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LIFTING
SPIRITS
Red balloons dotting the landscape of Myanmar’s
ancient city of Bagan, a World Heritage site, look
stunning and transpire us into an altogether different
world. This incredible scene was captured by
photographer Stefano Tomassetti while showcasing
the Earth’s beauty during Coronavirus-induced
lockdown, when humans have taken a backseat!
IVANKA HAILS GIRL WHO
CYCLED 1200 KM HOME!
Bihar: Jyoti Kumari, 15, who cycled
with her wounded father from
Gurugram to Darbhanga covering
over 1,200 km over 7 days, has
proved that “where there is a will
there’s a way”. Her feat has not
just caught the attention of Cycling
Federation of India but also of Ivanka
Trump, US President’s daughter. P6
INDIA’S CASES CROSS
1.25 LAKH MARK
New Delhi: India saw biggest rise
in corona cases in last 24 hrs at
6,654 with the total count going
up to over 1.25 lakh on Saturday.
The total number of deaths due to
COVID-19 has gone up to 3,720
with 137 persons succumbing to
disease in the last 24 hours. P5
WEST BENGAL CALLS
FOR ARMY SUPPORT
Kolkata: West Bengal government
has called for Army support, while
NDRF and SDRF teams are already
working, for the restoration of
infrastructure and essential services
after Cyclone Amphan wreaked havoc
in the state. State Home Department
said most essential services are
being restored fast. P5
First India Bureau
Churu: A Station
House Officer (SHO) of
Rajgarh police station
in Rajasthan’s Churu
d i s t r i c t
allegedly
commit-
ted sui-
cide, re-
p o r t s
stated on
Saturday
(May 23).
News agency PTI cited
an unnamed police of-
ficer as saying that the
body of Vishnudutt
Bishnoi was found
hanging inside his offi-
cial accommodation.
DGP Bhupendra Sin-
gh expressed grief over
the death of the Churu
SHO saying, “Bishnoi
was one of the best po-
lice officers and his
death has come as a big
loss to the police de-
partment.”
According to prelimi-
nary information, Bish-
noi was investigating a
murder case in the area
till Friday night. Later,
he reached his official
accommodation and
committed suicide. P8
Rajgarh SHO
ends life, WA
chat shows
was in stress New Delhi: Chinese
military is fast increas-
ing its troops in areas
around Pangong Tso
lake and Galwan Valley
along the Line of Actu-
al Control in Ladakh,
sending a clear signal
that it was not ready to
end its confrontation
with the Indian Army
anytime soon, people
familiar with the situa-
tion in the disputed re-
gion said.
The Chinese side has
particularly bolstered
its presence in the Gal-
wan Valley, erecting
around 100 tents in the
last two weeks and
bringing in machinery
for possible construc-
tion of bunkers, not-
withstanding the stiff
protest by Indian
troops, they said.
Turn on P6
China brings
more troops
into LadakhCorona to decide future
fiscal policy action: FM
New Delhi: A day after
the RBI projected eco-
nomic contraction in
2020-21, Finance Minis-
terNirmalaSitharaman
on Saturday said future
fiscal policy actions to
stimulate the economy
will depend on how
COVID-19 pandemic
pans out. The govern-
ment has already an-
nounced a Rs 20.97 lakh
croreeconomicpackage,
which includes Reserve
Bank’sRs8.01lakhcrore
worth of liquidity meas-
ures till May 17.
Sitharaman said
making a “realistic as-
sessment” of economic
growth would be diffi-
cult at this point of time
as there is no clarity on
when the pandemic
would retreat.
“I’m not closing the
door at all. I want to
keepgettinginputsfrom
industry, implement
what we have an-
nounced and depending
on how things pan out
we have to respond ac-
cordingly. We are only
2-month old in this year,
we have 10 months to
go,” Sitharaman said in
a conversation with BJP
leader Nalin Kohli.
The Reserve Bank on
Friday had said the im-
pact of COVID-19 is
more severe than antici-
pated and Turn on P6
ECONOMY AFTER COVID-19
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman
Come Aug, India to
open up global skies
Aditi Nagar
New Delhi: As India re-
sumes domestic flight
services from May 25, as
part of Centre’s gradual
rebootof airtravel,plans
areafoottore-startinter-
national flights before
August amidst the coro-
navirus pandemic, said
Civil Aviation Minister
Hardeep Singh Puri on
Saturday,threedaysafter
announcing resumption
of domestic flights.
India will try to re-
start a good percentage
of international pas-
senger flights, he said.
The minister, while
addressing a Facebook
Live session, clarified
again that Aarogya Setu
appisnotmandatoryfor
air passengers and they
can instead give a self-
declaration form. Puri
said during the session,
“I can’t put a date on it
(restarting internation-
al flights). But if some-
body says can it be done
by August or Septem-
ber? My response is why
notearlierdependingon
what is the situation.”
When asked about the
minister’s announce-
ment on resuming in-
ternational services,
Vistara said it will await
instructions and guide-
lines from Turn on P6
Passenger flights parked at Indira Gandhi International Airport after the government eased
coronavirus lockdown with some restrictions, in New Delhi on Friday. —PHOTO BY ANI
23,000 INDIANS
REPATRIATED
New Delhi: Between 7
May and 21 May, around
23,000 Indians have
been repatriated through
flights operated by Air
India and its subsidiary
Air India Express under
this mission. Passengers
have to pay money
to book a seat on any
repatriation flight being
operated under the
Vande Bharat Mission.
CORONA
ALERT
JAIPUR l SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 l Pages 12 l 3.00 RNI NO. RAJENG/2019/77764 l Vol 1 l Issue No. 347
32°C - 43°C
OUR EDITIONS:
JAIPUR & AHMEDABAD
www.firstindia.co.in
www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/
thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia
instagram.com/thefirstindia
COVID-19
UPDATE
RAJASTHAN
160
DEATHS
6,742
CONFIRMED CASES
INDIA
1,31,385
CONFIRMED CASES
3,868
DEATHS
WORLD
3,42,396
DEATHS
53,69,388
CONFIRMED CASES
‘Corona crisis: Raj a model state in giving rations to poor & needy’
First India Bureau
Jaipur. The state gov-
ernment is committed
to providing health fa-
cilities to the people,
said Chief Minister
Ashok Gehlot on Sat-
urday. He encouraged
the people to take ben-
efit of free consulta-
tion, treatment and
medicines at Janata
clinics, PHCs and
CHCs across the state
if they have slightest
health problem.
Taking stock of var-
ious departments
through VC from
CMR, CM Gehlot
touched upon most
crucial departments
that affect the com-
mon people directly.
He also instructed the
collectors from the bor-
der districts to keep ex-
tra vigil for the locusts
whichareexpectedtohit
in a big way this year. He
asked them to strength-
en the Locust Warning
System to save the farm-
ers from huge losses like
they faced last year.
Gehlot also reviewed
the Food & Civil Sup-
plies department at
length. He said that Ra-
jasthan has emerged as
a model state during the
corona times by provid-
ing ration and food to
the poor and needy. Ge-
hlot said that the provi-
sion under NFSA is to
provide wheat at Rs2
per Kg but the state govt
has decided to provide
it at Rs1 per Kg to the
Antyodaya, BPL and
State BPL beneficiaries.
He said that govern-
ment has spent Rs114
crore extra on this in
the last fiscal year end-
ing March 31, 2020. He
also praised the depart-
ment for lifting the
wheat from FCI every
month which was every
two months earlier. He
also praised lifting of
thrice the quantity com-
pared to normal times
while distributing dou-
ble the normal amount
in April & May.
