF code to identify a COVID-19 positive case.

"The VTM kits that we had received from the authorities were broken and the leaks were detected at the laboratories. The RT-PCR tests are done several kilometres away from the sample collection centres and the leaks have also taken place during transportation," said Shopian chief medical officer Dr Arshad Hussain Tak.

Medical experts have said that poor testing was one of the reasons that the COVID-19 positive cases and fatality numbers released by the government each day appear to be an undercount. On Saturday, authorities said they detected 2,253 new positive cases of COVID-19 in Jammu and Kashmir.

Of them, 794 cases were reported from the Jammu division and 1,459 from the Kashmir division. The deaths were 46 out of which 30 were from Jammu and 16 from Kashmir. The number of active positive cases has now risen to 39,255 while the total number of 2,86,684 positive cases have been detected across the Union Territory (UT) so far.

In view of the poor sample collection, the health authorities have been asked to ensure a better testing procedure and to improve the testing rate across Kashmir.

The health department spokesperson, Dr Mir Mushtaq, said that the healthcare workers have been advised that the COVID-19 samples should be taken properly. "There could be cases of sample leakage, but the people are later being re-tested for the virus," he said.

The revelation of virus leaks has come to the fore even as the authorities asserted the need for early detection of positive cases and timely hospitalisation to prevent deaths. The testing has already been low in all the regions of southern Kashmir, central Kashmir and northern Kashmir and the targeted numbers were not achieved.

As per official records in the south Kashmir districts of Shopian and Anantnag only 169 and 376 tests respectively were carried out in the first two weeks of the COVID-19 surge in April. In the northern Kashmir districts of Kupwara and Baramulla, only 237 and 418 tests respectively were done in the first two weeks of April while in the central Kashmir district of Budgam no RT-PCR test was done on 337 COVID-19 symptomatic people after their Rapid Antigen Tests (RAT) turned out to be negative.

Budgam chief medical officer Dr Tajamul Hussain Khan said that the testing has been sped up and was now done at several healthcare centres including those in the rural areas.

"We are now carrying out RAT tests at several hospitals including the sub-district hospitals (SDHs) and the primary health centres (PHCs)," he said.

The authorities had earlier devised the guidelines that 15,000 people should be tested from among a million each day and half of the tests should be done through RT-PCR. The testing has not remained commensurate with these targets even when those under observation for COVID-19 in Jammu and Kashmir has now reached 20,76,265. The UT has done tests on 84,92,134 people so far.

"Those under observation were the contacts of the positive patients," said Tak adding that the testing procedures are being improved to prevent leaks or missing SRF numbers.



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Pfizer vaccine protects against COVID-19 strain predominant in India but is slightly less effective, finds study

The Pfizer vaccine is slightly less effective but appears to still protect against the more transmissible Indian strain of the virus that causes Covid-19, according to a study by France's Pasteur Institute. "Despite slightly diminished efficacy, the Pfizer vaccine probably protects" against the Indian variant, according to laboratory test results, said Olivier Schwartz, the institute's director and co-author of the study that was published on the BioRxiv website ahead of peer review.

The study sampled 28 healthcare workers in the city of Orleans. Sixteen of them had received two doses of the Pfizer vaccine, while 12 had received one dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine.

People who had received two doses of Pfizer saw a three-fold reduction in their antibodies against the Indian variant, B.1.617, according to the study, but were still protected.

"The situation was different with the AstraZeneca vaccine, which induced particularly low levels of antibodies neutralising" the Indian variant, the study said.

Patients who had had Covid-19 within the past year and people vaccinated with two doses of Pfizer retained enough antibodies to be protected against the Indian variant, but three to six times less antibodies than against the UK variant, Schwartz said.

The study shows that "this variant.. has acquired partial resistance to antibodies," Schwartz said.

Since first emerging in late 2019 in China, the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes Covid-19 has developed several variants, usually named for the places where it first appeared including the so-called South Africa and UK strains.

The variant first detected in India appears to be much more transmissible than earlier variations. It has now been officially recorded in 53 territories, according to a World Health Organization report.

To try to curb its spread, France and Germany have re-introduced tighter rules on arrivals from affected countries, including the United Kingdom.



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Serum Institute promises GOI it will supply 9-10 crore Covishield doses in June

Serum Institute of India (SII) has informed the government that it will be able to manufacture and supply nine to 10 crore doses of Covishield in June, official sources said on Sunday amid complaint by States about the shortage of anti-coronavirus vaccine jabs. In a recent letter to Union Home Minister Amit Shah, SII said its employees have been working round the clock in spite of various challenges because of the pandemic.

