Chidambaram slams Centre for ‘failing miserably’ in rolling out vaccination process for citizens | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader P Chidambaram on Thursday hit out at Centre for “failing miserably” in rolling out the Covid-19 vaccination for Indians.
“I share the pride that India exported 5.9 crore doses of Covid-19 vaccines. At the same time, I am disappointed that we have administered only 3 crore doses to Indian citizens,” Chidambaram tweeted.

“The central government has failed miserably in rolling out the vaccination to Indians. Is there any wonder that the number of infections is rising rapidly every day?” he added.
The former Union minister also pointed out the need to allow walk-in, on demand vaccination and get rid of the bureaucratic hurdles, including pre-registration.
“Government should allow walk-in vaccination on demand and get rid of bureaucratic hurdles including pre-registration,” he further tweeted.

The nationwide Covid-19 vaccination has crossed 3.64 crores coverage, informed the Union ministry of health and family welfare on Wednesday.
According to the official data, a total of 3,71,43,255 vaccine doses were administered in the country, as per the provisional report till 8 am on Thursday.
The second phase of the vaccination drive started on March 1 in which doses are being administered to people above the age of 60 and those between 45 and 59 years with specific comorbidities.



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India adds 35,871 fresh Covid-19 cases, biggest single-day jump in 102 days | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: India on Thursday recorded 35,871 new Covid-19 cases, the highest single-day rise in over 100 days, which took the infection tally to 1,14,74,605, according to Union health ministry data.
Registering an increase for the eighth consecutive day, the active caseload reached 2,52,364, which accounts for 2.20 per cent of the total infections. The recovery rate further dropped to 96.41 per cent, the data updated at 8 am showed.
The death toll increased to 1,59,216 with 172 new fatalities, it stated.
The single-day spike of 35,871 cases is the highest in 102 days. As many as 36,011 new infections were recorded on December 6.
The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 1,10,63,025, while the case fatality rate stands at 1.39 per cent, according to the data.
India’s Covid-19 tally had crossed the 20-lakh mark on August 7, 30 lakh on August 23, 40 lakh on September 5 and 50 lakh on September 16. It went past 60 lakh on September 28, 70 lakh on October 11, crossed 80 lakh on October 29, 90 lakh on November 20 and surpassed the one-crore mark on December 19.
According to the Indian Council of Medical Research, 23,03,13,163 samples had been tested up to March 17 with 10,63,379 being tested on Wednesday.
The 172 new fatalities include 84 from Maharashtra, 35 from Punjab and 13 from Kerala.
So far, 1,59,216 deaths have been reported in the country including 53,080 from Maharashtra, 12,564 from Tamil Nadu, 12,407 from Karnataka, 10,948 from Delhi, 10,298 from West Bengal, 8,751 from Uttar Pradesh and 7,186 from Andhra Pradesh.
The health ministry stressed that more than 70 per cent 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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Researchers mimic photosynthesis, convert CO2 into solar fuel | India News – Times of India

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BENGALURU: Researchers from the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR) have developed an integrated system that can capture carbon dioxide (CO2) and convert it into solar fuel — a process they call artificial photosynthesis (AP) — which they feel can aid mitigate effects of emissions made by use of fossil fuels. This process of converting CO2 into solar fuel also generates oxygen from water.
Pointing out that owing to the excessive consumption of fossil fuels, extreme emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and nitrogen oxides are the prime reasons for severe pollution and global warming, Prof Tapas Kumar Maji, who led the team, said that for humanity, however, nature provides oxygen and foods for aerobic life cycles via photosynthesis, which produces oxygen (O2) and carbohydrates from CO2 and water by utilizing solar energy.