CM informed that dis-
trict administrations
had reached out to 3.7
crore needy and desti-
tute people during lock-
down with dry ration
and cooked food. He also
mentioned about free 5
Kg wheat distribution
for 2 months for the mi-
grant workers and per-
sons not covered under
NFSA. He stressed on
the survey of such peo-
ple to make data base
based on which these
people could Turn on P6
Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot during a VC on Saturday where DB Gupta, Niranjan Arya Kuldeep Ranka
and others were present.
n Gehlot also encouraged people to take
benefit of free medicines scheme
n Asks collectors of border districts to
keep extra vigil on locust menace
Vishnudutt
Bishnoi
NEWSJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
02www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
Satya Narayan Sharma
Jaipur: The sister’s rela-
tionship is considered to
bethemostsacredandthe
brother pledges to protect
his sister, but a Kalyugi
brother severed this sa-
cred relationship. A men-
tally disturbed minor girl
was raped and killed by
none other than her
brother. The incident re-
lated to Todi village near
Shahpura under Mano-
harpur police station.
Accordingtopolice,the
brother along with his
friends raped his sister
before killing and dump-
ing her body in the forest.
Additional SP Suresh
Choudharyinformedthat
the police have arrested
all four accused. Choud-
hary also told that many
laborers of UP area work
on brick kiln located in
Todi village.
On May 17, a mentally
challenged minor went
missing from a brick-kiln
here. Her parents had
filed the report of her dis-
appearance. The police
registered the case and
started search operation.
They found her clothes
near drainage and her de-
cayed corpse in Mishra-
was forest.
Policeconductedapost-
mortem of the body and
started questioning the
relatives of the minor on
the basis of mobile loca-
tion and suspicion. The
police started interroga-
tion of girl’s parents on
the basis of mobile loca-
tion. Initially, the accused
denied but after strict in-
terrogation by the police
confessed the crime.
At first, the accused
triedtomisleadthepolice,
but they could not last
long due to the strictness
of the police. Eventually,
the accused Zeeshan con-
fessed his crime. Accused
Zeeshan told that the
wholefamilywasupsetby
the retarded minor and
that the family was trou-
bled by the girl, so he
along with his friends Sa-
jid, Wajid, and Ahmed
took her to the jungle and
they gang-raped her and
then killed her.
To hide the incident,
the accused slammed the
body into the forest and
came home. Police is cur-
rently further investigat-
ing the case.
Vaishali
New Delhi: Union Min-
ister of State for Finance
Anurag Thakur made a
strong statement on Sat-
urdayclaimingthatModi
government has brought
Economy back on track.
It is notable that the Un-
ion government went all
out to support and aid the
state governments in the
fight against Corona.
“Regular and consistent
efforts are being made to
provide employment to
the migrant labourers.
The death rate in India is
much less as compared to
other nations due to the
farsightedness of BJP
government and the pre-
ventive measures taken,”
the ‘young turk’ in Modi
government said while
speaking to media on Sat-
urday.
Thakur reiterated that
Modi government en-
sured funds to every class
and sector. “Be it farmers,
labourers or the specially
abled, everyone has re-
ceivedthedecidedamount
in their accounts, with .
52,608 crore rupees being
credited in total,” he said,
further adding, “Today,
India is in a much better
positionoverallthaneven
the so-called developed
nations. People are aware
and we have to stay alert
against Corona till a vac-
cine is developed”
Thakur said that the
measures taken by the
government will result in
lesser imports while FDI
has been increased to 75%
from 49%, even in defence
production. Thakur said
that Modi government is
sensitivetowardstheneed
of the migrants and en-
suredspecialtrainsforthe
migrants to reach home
bearing 85% of the fare.
—Pic for representational purpose only
Vishvendra Singh with Mahant Kailash Sharma on Saturday.
Anurag Thakur
Brother, friends gang rape and
kill mentally disabled minor
‘Govt is committed to provide
best facilities to foreign
investments post Covid-19’
RMSCL’s 5 lakh
PPE kit tender
cancelled
First India Bureau
Jaipur: Rajasthan Medical Services
Corporation Ltd, (RMSCL) has it work-
ing under the scanner again. It has nul-
lified the tender for 5 lakh PPE kits
with the logic that as of now there is
sufficient stock. New tenders will be
long term tenders for two years with
specifications provided by the demand
of the doctors.
New tenders will have separate PPE
kit specifications for Operation thea-
tres, ICU and OPD. The most surpris-
ing aspect is that due to competition
the suppliers were ready to supply 5
lakh PPE kits at Rs 296 per kit whereas
the RMCL officials have been ordering
the same kits for Rs 380 per kit. This
puts the ED (Procurement) under the
scanner.
It is noteworthy that during the co-
rona crisis RMCL was ready to pur-
chase PPE kits at Rs 705 through short
term tenders but the complaint
reached the higher officers which
forced RMCL to drag its feet.
Bharat Dixit
Jaipur: TheongoingCov-
id-19 pandemic has made
an unusual impact both
on our society and our
economy. With the offline
businesses being shut for
alongtime,people,aswell
as organizations, are now
willing to adopt new tech-
nologies like IoT, AI,
Blockchain, etc. which
will further completely
transformthewaywelive
and work. Against the
backdrop, FICCI Ra-
jasthan State Council vir-
tually organized the 2nd
edition of the Rajasthan
IoT Summit on Saturday.
The objective of the sum-
mit was to explore the po-
tentialof IoT&AIinrevo-
lutionizingthebusinesses
post Covid-19.
Addressing the Webi-
nar, Chief Guest DB Gup-
ta, Chief Secretary said,
Rajasthanhasledtheway
to fight Corona. Our ef-
forts and strategies have
been applauded and
adopted by other states
also. During the COV-
ID-19, saving lives has
been our priority. The
fight is still on but we
need to learn to live with
this along with this it is
very important to put our
economy back on track.
Two arrested for
child molestation
in Bhilwara
Donation to disaster
mgmt will be now
CSR expenditure
First India Bureau
Bhilwara: A shameful
sentence for misleading
innocent by indulging in
giving greed for choco-
late has emerged in Sub-
hash Nagar of Bhilwara.
5 people including a child
abuser made the inno-
cent child a victim of
their cruelty and inhu-
man act.
The police have arrest-
ed two youths in this case
which is shameful to hu-
manity, while the wanted
child abuser has been de-
tained in the case. Two of
the accused in the group
are still absconding. The
police have registered a
case against them under
the POCSO Act.
First India Bureau
Jaipur: The State Gov-
ernment has issued a cir-
cular recognizing the
amount of contribution
made by companies and
organizations in the ac-
count opened by State
Disaster Management
Authority for the preven-
tionfromCovid-19asCor-
porate Social Responsi-
bility CSR expenditure.
Additional CEO of
SDMA and Government
Secretary, Department
of Disaster Management
and Assistance, Mr. Sid-
dharth Mahajan said
that the new bank ac-
count of the authority
created for this is RSD-
MA CSR COVID 19 and
account number
39343146577. The IFSC
code of the branch locat-
ed at the Secretariat of
SBI is SBIN0031031.
‘Modi govt has brought Economy back on track’
Met dept issues
heatwave
warning for
various districts
Naveen sharma
Jaipur: Amid lockdown,
the weather of Rajasthan
is certainly facing scorch-
ing heat. There is an alert
of heat in the state for the
last three days. Mean-
while, the temperature is
increasing.
Maximum mercury re-
mained 46.6 degrees on
the second consecutive
day in the state. Churu
and Jhunjhunu recorded
the highest mercury. At
the same time, the mer-
cury of 20 cities in the
state was more than 41
degrees.
At the same time, the
mercury of five cities
was more than 45 de-
grees. The Meteorologi-
cal Department has
warned of a severe heat-
wave in 10 districts from
Sunday to May 27.