"We are pleased to inform that in the month of June we will be able to manufacture and supply nine to 10 crore doses of our Covishield vaccine to the country as compared to our production capacity of 6.5 crore doses in May," Prakash Kumar Singh, the Director of Government and Regulatory Affairs at SII, said in the letter.

Mr Singh also thanked Mr Shah for his "valuable guidance and continuous support" at various stages of their endeavour to make India 'aatmanirbhar' (self-sufficient) in COVID-19 vaccines and making it available for the people of the country.

"Serum Institute of India has always been sincerely concerned about the protection of the citizens of our country and world at large from COVID-19. Under the leadership of our CEO, Adar C Poonawalla, our team has been working relentlessly shoulder to shoulder with our government to fight the COVID-19 pandemic," he said in the letter.

"We assure you that with the support of the Government of India and under your kind guidance, we are trying our best by utilising all of our resources to increase our production capacity of Covishield in the coming month also." In early May, SII had communicated to the Centre that production of Covishield would be ramped up to 6.5 crore in June, seven crore in July and 10 crore each in August and September.

India is currently using made-in-India vaccines — Covishield manufactured by SII and Covaxin of Bharat Biotech — in its COVID-19 immunisation programme.

The Russian Sputnik V is the third vaccine to get approval from the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) for emergency use and is being used in a few private hospitals.



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World No Tobacco Day 2021: Health benefits of quitting smoking, and tips to effectively kick the habit

The World Health Organisation has designated 31 May as 'World No Tobacco Day.' The theme this year is 'Commit to Quit', which assumes significant importance in the present times of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The association of smoking with the COVID-19 infection has been controversial. Initial studies from China and Europe seemed to suggest a lower prevalence of COVID infection among smokers and protective effects of smoking against the effects of COVID. However, subsequent analysis showed serious methodological flaws in those studies. And later studies showed that smokers in fact fare poorly after a coronavirus infection.

COVID infection and lung complications in smokers

COVID predominantly affects the lungs and smoking too damages the lungs. Worldwide research suggests that there is a higher incidence of severe lung complications following COVID in smokers as compared to non-smokers. The World Health Organisation released a scientific brief earlier this year showing that smokers are at higher risk of developing severe disease and death from COVID-19.

These findings of a negative impact of smoking should not be surprising given the fact that smokers have been traditionally known to be more susceptible to infections, especially respiratory infections like flu, pneumonia and tuberculosis.

Weakened immune system and increased risk of transmission

Tobacco smoke contains toxic chemicals which cause damages to the linings of the airways and the lungs. The chemicals in tobacco smoke suppress the activity of different types of immune cells leading to weakening of immunity and thus impairing one’s ability to fight the COVID-19 infection.

The act of smoking involves the fingers and possibly contaminated cigarettes coming in contact with the lips and thus increasing the risk of transmission of virus from hand to mouth. Moreover, chewing tobacco products is associated with usually spitting in public places which also accelerates the risk of transmission of COVID through saliva droplets.

Also, smokers are more likely to have heart disease, stroke, cancer, chronic lung disease and diabetes, all of which are important comorbidities for developing severe illness and adversely affecting the clinical outcome in COVID affected patients.

Therefore, it is vital that smokers quit the habit. And the COVID pandemic couldn’t be a better time to quit smoking. However, it can be a challenge given the economic and social stress prevailing during the pandemic. Smokers will need help to quit. And the WHO World No Tobacco Day 2021 campaign aims to empower and support tobacco users on their journey to quit.

There is no single and easy way to quit tobacco, but here are some tips

· Make a 'quit plan' and stick to it. It doesn’t matter if you fail a couple of times. Keep trying and don’t give up.

· Modify your diet. There are some food items which make cigarettes taste better like meat, alcohol, tea, coffee, and aerated beverages. Avoid them and instead have fruits, vegetables, cheese, water, and fresh fruit juices. Also, if you have a habit of post-meals cigarettes, then change your routine and do some activity to divert your mind.

· Have a support group in place to help you through this — family, friends, doctor, counsellor.

· Nicotine-replacement therapy like chewing-gum or skin-patches can be very helpful to tide over your withdrawal symptoms.

· Try to avoid stressful situations during the first few weeks after you stop smoking.

· Exercise, even a 5-minute walk or stretch, has been shown to reduce your cravings and ease some of your withdrawal symptoms.

· Try to be around your non-smoker friends and avoid your smoker companions for a while.

· Clean your house, your surroundings, clothes and belongings so that you do not get the familiar scent of cigarette smoke which will remind you of smoking.