In other words, solar energy, he said, gets converted into chemical energy and stowed in carbohydrates. That they have demonstrated this under the sunlight and not just in lab conditions has the researchers elated.
“We have tried to mimic nature’s design of the energy supply method by CO2 capture and conversion. The system we’ve developed is configured in such a way that it can capture CO2, harness the solar energy, produce charge-separated electron-hole pairs and reduce CO2 selectively in water in a sustainable condition,” Maji told TOI.
Their findings, including the method used to develop their integrated system and the various components it contains, and the process used to create artificial photosynthesis, have been published in the scientific journal Energy and Environmental Science. Maji’s team comprises three other JNCASR scientists: Sanchita Karmakar, Soumitra Barman and Faruk Ahamed Rahimi.
“We have designed and fabricated an integrated catalytic system that can harness solar power and a catalytic centre that can eventually reduce CO2. In addition, by mimicking natural photosynthesis, the photocatalytic assembly is assessed for CO2 reduction under direct sunlight in a water medium without any additives, where it shows the superior performance of CO production,” Maji explained.
Further, pointing to various challenges, Maji said that for a designed material to comprehend the solar energy conversion technology of the leaf, the light-absorbing material must capture a solar photon to generate a wireless current which can be harnessed by catalysts and drive the subsequent oxidation and reduction reaction in sustainable conditions to produce value-added carbon-feedstock.
In artificial photosynthesis (AP), scientists are essentially conducting the same fundamental process in natural photosynthesis but with simpler nanostructures.
“…However, there are plenty of hurdles to overcome as a successful catalyst to carry out AP. First and foremost, the catalyst platform should possess excellent CO2 absorbing capability so that the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2 RR) can be carried out in the later stage. Secondly, the catalyst should be able to harness solar energy to gain enough fuel to drive CO2 RR,” Maji explained.

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Joe Biden called upon to support India, South Africa at WTO on Covid-19 vaccines | India News – Times of India

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WASHINGTON: A group of lawmakers in the US have urged President Joe Biden to support the move by India and South Africa before the World Trade Organization for emergency temporary waiver of some Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) rules to enable greater production and supply of Covid-19 vaccines, treatments, and diagnostic tests.
The move comes after India and South Africa, along with several other countries, have urgently gone to the WTO seeking a time-limited waiver of the TRIPS agreement. The previous Trump administration had opposed such a move.
At a news conference here on Wednesday, the lawmakers — Rosa DeLauro, Jan Schakowsky, Earl Blumenauer, Lloyd Doggett, Adriano Espaillat, and Andy Levin — said this while urging President Biden to support the emergency temporary waiver at the WTO as requested by countries led by India and South Africa.
The lawmakers said more than 60 US representatives would collectively write to Biden to announce support for the TRIPS waiver proposed by India and South Africa at the WTO. The temporary TRIPS waiver would allow countries and manufacturers to directly access and share technologies to produce vaccines and therapeutics without causing trade sanctions or international disputes, they said.
“The Biden administration has an obligation to reverse the damage done by the Trump administration and reestablish our nation’s global reputation as a public health leader,” said DeLauro.
“As we see every day, the Covid-19 pandemic knows no borders. Our globalised systems cannot recover if only parts of the world are vaccinated and have protection against the virus. We must make vaccines available everywhere if we are going to crush the virus anywhere, and we need to make public policy choices, both in the US and at the WTO, that put people first,” DeLauro said.
“Congress has appropriated billions of dollars of emergency relief for the travel, tourism, and hospitality industries and is planning billions more. The faster we can bring this emergency to an end, the faster these industries can recover. President Biden’s support for the TRIPS waiver is key to the end of the pandemic and the beginning of a strong global recovery.”
Schakowsky said big pharma companies are adamantly opposed, claiming in their letter to President Biden that “intellectual property is the foundation for both the development and sharing of new technologies,” not mentioning their own profits, or the billions of dollars that tax payers have contributed to their research and development.
“As a global community, we must come together and use every tool at our disposal to stop this pandemic. We have seen that WTO intellectual property rules and corporate greed have disastrous impacts for public health during past epidemics, and we need to ensure that this doesn’t happen again,” said Blumenauer.
“The Biden administration has already shown that we are in this together with our allies. They understand that a deadly pandemic does not stop at any one border. Working to ensure that trade rules do not stunt the developing world’s access to vaccines, treatments, and diagnostic tests is the next step,” he said.
“Mindful of Covid variants from Brazil and South Africa to stop this deadly virus, we need widespread immunisation everywhere around the globe, not just in the wealthiest countries,” said Doggett. “While we have lacked sufficient vaccines in America, immunisation has been almost non-existent in poorer countries,” he said.
“America has an obligation to support the global community with the tools and vaccine resources we developed to combat the Covid-19 pandemic,” said Espaillat, adding that a global conundrum exists with countries having to wait months or even years to vaccinate their citizens – a delay that will only allow the virus to continue to mutate, spread, and kill more people.
“We simply cannot allow this to happen. During this time of crisis, rather than protecting wealthy pharmaceutical companies’ bottom lines or intellectual property derived from our collective investments, we must remove all impediments to vaccine distribution, including maximising capacity worldwide to ensure every person who wants this vaccine has access as soon as possible regardless of economic background, race, or nationality,” Espaillat said.
“The World Trade Organization (WTO) has the ability to accomplish this task, and I encourage the Biden administration to urge the WTO and partner member-nations to use the tools at its disposal to do so,” he said.
“I desperately want a return to normalcy,” said Levin. “But I want that normalcy to be sustainable! I want to be sure that this virus isn’t going to keep spreading, keep mutating – potentially in a way that’s resistant to the vaccines we’re getting right now. I don’t say this to fearmonger,” he added.