WEATHER REPORT
Tourism min conducts
inspection at Moti
Dungri Ganesh temple
Naresh Sharma
Jaipur: Tourism and
Devasthan Minister Vish-
vendra Singh visited
Jaipur temples on Satur-
day. The Devasthan Min-
isteralsoconductedasur-
prise inspection at the fa-
mous Moti Dungri
Ganesh temple in Jaipur
and took stock of the ar-
rangementsof thetemple.
He appeared satisfied
with the arrangements
made in the temple and
said, “I have learned a lot
from the arrangements
here and this should be
followed in other temples
as well”.
Singh also discussed
with Mahant Kailash
Sharma of Moti Dungri
GaneshTempleonthisoc-
casion.
DB Gupta
SWARM OF LOCUST CROSS BORDER, REACH STATE CAPITAL!
A worried farmer walks past swarm of locust that have attacked his crops in a village in Dausa at 3 pm on Saturday. So far, locusts have been reported from more than half of Rajasthan, covering 16 out of 33 districts. It is a major
cause of concern for the state amidst the current Coronavirus crisis. —PHOTO BY SUNIL SHARMA
Bharatiya Janata Party
state president Satish
Poonia has attacked the
state government over the
locust attack in Rajasthan.
He argued that, in May
last year, the International
Agriculture Organisation
and GoI’s locust warning
organisation had warned
of locust attack, but the
state government did
not take any action on it
and due to government’s
apathy there was loss of
crop worth Rs800 crores
in 6 districts. This year too,
IAO warned of double the
magnitude of the attack,
and in May this year itself,
the locust reached Sikar,
Jaipur, Dausa, far ahead
from the border districts.
State should immediately
form a task force and
deploy staff with spray and
chemicals, Poonia said.
Rajendra Chhabra
The Animal Husbandry department is in dire
straits these days as there is no Head of
the Department (HOD) for last four months.
The seat of the post of Director is lying vacant.
Just to complete the formalities the additional
charge of the post of Director has been given
to the Deputy Secretary of the department in
the secretariat. Junior RAS Virendra Meena
has his hands full due to his own work load
so he hardly finds time for this additional
charge, Further the post of Director (Animal
Husbandry) is purely a technical post and in no
way can be handled by a non-technical person
like Deputy Secretary. What is most worrying
is that Animal Husbandry is not a small
department as it has the overall responsibility
of the health and medication of the animals/
cattle in the state. There are around 10000
doctors and compounders serving in the
department. To elucidate the point just know
that there are 2500 veterinary hospitals with as
many doctors in the state. Therefore it makes
no sense that such a department doesn’t have
a HOD for last four months.
It is sheer good luck and destiny of the
department that IAS Rajesh Sharma is the
Secretary of the department sitting in the
secretariat. Apart from being an IAS he also
holds a graduate degree in veterinary sciences.
Further he has held the charge of the post
of Director of the department from 2007
to 2011. He has complete know how and
experience of handling the affairs of the HOD
of the department. Rajesh Sharma has been
delegating the duties of the Director despite
being the Secretary of the department. If one
concludes that it is Rajesh Sharma due to
whom the department is functioning somehow,
then it won’t be an exaggeration.
A DEPT RESPONSIBLE
FOR HEALTH OF
LIVESTOCK IS HEADLESS
OFF THE
RECORD
RAJASTHANJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
03www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
l Jaipur: Medical
teachers-residents
caqme out on the
road boycotting work
over medical teach-
ers raising their
retirement age. There
is a big discussion
about increasing re-
tirement age from 65
to 70 years. Medical
Teachers Association
of Rajasthan said,
if the government
issued such orders,
then the Residents-
medical teachers will
boycott work across
the state.
l Jaipur: Regular
courts of Jaipur
District Court area
will not open from
May 26. District
and Sessions Judge
of Jaipur District
Court took back the
orders. The orders
were issued to open
the courts regarding
administrative work
arrangements. Court
employees were
also issued orders to
ensure attendance.
The new order said
- “case will only be
heard from 18 to 31
May”
l Ajmer: A Bear
attacked a forest
department team in
Ajmer. Sudeep Kaur,
Ajmer in-charge of
the department, was
injured in the attack.
Action was being
taken for the bear’s
rescue.
l Jaipur: BJP MP
Diya Kumari met En-
ergy Minister BD Kal-
la, at his residence.
She demanded for
waiver of 3 months
electricity bill, in this
regard a memoran-
dum was submitted
to BD Kalla. Energy
Minister BD Kalla
said- “Demand from
the Center as well”.
Kalla has already
spoken to the Center
on this issue.
l Jaipur: SGST took
action against pan
masala smuggling
under onion bags.
The goods were
being transported by
truck without paying
bills, GST. Important
information was
given by trusted
sources, stating Pan
masala were being
taken away in a truck.
The action was taken
on the direction of
Principal Commis-
sioner (State Tax) Pri-
tam B Yashwant. And
the action was taken
by SGST’s Rajasthan
AE-1 officials. Truck
was seized along
with goods and was
then transported to
the regional office.
BRIEF
in
‘MIGRANTSWELLLOOKEDAFTER,
SHOULDFOLLOWPROTOCOLS’
7 die, 248 new cases found,
including 12 from central jail
First India Bureau
Jaipur: Saturday wit-
nessed, 7 deaths, 248
new positive cases. 1
death in Chittorgarh, 2
in Jaipur, Kota and Na-
gaur each. Most of the
40 patients came from
Nagaur. 6 in Ajmer, 5 in
Alwar, 1 in Banswara, 6
in Barmer. 1 in Bharat-
pur, 12 in Bhilwara, 3 in
Bikaner, 1 in Chittor-
garh. 4 in Churu, 2 in
Dholpur, 12 in Dungar-
pur, 22 in Jaipur, 13 in
Jalore. 7 in Jhalawar, 8
in Jhunjhunu, 26 in
Jodhpur, 14 in Kota, 23
in Pali. 19 in Rajsa-
mand, 2 in Sikar, 4 in
Sirohi, 3 in Tonk, 14 pa-
tients found positive in
Udaipur. Death toll
reached 160 in state,
and there 6742 patients
so far. 1478 of them are
migrants.
In Jaipur Two pa-
tients died, 22 new pos-
itives surfaced. 12 Co-
rona positive cases
identified in Central
Jail. Apart from this, 3
in Shastri Nagar, 1 in
Brahmapuri, 1 in Ha-
numan Nagar, 1 in Raj-
ni Vihar Hirapura, 1 in
Nehru Bazaar, 1 in
Johri Bazaar, 1 in Sita-
pura, and 1 patient
found in Amer.
Till Saturday, the to-
tal samples received in
the state are 303935,
and out of which 6742
is the total number of
cumulative positive
cases of Corona. The
total sample which
turned out negative in
the state are 292384.
There are 4809 samples
that are under process.
Vikas Sharma
Jaipur: Health Minis-
ter Dr Raghu Sharma
said that every migrant
Rajasthani and work-
ers coming from out-
side, along with medi-
cal checkup, are being
counseled by psychia-
trists in their them ex-
cellent quarantine fa-
cility so that they do
not feel any stress.
He said that about 10
lakh migrant Rajastha-
ni and workers have
come to the state in dif-
ferent districts of the
state. Out of these,
about 7.25 lakh people
have been placed in
home quarantine while
about 34 thousand peo-
ple have been kept in 10
thousand institutional
quarantine centers. He
said that all the neces-
sary facilities have been
made available.
Committees have
been made at 3 levels for
better facilities. Shar-
ma said that every mi-
grant coming from out-
side, Rajasthani or
workers should follow
the protocol of Quaran-
tine centers and 3 types
of committees have
been formed to benefit
from the facilities. He
told that work is being
done by forming a com-
mittee at the Gram Pan-
chayat, Subdivision
Headquarters and Dis-
trict level, so that the
immigrants do not face
any kind of problem.
Reports are being
taken daily, and instruc-
tions are being given.