Following are the responses to some common questions on the dangers of smoking:

What are the unique dangers of smoking for women?

While smoking is bad for both the genders, women experience certain additional detrimental health effects apart from the ones common to all genders. Some of these include:
premature menopause menstruation disturbances reduced fertility increased risk to cancers specific to women such as breast or cervical cancer premature ‘aging’. Smoking during pregnancy exposes the fetus to toxic substances that can result in several complications including abnormalities in the newborn or even miscarriages.

What are the long and short term health effects of smoking among young people?

The short term effects of smoking include throat irritations, cough, asthma, wheezing, unhealthy dental and oral hygiene. These are due to the carcinogenic substances like nicotine, tar and carbon monoxide present in tobacco.

The long terms effects of smoking are more dangerous. Smoking has been shown to be strongly correlated with a number of life-threatening diseases such as a variety of cancers, diabetes, respiratory disorders and cardiovascular diseases like heart attack and stroke. Vision issues and infertility issues as well as weak immune systems are also more prevalent in smokers than non-smokers. Overall, smoking is associated with a lower life expectancy.

In terms of mental health, while smoking is commonly known to relieve stress and help people relax, it is has been shown to increase anxiety levels, and smokers are at an increased risk of clinical depression. For people dependent on nicotine, missing a smoke can cause irritability and mood swings and come in the way of normal functioning. Loss of appetite and disturbed sleep cycles are also frequently observed in smokers.

Can smokers and tobacco users be at higher risk for COVID 19 infection?

The association of smoking with the Covid-19 infection has been controversial. Initial studies seemed to suggest a lower prevalence of Covid infection among smokers and protective effect of smoking against the effects of Covid. However, subsequent analysis showed serious methodological flaws in those studies. And later studies showed that smokers in fact fare poorly after a Covid infection.

Smokers may be more susceptible to Covid-19 infection and the associated severe lung complications for the following reasons:

Tobacco smoke contains toxic chemicals which cause damages to the linings of the airways and the lungs and suppresses the activity of different types of immune cells, thus impairing one’s ability to fight the Covid infection.

The act of smoking involves the fingers and possible contaminated cigarettes coming in contact with the lips and thus increasing the risk of transmission of virus from hand to mouth.

Smokers are more likely to have heart disease, stroke, cancer, chronic lung disease and diabetes, all of which are important co-morbidities for developing severe illness following Covid infection.

What are the effects of quitting smoking on the body?

The beneficial effects of quitting smoking begin almost immediately within minutes to hours and continues to be seen over several years to a decade.

Within 30 to 60 minutes, heart rate and blood pressure begin to drop.

At around 12 hours, the carbon monoxide level in blood drops to normal.

By 4-12 weeks, blood circulation and lung function improve.

By 3-6 months, coughing and shortness of breath decrease and risk of respiratory infections also reduces.
At 1 year, the risk of coronary heart disease reduces to about half that of a smoker's.

At 5 years, the risk of having a heart attack or a brain stroke risk is reduced to that of a nonsmoker.

At 10 years, the risk of lung cancer falls to about half that of a smoker and the risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, etc also decreases.

Though in the initial days after quitting, one could have withdrawal symptoms but in the long run, stopping smoking would lead to lesser mental irritability, anxiety, depression and mood swings.

Abstinence from smoking also reduces the chances of impotence, infertility, having premature births and miscarriage.

And finally, quitting smoking improves life expectancy.

Tips to effectively quit smoking

There is no single and easy way to quit tobacco. Some of the following tips could help you in kicking this habit:

Make a quit plan and stick to it. Doesn’t matter if you fail a couple of times. Keep trying and don’t give up.

Modify your diet. There are some food items which make cigarette taste better like meat, alcohol, tea, coffee, aerated beverages. Avoid them and instead have fruits, vegetables, cheese, water, fresh fruit juices. Also, if you have a habit of post-meals cigarette, then change your routine and do some activity to divert your mind.

Have a support group in place to help you through this --- family, friends, doctor, counsellor Nicotine-replacement therapy like chewing-gum or skin-patches can be very helpful to tide over your withdrawal symptoms.

Try to avoid stressful situations during the first few weeks after you stop smoking.

Exercise, even a 5-minute walk or stretch, has been shown to reduce your cravings and ease some of your withdrawal symptoms.

Try to be around your non-smoker friends and avoid your smoker companions for a while.

Clean your house, your surroundings, clothes and belongings so that you do not get the familiar scent of cigarette smoke which will remind you of smoking.

The author is a Senior Interventional Cardiologist at the Asian Heart Institute.