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Covid-19: India’s rate of inoculation fastest in world, says health secy | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: India has witnessed the “speediest acceleration” of administration of Covid-19 vaccine doses, health secretary Rajesh Bhushan said, highlighting that on March 15, India accounted for 36% of the 8.34 million shots given across the world.
As of March 15, India administered the second highest number of vaccine doses at around 3.3 crore in 60 days. The US leads with 10 crore doses though it started its vaccination programme around a month before India. The UK — which was the first to start Covid-19 vaccination — inoculated only 2.6 crore doses in 98 days, Bhushan said.
India administered over 3.6 crore vaccine doses till 7pm on Wednesday. Of this, 1.5 crore health and frontline workers have received their first doses, whereas 1.2 crore doses have been given to those above 60 and 23.8 lakh to people aged between 45 and 60 years with co-morbidities. Apart from these, 63.9 lakh health and frontline workers have received their second doses.
In the last two weeks (March 1-15), India administered an average of 13.1 lakh doses per day. While Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Gujarat had the highest average ranging between 1.5 lakh and 1.2 lakh, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Andhra Pradesh and Chhattisgarh were among the poor performers. On Wednesday, 14 lakh doses were given till 7pm.

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PM Modi’s Bangladesh trip next week likely to have poll ring to it | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: On March 27, the day West Bengal goes to polls in the first phase, PM Narendra Modi will be in Orakhandi in Bangladesh offering prayers at the Matua temple, a move redolent with intense political symbolism.
Modi will also offer prayers at the Jessoreshwari Kali temple at Satkhira outside Dhaka. Both these events are intended to resonate with voters in West Bengal. On his first visit in 2015, Modi had visited Dhakeshwari temple and offered prayers there, but then Mamata Banerjee had also accompanied him on his trip to Bangladesh. This time the two are locked in an intense political battle for Bengal.
On March 26, Modi will hold talks with Sheikh Hasina and call on President Mohammed Abdul Hamid. He would hold a public event at the National Parade Ground on March 26, Bangladesh foreign minister A K Abdul Momen told journalists. Modi and Hasina are expected to jointly inaugurate the Bangabandhu-Bapu digital exhibition later that day.
Modi will attend the National Day programme of Bangladesh on March 26, as the guest of honour. An MEA press statement said, “This visit is in connection with the commemoration of three epochal events — Mujib Borsho, the birth centenary of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman; 50 years of the establishment of diplomatic ties between India and Bangladesh; and 50 years of Bangladesh’s war of liberation.”
Bangladesh foreign secretary Masud bin Momen said India and Bangladesh would sign three agreements in the areas of disaster management and cooperation.
MEA said, “The visit of the PM to Bangladesh will be the first visit to a foreign country since the outbreak of the Covid pandemic. This highlights the priority India attaches to Bangladesh.”