Sharma said that the
committees have been
made at village level 3,
include panchayat sar-
panch, former sar-
panch, headmaster,
gram sevak, patwari,
NGO, social workers
and employees of police
and health department.
Monitoring being done
every day. Instructions
are given every day
through video confer-
encing so that no per-
son violates the quaran-
tine period.
1300 migrant have
been found positives
from 17 districts. The
Health Minister said
that at present about
2600 people have been
identified as Corona
positive in the state, out
of which more than
1300 are migrants com-
ing from outside. He
said that more than 1300
positive cases have
come in 17 districts in-
cluding Dungarpur,
Sirohi, Pali, Jalore, Bi-
kaner. He said that the
number of positive cas-
es may increase further
in the coming days, but
if all people spend the
quarantine period with
discipline, then there
will be no problem.
Home quarantine is
also being monitored.
He said that for home
quarantine, a bond is
being filled bounding
them to stay inside for
14 days and not to break
the protocol, with two
of their neighbors as
witnesses.
Dr Raghu Sharma
First India Bureau
Jhunjhunu: Three per-
sons including two em-
ployees of railway and
a camper driver died in
a road accident near
Goga ji temple ahead of
Bakhtawarpura village
under Bagad police sta-
tion in Jhunjhunu dis-
trict on Saturday.
According to reliable
sources, trolley men
Ramlal Yadav of Kotdi
Udaipurwati and Vikas
Jat of Rampura Malsi-
sar, Mate Hari Singh of
Chidawa were return-
ing from Ratan Shaher,
when ahead of Bakhta-
warpura village, the
driver Manish lost con-
trol over the steering
and the vehicle rammed
into a tree.
On hearing the noise
of the crash, people in
the nearby areas
reached the spot and
helped the injured
reach the government
hospital in Bagad. How-
ever, another person
was found dead under
the camper. Of the three
injured, two were de-
clared dead by the doc-
tors, on arrival.
Ramlal has been
shifted to a hospital in
Jhunjhunu because of
his critical condition.
The police said that
they had gone to Ratan
Shaher in relation to an
under construction of a
tunnel.
The police have hand-
ed over their bodies to
their relatives after
postmortem.
Car crashes into a tree
as driver loses control,
three die, one critical
Two mobile
sims found in
Sevar jail cell
Experts praise
CM’s economic
management
First India Bureau
Bharatpur: Security at
one of the highly pro-
tected jails in the state
has come into question.
During an intensive
search operation in Se-
var jail, the authorities
have found two mobile
sim and other material
from notorious gang-
ster Lawrence Bishnoi.
Bishnoi was linked to a
murder during recent
gangwar in Churu.
Cops traced mobile
call’s location in Sevar
jail. ADM city Rajesh
Goyal and additional SP
Mool Singh Rana led a
search in which two
mobile sim and a Blue-
tooth was found from
the cell of Lawrence. A
case was registered
against him.
First India Bureau
Jaipur: On Saturday,
Bikaner Technical Uni-
versity organised an
online dialogue on
“Economy after Cov-
id-19: Mahatma Gan-
dhi’s Village Swarajya”.
Inaugurating the pro-
gram, Chief Guest, Dr
Subhash Garg praised
the economic manage-
ment done by Chief
Minister Ashok Gehlot
during the lockdown in-
duced by coronavirus.
The speaker of the pro-
gramme was Prof Su-
darshan Iyengar. For-
mer Vice Chancellor of
Gujarat Vidyapeeth,
Ahmedabad, also pre-
sented his views on the
subject, appreciating
the Chief Minister’s
Gandhi Darshan.
A LPG gas cylinder delivery man near Ramganj area.
Joshi distributes food materials in
religious places, visits 300 temples
BJP leaders greet
Satish on his birthday
Yogesh Sharma
Jaipur: Chief Whip Dr
Mahesh Joshi seems to
be on a secular journey,
with his donation to all
religious places with-
out discrimination.
He visited nearly 300
temples in the last 6
days and distributed
over 1 kg of desi ghee
and free ration materi-
al kits for free.
Joshi’s family and
his team have also been
participating in this
harmonious practice.
In temples, he do-
nated for Thakurji’s
bhog and lamp light-
ing. It seems that his
goal is to make dona-
tion in every religious
institution in the
Hawa Mahal assembly
constituency. Joshi
also donated for lang-
ars in Gurudwaras. In
fact on the occasion of
Eid, Joshi plans to en-
sure that sevayas and
food items be provided
in mosques.
Aishwarya Pradhan
Jaipur: On BJP’s Na-
tional Joint General
Secretary (Organisa-
tion) V Satish’s birth-
day, on Saturday, all the
central leaders of BJP
and the leaders and ac-
tivists of various states,
gavehimbirthdaygreet-
ings and best wishes
through social media
and phone calls. V Sat-
ish stayed at the BJP
state office when he was
in Jaipur during the
lock down. Since then,
he has been attending
meetings through VC or
audio bridge.
He was greeted by Un-
ion Minister Nitin Gad-
kari, Piyush Goyal, Nar-
endra Singh Tomar, Sm-
riti Irani, Thavarchand
Gehlot, Arjun Ram
Meghwal, Gajendra Sin-
gh Shekhawat, Kailash
Chaudhary, CM Shivraj
Singh Chauhan, former
CM Vasundhara Raje,
State President of BJP,
Dr Satish Poonia, LoP
Gulabchand Kataria,
Deputy Leader of Oppo-
sition Rajendra Rathore
and State Organization
General Secretary
Chandra Shekhar, MP
RamcharanBohra,Diya
Kumari and CP Joshi
among others.
No direct flights from Jpr to major cities, worrying
Kashiram Chaudhary
Jaipur: Domestic flights will
start operating at airports in
the country from Monday. A
total of 21 flights will operate
from Jaipur Airport. Howev-
er, there will no longer be di-
rect flights from Jaipur to
many major cities. Due to the
reduction in the number of
flights, passengers will have
to face quite some trouble.
The resumption of air ser-
vices in the country is relief
for passengers. Now it will be
easy to travel from one city to
another again. However, in
view of the transition of Co-
rona, the Central Govern-
ment has appealed to the pas-
sengers to travel only when
necessary. It is worth noting
that before the lock-down, 63
flights were operated from
Jaipur Airport, of which 7
were international and 56 do-
mestic flights. While now only
21 flights will start operating.
There will be no flights from
Jaipur to major cities like
Ahmedabad, Chennai, Jais-
almer, Dehradun, Bhopal,
Lucknow etc. Now passengers
will need to change flights
from Delhi to these cities.
Airlines could not make the
schedule according to the re-
quirement of passengers.
There is a good, daily pas-
senger load, from Jaipur to
Ahmedabad. There were 4
daily flights from Jaipur to
Ahmedabad before the lock
down. 1 IndiGo, 1 Go Air and
2 Flight SpiceJet were operat-
ing. But now not a single air-
line has given schedule for
Ahmedabad. SpiceJet and
Air India had 2 flights before
the lock down for Bhopal.
But now not a single flight
will run for Bhopal. There
will be no direct flight from
Jaipur to Chennai. To get to
these cities, first you have to
take a flight to Delhi. From
there, connecting flights will
enable passengers to reach
other cities.
NUMBER OF REDUCED FLIGHTS
Mahesh Joshi’s sister, known to many as ‘Behen ji’ has been
helping him with the offerings.
V Satish during a VC
—PHOTOBYNAIMKHAN
PERSPECTIVEJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
04www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
G Vol 1 G Issue No. 347 G RNI NO. RAJENG/2019/77764. Printed and published by Anita Hada Sangwan on behalf of First Express Publishers. Printed at Bhaskar Printing Press, D.B. Corp Limited, Shivdaspura, Tonk Road, Jaipur.