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Sensex drops over 185 points in early trade; Infosys, TCS, Reliance track losses

Mumbai: Equity benchmark Sensex dropped over 185 points in early trade on Monday, tracking losses in index-heavyweights HDFC twins, Infosys, TCS and Reliance amid a weak trend in the Asian markets.

The 30-share BSE index was trading 189.52 points or 0.37 percent lower at 51,233.36 in initial deals, and the broader NSE Nifty fell 43.20 points or 0.28 percent to 15,392.45.

M&M was the top loser in the Sensex pack, shedding more than 5 percent, followed by Infosys, HDFC, IndusInd Bank, Tech Mahindra, L&T, NTPC and HCL Tech.

On the other hand, ITC, Asian Paints, Bharti Airtel and ICICI Bank were among the gainers.

In the previous session, Sensex ended 307.66 points or 0.60 percent higher at 51,422.88, and Nifty rose 97.80 points or 0.64 percent to 15,435.65.

"There are two conflicting pieces of news for the market now. The steadily declining COVID fresh cases continue to be positive. Progressive unlocking has started in many states paving the way for a pick up in economic activity.

"But the negative news is rising fresh cases in countries like China & Vietnam. This might impact sentiments for Asian markets in general," said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.

Usually, when markets touch new highs, some consolidation with minor corrections happen even in bull markets. This can happen since Nifty touched new highs last Friday, Vijayakumar said.

Auto numbers of May will be very dismal and some market reaction can be expected in this segment. Banking appears to be on a strong wicket in the light of new reliefs announced for the MSME segment, he noted.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were net buyers in the capital market as they bought shares worth 913.59 crore on Friday, as per provisional exchange data.

Equities on Wall Street closed higher in the overnight session.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Seoul and Tokyo were trading in negative territory in mid-session deals.

International oil benchmark Brent crude was trading 0.41 percent higher at $69 per barrel.



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Odisha extends lockdown till 17 June; check what’s allowed and restricted in the state

The COVID-19 lockdown in Odisha has been extended till 17 June. Previously, the lockdown was supposed to end on 1 June. As reported by Mint, Odisha chief secretary SC Mohapatra said that like the previous two phases, the third phase of the lockdown is aimed at restricting the movement of people, not goods.

According to a report in Hindustan Times, Mohapatra said that the state had to face the dual crisis of COVID-19 and Cyclone Yaas last week. The chief secretary added that the positivity rate in the state has dropped, however, it faces the risk of infection from neighbouring states and thus, the lockdown has been extended.

He also urged citizens of the state to not venture out for shopping ahead of the Savitri and Raja festivals which are going to be celebrated in the month of June.   

Here is the list of permissible activities during the COVID-19 lockdown in Odisha:

People in the state can shop for essential items at nearby markets between 6 am and 11 am. The time has been reduced from six hours to five hours in this phase of the lockdown.

A maximum of 20 people is allowed to attend funeral, last rites and thread ceremony.

Weddings can happen only in the presence of 25 people, including the bride, groom and priest. Previously, 50 people were allowed at weddings.

Guests at these functions will not be allowed to feast together. However, takeaway food packets can be given to them after the function.

There will be a complete weekend shutdown in the state during which only medical facilities and outlets along with hospitals will be allowed to operate.



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Coronavirus Live News Updates: India reports 1.52 lakh new COVID-19 cases today, lowest tally in 50 days

10:13 (IST)

Coronavirus Latest Updates

16.83 lakh COVID-19 tests conducted on Sunday

The ICMR said that a total of 34,48,66,883 samples were tested up to 30 May. Of which, 16,83,135 samples were tested on Sunday.

10:01 (IST)

Coronavirus Latest Updates

Trend of declining number of new COVID-19 cases continues; 1.52 lakh cases today

India reported 1,52,734 new COVID-19 cases, 2,38,022 discharges and 3,128 deaths in the last 24 hours, the Union Health Ministry said on Monday morning. The country has been registering a gradual decline in the number of new cases this week. On Sunday, 1.6 lakh new cases were reported.

Total cases: 2,80,47,534
Total discharges: 2,56,92,342 
Death toll: 3,29,100    
Active cases: 20,26,092 

09:51 (IST)

Coronavirus Latest Updates

Odisha extends lockdown till 17 June; weekend curfew relaxed in 3 districts

The Odisha government on Sunday extended the lockdown by 16 more days till 17 June to further stem the spread of coronavirus. The second phase of the lockdown was to end at 5 am on 1 June. It will now continue till 5 am of 17 June.