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Govt: No political agenda behind sedition cases | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Faced with questions in Rajya Sabha over the rising number of sedition cases being filed by police, and the falling rate of conviction, the government said states were acting on their own and there was no political agenda behind it. It claimed no false case had been registered against those involved in protests against CAA and the new farm laws.
Claiming that sedition law data was kept hidden during Congresstenure, the government informed the House that it has sought inputs from various quarters for criminal law reforms and has set up a committee for it. When asked if the sedition law would be amended, MoS (home) G Kishan Reddy said the government was going to take a “big step”.
“The central government does not give any direction to any state government to arrest anyone. This act is there from the time of the Congress government. As far as conviction is concerned, judgments have not come in some cases,” the minister said. “During the current farmers’ agitation, different statements have been given, but the government has not intervened,” he said.

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Collegium split over selection of woman judge to Supreme Court | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court‘s five-member collegium headed by CJI S A Bobde failed to reach consensus over recommending Justice B V Nagarathna, a judge of Karnataka High Court, for appointment as judge of the SC as some said it would lead to supersession of many HC chief justices, who are far more senior than her.
CJI Bobde and another judge had placed Justice Nagarathna’s name for consideration before the collegium also comprising Justices N V Ramana, R F Nariman, U U Lalit and A M Khanwilkar with the hope that if she got through the process of scrutiny and the government appointed her, then she would go on to become the first woman CJI after retirement of Justice Surya Kant as CJI in February 2027.
But some members of the collegium argued that recommending Justice Nagarathna’s name, even in the women’s quota, would lead to supersession of several HC chief justices, including Justice Abhay S Oak (Karnataka) and two other senior judges from Karnataka — Justice L Narayana Swamy (present CJ of Himachal HC who belongs to the Scheduled Caste community) and Justice Ravi V Malimath (senior judge in Himachal Pradesh and belonging to OBC community).
A few members of the collegium said if Justice Nagarathna’s name was to be recommended for appointment as SC judge, then it should be along with that of Justice Oak.
But both the names appeared to be breaching the balance in regional representation among SC judges, as observed by the apex court in its fourth judges case judgment in 2015, while striking down the National Judicial Appointments Commission.
If Justice Nagarathna is appointed, there will be four judges from Karnataka in the SC. If Justice Oak’s name is recommended, there will be five judges from Maharashtra. If the collegium recommends Justice Nagarathna, then it could also be accused of ignoring Justice Hima Kohli, the senior-most among women HC judges in the country and the present CJ of Telangana HC. Justice Kohli’s parent HC is Delhi and her elevation would increase the number of judges from Delhi HC in the SC to four.
The collegium members appear to have been caught in a Catch-22 situation and the sharp division in views over Justices Nagarathna and Oak seems to have pushed the discussion over other names to the background. The SC has five vacancies at present against the sanctioned strength of 34.
With just a little over a month to go for CJI Bobde’s retirement on April 24, it is not clear whether there will be a collegium meeting again this week or next week to reach a consensus over some names so that the CJI does not retire without making any appointment to the SC. As per convention, the CJI writes to the government a month before his retirement for appointment of his successor and then refrains from holding any collegium meeting for selection of judges to the SC or HCs.

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India records 35,886 fresh Covid-19 infections, highest in 102 days | India News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: India recorded its highest Covid-19 tally in 102 days on Wednesday with 35,886 patients testing positive for the virus as Maharashtra continued to be the worst affected state, accounting for 64% of the daily count in the country.
Maharashtra added 23,179 fresh cases, the highest in six months since September 17 (24,619 cases). With this, Maharashtra reported a 30% increase in cases compared to Tuesday, taking the total caseload of the state to 23,70,507. From March 1-17, the daily cases in the state have risen four times.
The daily case count in several cities in Maharashtra was higher than the total case count of worst affected states like Punjab, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh.