Published at 304, 3rd Floor, City Mall, Bhagwan Das Road, C-Scheme, Jaipur-302001, Rajasthan. Phone 0141-4920504. Editor: Jagdeesh Chandra, responsible for selection of news under the PRB Act
EID FESTIVITIES
FALL VICTIM TO
THE PANDEMIC
ot very long ago, Eid-ul-Fitr was
celebrated with piety, joy and
enthusiasm. Photographs of
hundreds of devout together of-
fering first the Alvida (last Fri-
day of Ramzan) prayers and then Eid
prayers a few days later splashed across
newspapers was as common as cooking of
vermicelli in Muslim homes. Iftaar par-
ties, in which non-Muslims also partici-
pated, were also an important part of Eid
festivity. Enter novel coronavirus followed
by a lockdown described as the strictest in
the world and Ramzan’s traditions and
rituals were disrupted for both rich and
poor. Closed businesses and shops, job
losses, people forced to lead a frugal life
in virtual confinement, a palpable fear of
catching the virus, and death, is not what
Eid is all about. It is about celebration and
the mood has been conspicuously missing.
As shops remain closed until a week before
Eid and with social distancing still in place,
the enthusiasm that marks festival shopping
was missing. One report said that this was
the most depressing Eid for several clothing
brands. Even street side vendors selling dif-
ferent varieties of vermicelli sprung up late
but only in non-containment zones. Even if
traditional vermicelli is bought and pre-
pared, there will be no guests to savour them
just as there will be few to admire ones new
apparels as socializing is still forbidden. Such
is the dread of the new virus.
The almost negligible shopping for Eid
has hit the retail sector the most. Already
facing an estimated loss of Rs 5.50 lakh
crore, the partial lifting of curbs was too
late and too little. There are approximately
seven crore retailers in the country. “Indian
retailers do a daily business of Rs 15,000
crore and since the country is in a lock-
down there has been a huge loss of Rs 5.50
lakh crore of business which is done by 7
crore traders of the country,” the secretary-
general of Confederation of All-India Trad-
ers Praveen Khandelwal was quoted as
saying. Besides, there are 2.5 crore small
and micro traders for whom the lockdown
must be nothing less than a catastrophe.
It is not that only Indian Muslims have to
face the adverse impact of this nationwide
clampdown. Saudi Arabia announced impo-
sition of curfew from May 23 to May 27, fol-
lowing the end of the holy month of fasting
as Covid-19 cases have been rising. Mosques,
too, will remain shut for Eid prayers. The
kingdom has reported highest number of
cases in the Gulf region.
Egypt also stopped movement of all
public transport for six days starting May
24. Curfew too was imposed. In United
Arab Emirates, the Dubai government’s
media office was quoted as saying on
Twitter that mosques will remain closed.
The tweet banned customs like family vis-
its and giving money or gifts to children.
Despite the odds, one can
still say Eid Mubarak!
IN-DEPTH
N
OVID-19 has
c o n f r o n t e d
the world with
a horrific cri-
sis. Because
developing a vaccine will
likely take at least a
year, governments need
to buy time to keep
health-care facilities
from being overwhelmed
and to minimize the
number of people who
fall ill and die, not least
by reducing the rate of
new infections.
In rich countries, the ar-
senal has included social
distancing, sheltering in
place, shuttering nones-
sential businesses (or
more telecommuting), and
recommending or requir-
ing face masks. Though
the economic costs of
these first-phase measures
have been dreadful, they
are preferable to the hu-
man and economic costs
that would follow from let-
ting COVID-19 spread un-
checked. The second
round of the fight can
start when the numbers of
new cases and deaths are
flat or falling, and when
testing and contact-trac-
ing capabilities have been
deployed widely enough to
spot and contain potential
outbreaks.
But the pandemic will
never be under control
as long as there are still
rising infection rates
elsewhere in the world.
A viral contagion is like
a wildfire: it takes only a
few sparks to trigger a
resurgence. No matter
how rigorously rich
countries try to prevent
the virus from crossing
their borders, there will
always be enough leak-
ages to cause a new out-
break. Thus, to combat
the pandemic in the ab-
sence of a universally
available vaccine, the vi-
rus also must be con-
tained in poorer coun-
tries, all of which are
woefully ill-equipped for
the task.
After all, social distanc-
ing and sheltering in place
are impossible in crowded
urban areas with commu-
nity wells and toilets,
where many families live
from hand to mouth on a
day laborer’s pay. Even if
they were enforceable,
lockdowns in these situa-
tions would mean starva-
tion for many people.
Moreover, most poor
countries have inade-
quate health-care infra-
structure (too few hospi-
tal beds, scarce personal
protective equipment)
and underfunded and
understaffed public-
health systems. They
also lack the domestic
resources to finance so-
cial programs, as well as
the foreign-exchange re-
serves to import criti-
cally needed supplies
and equipment. Many
governments are already
in dire fiscal shape, and
cannot provide even
minimal support for un-
employed workers and
their families.
Poorer countries thus
have two overarching
needs. First, they require
additional support for
their health systems, so
that they can provide suf-
ficient medical care to all
who become infected. Oth-
erwise, COVID-19 cases,
not to mention the mortal-
ity rate, will grow – possi-
bly exponentially. Second,
most poorer countries
need financing to avert
widespread starvation and
penury. While a few have at
least some fiscal space to
increase their expendi-
tures, most do not.
Coordination among
rich countries will be
necessary to address
both needs. So far, there
has been some progress
with respect to finance,
but not nearly enough
when it comes to address-
ing the health crisis.
FOR FULL REPORT LOG ON TO
WWW.PROJECTSYNDICATE.COM
The rich world’s pandemic imperative
C
While the advanced
economies reckon
with the costs of the
COVID-19 lockdown
phase, developing
and emerging
economies are
facing an even
deeper disaster
He gives power to the weak
and strength to the
powerless. —Isaiah 40:29
Spiritual
SPEAK
Top
TWEET
Dharmendra Pradhan
@dpradhanbjp
Urged all my Odia friends to
stay safe and take necessary
precautions to minimise the risk
of novel coronavirus infection.
Together we have dealt with
many catastrophes in the past
and have emerged stronger. By
the grace of Lord Jagannath, we
will win this battle too.
Piyush Goyal
@PiyushGoyal
24x7 Movement of Essential
Commodities: Railways is
working in a mission mode to
maintain a continuous supply
chain during lockdown, delivering
essentials to every corner of the
nation. Railways has moved 23.2
lakh wagons, of which 13.5 lakh
wagons carried essential goods.
he top priority on the inter-
national agenda at the mo-
ment must be to combat
coronavirus and find a cure
for it. Regrettably this is not
happening. Regional dis-
putes continue to simmer.
Take for example the current
cartographic differences be-
tween Nepal and India. I have in
the past been intimately associ-
atedIndo-Nepalrelations.Ihave
nohesitationinemphasisingthe
fact that, with one or two excep-
tion the Prime Ministers of Ne-
pal have not been up to the job.
The Nepalese government
has taken objection to a map
India issued in 2019 to em-
phasise the changed status of
Jammu & Kashmir into a Un-
ion Territory. It asserted that
the 330 square kilometre
Kalapani area near the Indo-
Nepal border should not have
been shown as a part of In-
dia. We have assured our clos-
est and largest landlocked
neighbour that we would be
willing to discuss the matter
through diplomatic channels
after coronavirus pandemic
is over, even though the terri-
tory has been a part of India
for centuries. Not only that
Nepal endorsed India’s claim
for 150 years.
A word or two about Prime
Minister KP Oli. He is a crypto
communist, not on good terms
with the Nepal Communist Par-
ty which is at present in power.
By all accounts he is an indiffer-
entadministrator.Unfortunately
we played into his hands by the
manner in which we intervened
when a new constitution of Ne-
palwasunderdiscussionin2015.