"The lockdown is primarily aimed at restricting movement of people and not goods. All restrictions and exemptions of the previous lockdowns will be implemented in the third phase, too," Chief Secretary SC Mohapatra said.

The weekend shutdown will also continue, he said. "However, for three districts  Nuapada, Gajapati and Sundergarh  the relaxation period will be from 7 am till 1 pm, instead of 8 am to 11 am, from Monday to Friday, keeping in view the decline in COVID-19 cases in these places. This relaxation may be withdrawn if there is any sign of rise in infections," Mohapatra said.

09:39 (IST)

Coronavirus Latest Updates

Maharashtra extends COVID-19 lockdown till 15 June

The Maharashtra government on Sunday extended the lockdown-like curbs till 15 June and also announcedthat relaxations will be granted depending upon the COVID-19 positivity rate and availability of oxygen beds.

In municipal corporations or regions of districts with less than 10 percent COVID-19 positivity rate and where the availability of occupied oxygen beds will be less than 40 percent, all the establishments/shops engaged in essential commodities and services that are presently opened from 7 am to 11 am can now remain open from 7 am to 2 pm, the government said in an order.

Coronavirus Live News Updates: India reported 1,52,734 new COVID-19 cases, 2,38,022 discharges and 3,128 deaths in the last 24 hours, the Union Health Ministry said on Monday morning. The country has been registering a gradual decline in the number of new cases this week. On Sunday, 1.6 lakh new cases were reported.

Total cases: 2,80,47,534
Total discharges: 2,56,92,342
Death toll: 3,29,100
Active cases: 20,26,092

The Maharashtra government on Sunday extended the lockdown-like curbs till 15 June and also announced that relaxations will be granted depending upon the COVID-19 positivity rate and availability of oxygen beds.

In municipal corporations or regions of districts with less than 10 percent COVID-19 positivity rate and where the availability of occupied oxygen beds will be less than 40 percent, all the establishments/shops engaged in essential commodities and services that are presently opened from 7 am to 11 am can now remain open from 7 am to 2 pm, the government said in an order.

For districts and corporations having more than a 20 percent positivity rate and where over 75 percent of oxygen beds are occupied, the borders of such districts will be closed and no person will be allowed to enter or exit in such districts.

The exceptions will be death from a family, medical reason and emergency services or services related to such situations.

Instead of implementing the 'Break the chain' order uniformly in the state, the restrictions will now be relaxed or made more stringent till 7 am of 15 June by taking into account the positivity rate in the municipality jurisdiction and areas of districts, and the availability of oxygen beds at various places, the government said.

As per the census of 2011, the municipal corporations that are having a population of more than 10 lakh will be considered as the independent administrative unit for curbing the spread of COVID-19.

Mumbai, Thane, Navi Mumbai, Kalyan-Dombivali, Vasai Virar, Pune, PimpriChinchwad, Nagpur, Aurangabad and Nashik corporations will be treated as the administrative units.

Barring the jurisdiction of these corporations, the rest of the part of the district will be counted as a separate administrative unit, it said.

The decision for keeping open all the shops and establishments that do not fall in the essential category will be taken by the local disaster management authority (LDMA) but their timings will be at uniformity with those shops and establishment falling in the essential group, as per the order.

Similarly, the shops will remain closed on Saturdays and Sundays.

In such regions, along with the essential commodities, the non-essential goods and services can also be distributed through the e-commerce system.

However after 3 pm, except for medical services and medical-related emergency, there will be restrictions on commuting and traffic, it said.

Besides the offices that are working for the pandemic-related services, all other government offices can function with the attendance of 25 percent of employees.

If the chief of any of these departments needs the attendance of more than 25 per cent, they can take permission from the disaster management authority, the order said.

All the agricultural work and equipment-related shops will be open on the working days till 2 pm. Considering the monsoon and sowing period, the local disaster management authority can give the permission to increase the timings of such agriculture-related goods and
service providers or can also give a nod to remain open on Saturdays and Sundays, the order said.

Addressing the people of the state through social media, Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray on Sunday said the daily coronavirus case count in the state is on the decline, but these numbers are close to the last year's peak levels.

Thackeray announced that the lockdown-like restrictions currently in force in the state since mid-April, have been extended by a fortnight till June 15.

He said he was taking a district-wise review of the coronavirus situation and curbs will be made stricter where the numbers are on the rise, while some relaxations will be given where the case count is on the decline.

As of Sunday, Maharashtra's tally of COVID-19 cases stood at 57,31,815 and the overall death toll is 94,844. The state has 2,71,801 active cases, as per the state health department.



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