For instance, Nagpur (with 2,698 cases) alone surpassed the daily count of the four states, which recorded cases in four digits — Punjab (2,039), Gujarat (1,122), Kerala (2,098), Karnataka (1,275). With 2,698 fresh cases, Nagpur city, for the first time in pandemic, registered more daily cases than Mumbai, which recorded 2,377 cases.
The tally in Mumbai was almost three times the tally on March 1 (855).
Apart from Maharashtra, as many as 17 states and Union Territories on Wednesday logged the highest count of fresh cases since January or earlier.

These were: Punjab (2,039 cases, highest since September 23), Karnataka (1,275, highest since December 9), Gujarat (1,122, highest since December 16), Tamil Nadu (945, highest since December 29), Chhattisgarh (887, highest since January 9), Madhya Pradesh (832, highest since December 31), Haryana (555, highest since December 20), Delhi (536, highest since January 6), Rajasthan (313, highest since January 13), Bengal (303, highest since January 24), UP (261, highest since January 26), Telangana (247, highest since Jan 20), Chandigarh (201, highest since September 26), Himachal (167, highest since January 1), J&K (126, highest since January 17), Uttarakhand (110, highest since January 23) and Puducherry (52, highest since December 2).

According to figures released by the Union health ministry in Delhi, daily new cases in the country are increasing at around 43% week-on-week, whereas a 37% rise in daily new deaths has been recorded.
Union health secretary Rajesh Bhushan said data shows that 70 districts in 16 states have registered over 150% increase in cases during March 1-15, whereas the infection is rising at 100-150% in 55 districts in 17 states.
“Most of these districts are in west and north India,” he said, adding that Maharashtra still accounts for 60% of all active cases as well as 45% of new deaths. The average daily new cases are also increasing rapidly in the state. The weekly moving average of new cases shows it has risen from 7,741 cases on March 1 to 13,527 on March 15.

The average test positivity rate at 16.4% in Maharashtra is far higher than the cumulative national average of 5%. On March 1, the positivity rate was at 10.9%. However, the tests to detect the infection have not increased proportionately with the test positivity rate, Bhushan said.
Similarly, in states like Punjab, Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Delhi and Himachal Pradesh, tests have failed to keep pace with increasing number of cases and positivity rates.

In many states and UTs like Chandigarh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi and Himachal Pradesh, the share of RT-PCR is also significantly low.
The Centre has advised states witnessing a surge to increase tests in proportion to the positivity rate and also maintain the share of RT-PCR at a minimum of 70%.
The health ministry has also asked states to ensure strict adherence to mask wearing, physical distancing and hand hygiene along with greater vigilance and monitoring at the highest levels for all potential events where crowds gather.

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Disgruntled ex-PDP leader joins Lone’s Peoples’ Conference | India News – Times of India

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SRINAGAR: Disgruntled former senior PDP leader Muzaffar Baig on Wednesday joined Sajad Lone’s J&K Peoples’ Conference.
Lone, on Wednesday, had driven to Baig’s home in Brein Nishat here along with several of his party leaders.
Baig was peeved with PDP president Mehbooba Mufti after she could not give DDC ticket to Baig’s wife Safeena Baig from Sangrama in Baramulla. Safeena contested DDC elections as an Independent candidate and won the seat and even became the chairman in Baramulla.
The Gupkar Alliance, of w Baig (74), a lawyer, begun his political career with the People’s Conference in the early 70s, with Sajad Lone’s father Abdul Gani Lone, who was assassinated.
He then joined Mufti Mohammad Sayeed in 2000 and later joined his ministry as finance minister in 2002 when Mufti formed the erstwhile J&K state government with the support of Congress.hich Mehbooba Mufti is a part, chose Bashrat Bukhari as joint candidate from Sangrama. However, Bukhari lost DDC polls. Baig quit PDP in November 2020.
A Padma Bhushan awardee, Baig said: “It gives me immense pleasure to be a part of the party which I joined as a youth and was groomed by Abdul Gani Lone sahib. Today I have the opportunity to groom leaders like Sajad Lone and others, who are taking up leadership roles.”
Sajad Lone said the party looks up to Baig and believes that he has a big role to play at this juncture in helping the people of J&K to navigate the turbulent and treacherous times.

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