We sent to Kathmandu, the then
foreign secretary with a list of
sex amendments. This was an
unnecessary interference in the
internal affairs of Nepal which
was deeply resented.
China’s diplomatic, terri-
torial and political ambi-
tions in Nepal are all too
well known. Without Bei-
jing’s encouragement Prime
Minister Oli would not even
think of antagonising India.
The so called “dispute” will
eventually be resolved through
deft diplomacy. The sooner that
happens the better it would. A
prolonged estrangement is not
in the interest of either country.
For the first time since the
death of Deng Xiao Ping
China is on the defensive. Its
mishandling of the corona-
virus pandemic has been
widely condemned. It’s not
coming clean is damaging
her image. The economy for
the first time since 1992 has
taken a beating.
President Trump is leading
the charge against the Peoples
Republic. That is, quite obvi-
ously not having the desired re-
sults. President Trump’s goofs
onthecoronavirushavebrought
down his rating to seventy per-
cent negative. On the political
fieldheisrunningelevenpoints
behind Joe Biden. President
TrumpcallingformerPresident
Barak Obama names is a peril-
ous exercise. It only enhances
President Obama’s stature.
If elections were held to-
day in the USA President
Trump could find himself in
serious electoral trouble. If
the pandemic continues till
November, and the President
does not mend his ways, he
would find himself back in
Trump Towers in New York.
Friends ask me how I spend
my days in what they call un-
wanted solitary confinement.
My answer is, “I am discover-
ing the virtues of solitude”. As
we all know, the world is a
noisy place. India is among the
noisiest places on earth. No
wonder Mahatma Gandhi ob-
served a day of silence.
The Gymkhana club, has
been in the news for all the
wrong reasons. I became a
member in 1955. I was elect-
ed President in 1984 unop-
posed. The fifteen members
of the General Committee
were on my list of candi-
dates. All were elected. This
was unprecedented.
The Imperial Gymkhana
club was founded in 1913. The
word Imperial was dropped in
1947. From 1913 to 1947 only
Britishers became President of
club. Sir Harcourt Butter ICS
was the first President.
The first Indian to be
elected President was Sir
Usha Nath Sen, CBE i.e Com-
mander of the British Em-
pire. Between 1952 to 1970
seven Indian ICS officers
were elected Presidents.
According to the Oxford Dic-
tionary a club “is an associa-
tion dedicated to a particular
interest or activity, an organi-
zation constituted to play
matches…. An organization of-
fering members social ameni-
ties, meals and residence.”
The club has over a dozen
tennisgrasscourts,eighthard
courts, a squash and badmin-
ton court, a swimming pool, a
billiards room. A room is used
for Bridge players.
The cottages are well fur-
nished, with a spacious bed
room, sitting room, a bathroom
and a small store room. I lived
in cottage number 22 from 1958
to 1961 and 1966 to 1967.
Few, if any members
would know that Lord Irvin,
the Viceroy and Mahatma
Gandhi had a meeting in the
club in 1931.
A farewell party was held for
Lord and Lady Mountbatten on
21 June 1948. Jawaharlal Nehru
was among the guests.
A handful of members
have gone to court against
the President and the Com-
mittees for actions not in
keeping in mind the tradi-
tions of the club.
The Central Government
wants to take over the running
of the club. That would be un-
fortunate. Governments must
govern not run clubs.
A five member committee
of five for President should
be formed to sort out the dif-
ferences between the two op-
posing groups. Otherwise
Government will intervene.
In that event the Gymkhana
Club will become a sub-sec-
tion of one of the ministries
of the central government.
What a melancholy prospect.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY
THE AUTHOR ARE PERSONAL
REGIONAL DISPUTES
CONTINUE TO SIMMER
T
The Nepalese
government has
taken objection
to a map India
issued in 2019 to
emphasise the
changed status of
Jammu &
Kashmir into a
Union Territory.
It asserted that
the 330 square
kilometre
Kalapani area
near the Indo-
Nepal border
should not have
been shown as a
part of India
China’s diplomatic,
territorial and political
ambitions in Nepal
are all too well known.
Without Beijing’s
encouragement
Nepal’s PM Oli would
not even think of
antagonising India
K NATWAR
SINGH
The author is Former Minister
of External Affairs of India
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INDIAJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
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Kolkata: The West
Bengal government
sought support of the
Indian Army, railways
and port for restoring
essential infrastructure
and services in the are-
as ravaged by Cyclone
Amphan. It also urged
private entities to pro-
vide manpower and
equipment for the pur-
pose. In a series of
tweets, the department
said, “GOWB mobilises
maximum strength in
unified command mode
on 24×7basis for imme-
diate restoration of es-
sential infrastructure
and services asap.
Army support has been
called for; NDRF and
SDRF teams deployed;
Rlys, Port & private
sector too requested to
supply teams and
equipment.”
West Bengal CM-
Mamata Banerjee also
wrote to Indian Rail-
ways asking them not to
send Shramik Special
trains to state till May
26 in view of Cyclone
Amphan. “District ad-
ministration involved
in relief and rehabilita-
tion works after cyclone
Amphan. It won’t be
able to receive special
trains for the next few
days,” the CM said. The
death toll due to the cy-
clone rose to 86 on Sat-
urday. The cyclone,
which weakened into a
depression, was further
reduced to a well-
marked low-pressure
area over North Bangla-
desh and neighbouring
area. “It is very likely to
continue to move north-
northeastwards &
weaken further into a
low-pressure area dur-
ing the next 12 hours,” a
bulletin released by
IMD stated. —PTI
BENGAL SEEKS ARMY SUPPORT
CYCLONE AMPHAN District administration involved in relief works after the calamity
Spokesperson
Ministry of Home Affairs
@PIBHomeAffairs
10 additional @NDRFHQ
teams deployed in West
Bengal for post cyclone
#Amphan management.
Additional deployment of
10 teams will bring the
total deployment to 36
teams of NDRF, across
the 6 districts of WB af-
fected by the Cyclone.
We are doing whatever
possible to restore elec-
tricity. Cyclone Amphan
was a disaster. It is not
the right time to do
politics. We have spoken
to Calcutta Electric Supply
Corporation (CESC) for
restoration. I would like
to request people to have
patience.
—Mamata Banerjee
West Bengal, CM
People stand in a queue outside a shop to buy a generator due to power cut, after the passage of Cyclone Amphan in Kolkata on Saturday.
New Delhi: India wit-
nessed the biggest ever
spike of 6,654 positive
cases in the last 24
hours, taking the total
number of COVID-19
cases to 1,25,101, accord-
ing to the Union Minis-
try of Health and Fam-
ily Welfare.
As many as 137
deaths have been re-
ported in the last 24
hours, taking the
death toll to 3,720. Out
of the total number of
cases, 69,597 are active
and 51,784 have been
cured/discharged or
have migrated.
Maharashtra contin-
ues to remain the
worst-affected state
with 44,582 COVID-19
cases. It is followed by
Tamil Nadu (14,753),
Gujarat (13,268), and
Delhi (12,319).
The nationwide lock-
down has been extend-
ed till May 31. —ANI
With biggest spike of 6,654
cases, India’s tally@ 1,25,101
591 NEW POSITIVE CASES
REPORTED IN DELHI
14 NEW CONTAINMENT
ZONES IN DELHI
New Delhi: As many as 591 new
COVID-19 cases and no deaths have
been reported in Delhi in last 24 hours,
taking the total number of cases in the
national capital to 12,910, including
6,412 active cases, said the Delhi Health
Department. 370 patients have recov-
ered while 6,267 patients have recov-
ered so far. Meanwhile, India witnessed
the biggest ever spike of 6,654 positive
cases in the last 24 hours. —ANI
New Delhi: Fourteen new areas were
added to the list of containment zones
in Delhi taking the total number of such
zones to 92 in the national capital. Till
date, 34 areas have been ‘de-contained
in the Delhi. 11,659 persons have tested
positive for COVID-19 in the national
capital. 5,567 persons have been cured
while the death toll is 194 in Delhi, ac-
cording to the Union Ministry of Health
and Family Welfare. —ANI
New Delhi: A total of
1,15,364 samples were
tested for COVID-19 in
the last 24 hours in the
country, said the In-
dian Council of Medical
Research (ICMR) on Sat-
urday. As per ICMR’s bul-
letin, a total of 28,34,798
samples of coronavirus
have been tested so far.
