Vaccines are answer, not one-day lockdowns: Omar Abdullah | India News – Times of India

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SRINAGAR: National Conference leader Omar Abdullah on Sunday said one-day shutdowns to contain the spread of coronavirus is a “meaningless tokenism” which can lead to complacency, and called for allowing more people to take vaccine against Covid-19.
The Madhya Pradesh government had on March 19 announced Sunday lockdowns in Bhopal, Indore and Jabalpur till further orders in view of the spurt in coronavirus cases.
“With a rampaging virus that has a 2-14 day incubation period this one-day lockdown is meaningless tokenism. All it will do is create a misplaced sense of complacency,” Abdullah tweeted.
The former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister said vaccines were the answer to the spread of Covid-19 and called for opening up the vaccines to more people.
“Vaccines are the answer not one day lockdowns. Open up vaccines to more people,” he added.
His statement came as India recorded 43,846 new coronavirus cases on Sunday, the highest single-day rise so far this year.
India is currently vaccinating people above 60 and those aged between 45-59 years with 20 identified comorbidities.

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Not stars, but workers, will work to ensure Cong win: G-23’s Sibal | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Congress MP and member of G -23 Kapil Sibal Sunday said that the dissidents at the recent controversial meeting in Jammu spoke about strengthening the Congress and their objective was not antithetical to that of what the party stands for.
While he denied that the leadership’s anger over the Jammu meeting was behind the decision to leave out senior members of the dissident bloc from the ongoing assembly elections’ “star campaigners list“, Sibal, according to media reports, tersely remarked, “We are not stars, we are Congress workers. And the workers will do whatever he can do to ensure that Congress wins… I think that the party has the discretion to decide who are stars and which are the stars who shine and which are the ones who have lost their lustre.”
He said the good thing that happened from the G-23 letter to the leadership asking for reforms was that it was decided that elections will be held to the post of the party chief and the CWC. He said it was absurd to attribute personal motives like Parliament term or a Rajya Sabha nomination to the decision of leaders to ask the leadership for reforms. He said while only 23 Congress leaders signed the letter, there are “many many more who agree with us on these issues.” “All that we say is that the state that we are in today, we should work hard and embrace what the Congress stands for,“ Sibal said.

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G-23 Mulls Propping Up ‘Rebel’ Pick Against Rahul Gandhi in Presidential Poll as Cong Stares at ‘Inevitable’ Split

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It’s not the first time that Ghulam Nabi Azad wore a saffron turban while in Jammu. As chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, he wore it each time he visited the Hindu-dominated Jammu. But on Saturday, when not just Azad but seven others wore it and spoke about the state of Congress, it made a powerful statement; especially as saffron is associated with the BJP too.

Not that the G-23, or G-8 as they were that day, are even thinking of crossing over to the BJP. They made it clear that they were with the Congress but the present state of the party was unacceptable to them.

Congress officially reacted to the meeting in Jammu by appealing to G-23 that they were senior members of the party and should instead campaign in poll-bound states. But a G-23 member told News18.com: “Have we even been involved in the poll strategy? Have they asked us to campaign? We have been left out.”

So what’s next? Jammu was clearly not the last stop. Similar meetings are planned in other states as well. Next could be Himachal Pradesh, where interestingly Anand Sharma comes from.

Sharma has his grudges. The man, who has been a staunch Gandhi family loyalist and who was at one time the eyes and ears of the Gandhis, is now out in the cold. His immediate grudge is that while he has a year to go in Rajya Sabha, he was overlooked for the post of leader of opposition which went to Rahul Gandhi loyalist Mallikarjun Kharge. A source close to Sharma said: “It will be unacceptable to him to listen to orders from Kharge.” Sharma is deputy leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha.

After Himachal Pradesh, other states which will have similar meetings are Haryana, Punjab, UP and Delhi. But it doesn’t just stop here. The members of G-23 are mulling the possibility of putting up a candidate for June’s Congress presidential polls. If Rahul Gandhi is a candidate, it’s clear that he will face no problem but a “rebel” standing up against him will just rake up dirt.

The G-23 have been careful to camouflage their dissent by pitching for a strong Congress. In Jammu, that’s what most leaders said. The letter they wrote in August to Sonia Gandhi made the point that it was a party which was leaderless and rudderless. Even now, they ask who is making decisions for the party in the absence of a full-time president as Sonia Gandhi is no longer involved in day-to-day affairs. The dig is clearly at Rahul Gandhi. And this is where G-23 are being attacked by the present Congress leaders who say “they are ungrateful and are now hurting the party in the midst of polls”.

Congress was restrained in its response to the Jammu meeting. It is unlikely to take any action against the dissidents as it would invite distraction from the polls. While the rebels aren’t talking of splitting from the party, they know it’s inevitable. The split in the Congress is very much on the cards and this could be timed with Rahul Gandhi taking over the reins of the party formally. The ball has just got rolling.



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