India on Saturday wit-
nessed the biggest ever
spike of 6,654 positive
cases in the last 24 hours,
taking the total number
of COVID-19 cases to
1,25,101, said Health
Ministry. —ANI
‘TOTAL 1,15,364
SAMPLES TESTED
IN LAST 24 HRS’
Mumbai: Former BJP
MP Kirti Somaiya has
written a letter to Ma-
harashtra Health Min-
ister Rajesh Tope alleg-
ing black marketing
and hoarding of masks
by many traders and
manufacturers and de-
manded to cap MRP of
N95 masks.He also de-
manded strict action
against traders and
manufacturers who are
involved in black mar-
keting of masks. “All
Doctors in Mumbai are
raising concern about
availability and price
of N95 mask. Cost is the
same but the sale price
is different. The exploi-
tation of the situation
by a few manufacturers
and traders. I request
the government to fix
prices of masks, it must
be treated as an essen-
tial commodity and it
should be covered un-
der Medical Emergency
Act/Provisions,” So-
maiya wrote in the
letter.”I request strong
actionagainstallhoard-
ers” he added. —ANI
BJP demands
capping of
MRP of N95
masksPanaji: Goa Governor
Satya Pal Malik said
that during his tenure
in J& K he had succeed-
ed in holding panchay-
at elections, devoid of
violence, despite the
top leaders of the union
territory not cooperat-
ing under pressure
from Pakistan.
Malik served as the
Governor of J-K till Oc-
tober 2019, following
which he has taken over
the same role in Goa.
“The Prime Minister
had said that we will
conduct panchayat elec-
tions in Jammu and
Kashmir. I broke proto-
col and went to Omar
Abdullah and Mehboo-
ba Mufti’s residence.
They refused to partici-
pate under Pakistan’s
pressure. Terrorists
also threatened yet
elections were held
successfully, Hurriyat
boycotted them. But
the elections were still
held with record vot-
ing, barring a few plac-
es, and no violence took
place during the elec-
tions,” Malik said.
He also said that the
then administration
was able to do so be-
cause the people of the
union territory had ac-
cepted the system, as it
was benefitting them.
“We had conducted
an exercise which re-
vealed that close to
50,000 government jobs
were lying vacant in the
state. We had an-
nounced we will give
jobs to 50 thousand
Kashmiri youth. I hope
that the government
will give them to the
people soon. As J&K
Guv, I opened the Raj
Bhavan for everyone,
Malik said. —ANI
Panchayat polls under
Pak’s pressure: Malik
VHP PANEL MEETS HARYANA CM
OVER ‘ANTI-HINDU ACTIVITIES’
New Delhi: A high-level
delegation of Vishva
Hindu Parishad (VHP)
along with various social
and religious organisa-
tions of Haryana, led by
VHP central Joint General
Secretary, Surendra Jain,
met Haryana Chief Min-
ister Manohar Lal Khattar
on Friday in connection
with the “anti-national
and anti-Hindu activities
in Mewat.” The delega-
tion apprised Khattar of
the report of high-level
inquiry committee and its
conclusions and recom-
mendations. Apart from
that, some new facts that
had emerged were also
given to him. He was also
informed about “facts of
the temples which were
occupied and converted
into mosques.”
HUNAR HAAT TO REOPEN FROM
SEPT 25, SAYS MIN NAQVI
New Delhi : Hunar Haat, where an opportunity
is given to artisans from across the country
to showcase their handmade and indigenous
products, would reopen with a theme of ‘local for
global’ from September 25, said Minority Affairs
Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi on Saturday.
“Hunar Haat, which has provided employment
to more than 5 lakh Indian artisans, craftsmen,
associated with them in the last 5 years, have
become popular among the people. Now it will
restart on the theme of local to global.”
DAATI MAHARAJ BOOKED FOR
DOING PUJA IN LOCKDOWN
New Delhi: Delhi Police have registered a case
against self-styled godman Daati Maharaj and
his supporters who were seen offering prayers
at Shani Dhaam temple in South Delhi’s Asola.
According to lockdown guidelines, temples and
other places of worship have been closed to
control the spread of coronavirus. On Saturday,
when videos and photos of the religious ceremo-
ny at the temple went viral on social media, the
DM and the DCP of the South district sought an
inquiry into the matter.
ARMY CHIEF VISITS LADAKH TO
REVIEW LAC SITUATION
Leh, Ladakh: At a time
when there is stand-
off at three locations
in Ladakh sector with
Chinese troops, Army
Chief Gen MM Naravane
visited Leh to review the
ongoing situation with
field commanders. The
top military field Com-
manders in Leh including
Lt Gen YK Joshi, Lt Gen
Harinder Singh and other
senior officers briefed the
Army Chief on LAC situ-
ation. Sources said there
is stand-off situation at
three locations including
Galwan Nala area where
over 300 troops each
from Chinese side have
come to stake claim.
Army been holding talks
with their Chinese coun-
terparts on the situation &
finding a way out of it.
INFRASTRUCTURE GETTING RESTORED: GOVT CENTRE SENDS 5 ARMY COLUMNS
The Bengal government said multiple depart-
ments are at work to cut and remove the trees
that had fallen during Cyclone Amphan. “Drinking
water and drainage infrastructure getting restored
fast. PHE asked to supply water pouches in gap
pockets. Generators being hired where necessary.
More than a hundred teams from multiple depart-
ments and bodies working for cutting of fallen trees
which is the key to restoration of power in locali-
ties. WBSEDCL & CESC asked to deploy maximal
manpower, even while lockdown significantly
affects the deployment potential of the latter. Police
on high alert,” Bengal’s home department tweeted.
The Defence Ministry on Saturday decided to
send five columns of Indian Army to help Chief
Minister Mamata Banerjee to restore infrastructure
in state capital Kolkata. The Centre’s decision fol-
lowed a request from the West Bengal government
that appeared to have been overwhelmed by the
magnitude of the relief work needed in the state
battered by cyclone Amphan. “Based on the request
from the government of West Bengal, Indian Army
has provided five columns to assist the Kolkata City
Civil Administration in the aftermath of Cyclone
Amphan,” a person familiar with the development
said. Each column has about 35 personnel.
Kolkata: West Bengal
Governor Jagdeep
Dhankhar targeted
state government over
the handling of Cyclone
Amphan. Dhankar said
that he could not have
any discussions with
the Mamata Banerjee-
ledTrinamoolCongress
government. He said
that the state did not
have any contingency
and questioned Kolkata
Municipal Corpora-
tion’s work. Cyclone
Amphan Toll Rises to 85
in West Bengal; People
in Kolkata Stage Pro-
tests Demanding Resto-
ration of Power, Water
Supply.
“I couldn’t have any
discussion with state
govt. It’s unfortunate. I
had extensive discus-
sions with Indian Coast
Guard & BSF, they did a
great job. I spoke to the
Army, they were ready
for relief work. What
did Kolkata Municipal
Corporation do?”
Dhankar said.
Why could they not
anticipate? Most of the
deaths were caused
due to uprooting of
trees. Why was there
no contingency plan?
Why were arrange-
ments not done before-
hand?” he added.
The death toll due to
the cyclonic storm in
West Bengal has risen
to 85. The residents of
Kolkata staged a protest
earlier in the day, over
the administration’s
failure to restore nor-
malcy even three days
after Cyclone Amphan.
According to PTI sourc-
es, nearly 1.5 crore
people of the state are
directly affected over
10 lakh house have
been destroyed due to
the cyclone. —PTI
‘What did Kolkata
Municipal
Corporation Do?’
Why could they not
anticipate? Most
of the deaths were
caused due to up-
rooting of trees. Why
was there no con-
tingency plan? Why
were arrangements
not done beforehand?
—Jagdeep Dhankhar,
West Bengal Governor
When I was the Jammu and Kash-
mir Governor, I opened the Raj
Bhavan for everyone. All my advi-
sors were tasked to hear people’s
complaints once a week. 95,000 complaints
were received by my office, I resolved 93,000
of them before coming to Goa. People felt
comfortable because of this, they felt it was
their government. Thus, anger was low.
—Satya Pal Malik, Goa Governor
Lucknow: Amid
the nationwide
lockdown, UP CM
Yogi Adityanath on
Saturday held a
meeting with the of-
ficers of the ‘COV-
ID-19 management
Team-11’ here.
While reviewing
the lockdown meas-
ures, he asked for
effective police pa-
trolling which ac-
cording to him
would help in pre-
venting the acci-
dents in the border
areas as well as on
highways and
expressways. He
also underlined
the utility of foot-
patrolling in the
markets. —ANI
CM Yogi
holds
COVID-19
review meet
INDIAJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
06www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
New Delhi: Indian
Railways has prepared
a schedule to transport
another 36 lakh mi-
grant labourers to 16
destination states from
originating points in 19
states over the next 10
days, revealed the rail-
way ministry. The min-
istry in a media address
added that it had al-
ready transported a to-
tal of 45 lakh migrants
through inter and intra-
state services provided
since May 1.
The announcement
of Shramik special
schedule comes at a
time when railways has
also announced a grad-
ual resumption in its
normal passenger ser-
vices with 100 pair of
trains from June 1 in
addition to 15 pairs of
Rajdhani special ser-
vices in operation to ad-
dress the rising demand
for interstate travel
with the easing of re-
strictions from lock-
down clamped to con-
tain the spread of coro-
navirus pandemic.
“A total of 2,600 Shra-
mik Special trains will
run for the next 10 days,
originating from 19
states for destinations
in 16 states, carrying 36
lakh passengers,” the
official said. —ANI
Rlys to carry 36L migrants in
2,600 Shramik special trains
New Delhi: Two hun-
dred Mail Express
trains will be run from
June 1, said Railway
Board Chairman Vinod
Kumar Ya-
dav here
on Satur-
day. Ad-
dressing a
press con-
f e r e n c e
here, Ya-
dav said: “In an effort
towards returning to
normalcy, the Ministry
of Railways will run 200
Mail Express trains
starting June 1.” He
said that 80 per cent of
the train journeys were
undertaken by the mi-
grant labourers of UP &
Bihar. “Shramik Spe-
cial trains were started
on May 1. Free meals
and drinking water
were provided to all
passengers.” —ANI
200 MAIL
EXPRESS TRAINS
FROM JUNE 1
RAHUL GANDHI@RahulGandhi
My brother and sisters, you are the
strength of this country, you carry
the weight of this country on your shoulders.
The entire country wants there should be justice
(nyay) with you. It is our duty to empower this
strength of the country.
FOUR SECRETARIES IN GOVT OF
INDIA RETIRING IN MAY
Four Secretaries with various Ministries and
Departments, are due to retire on May 31, 2020.
They include: Binoy Kumar, Secretary, Ministry
of Steel; Chandra Kishore Mishra, Secretary, Min-
istry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change;
Injeti Srinivas, Secretary, Ministry of Corporate
Affairs; P Raghavendra Rao, Secretary, Chemicals
and Petrochemicals.
VIJAY PRAKASH RETURNS
TO PARENT CADRE
Vijay Prakash, Director in the Department of Land
Resources, has been given premature repatriation
to his parent cadre with the condition of extended
cooling off. He is a 1996 batch ITS officer.
FOUR IIS OFFICERS GET NEW POSTINGS
MIB has given new postings to 4 IIS officers.
Accordingly, Dhiraj Singh has been posted as Di-
rector, DPD, Manish Gautam, Director, PIB, Delhi,
Ravinder Chaudhary, Chief Media, Ministry of
Health and Family Welfare and HP Kunappareddy
posted as Dy Director, PIB, Hyderabad.
PANKAJ KUMAR GOSWAMI TO JOIN AS
DIRECTOR (OPE), OIL INDIA ON JUNE 1
Pankaj Kumar Goswami, CGM, OIL, will be
taking over the charge as Director (Operations),
Oil India Limited (OIL) on June 1, 2020. He will
succeed PK Sharma retiring in May this year.
AJOY CHOUDHURY TO TAKE OVER
AS DIRECTOR (FIN), REC ON JUNE 1
Ajoy Choudhury, ED, REC, will be taking over the
charge as Director (Finance), Rural Electrification
Corporation (REC) on June 1, 2020.
RAJESH KUMAR SAHU APPOINTED
DS/DIRECTOR, TOURISM
Rajesh Kumar Sahu has been appointed as Depu-
ty Secretary/ Director in the Ministry of Tourism.
He is a 2010 batch IRS-C&CE officer.
M THENNARASAN APPOINTED
MEMBER IN GUJARAT
M Thennarasan, vice-chairman & managing
director, Gujarat Industrial Development Corpo-
ration been appointed as member of the expert
advisory committee to guide the government on
reviving the state’s economy. He is 2000 batch
IAS officer of Gujarat cadre.
SEVEN ITS OFFICERS RETIRING
THIS MONTH
Seven Indian Telecom Service (ITS) officers are
retiring this month. These officers belong to four
batches. They are- Raman Lal of 1982 batch,
Rajendra P Sharma of 1984 batch, I Thirunavuk-
karasu of 1984 batch, Dev Kumar of 1984 batch,
SS Thampi of 1985 batch, Tushar Kanti Roy of
1986 batch and George Methew of 1986 batch.
POST OF TWO MEMBERS ARE
LYING VACANT IN TDSAT
Two posts of Members in TDSAT are vacant. In-
terested can apply for the post till June 25, 2020.
Details can be seen from DoT website.
SANJAY GUPTA SHIFTED TO
WESTERN RAILWAYS
Sanjay Gupta on his return from deputation at
DFCCIL, is being posted in Western Railways. He
is an IRSE officer.
ABHINAV GUPTA SHIFTED TO
NORTH WESTERN RAILWAYS
Abhinav Gupta on his repatriation from DFCCIL,
is being posted in North Western Railways. He is
an IRAS officer.
RK JHA POSTED AS OSD IN MHA
Ratnesh Kumar Jha presently posted in Northern
Railways, has been posted as OSD in the Ministry
of Home Affairs. He is an IRTS officer.
POWERGallery
Darbhanga: Fifteen-
year-old Jyoti Kumari,
who cycled with her
wounded father from
Gurugram in Haryana
to Darbhanga in Bihar
covering over 1,200 km
over 7 days, has proved
to the world that
“where there is a will
there’s a way”.
The feat of endur-
ance of this lion-heart-
ed girl has not just
caught the attention of
Cycling Federation of
India (CFI) but also of
Ivanka Trump, US Pres-
ident Donald Trump’s
daughter. Ivanka on
Friday took to the Twit-
ter and heaped praises
on Jyoti, stating that
the “beautiful feat of
endurance and love has
captured the imagina-
tion of the Indian
people and the cycling
federation”.
Jyoti will now be al-
lowed to give a trial to
become a trainee at the
National Cycling Acad-
emy in the IGI Stadium
complex in the nation-
al capital.
“15 yr old Jyoti Ku-
mari, carried her
wounded father to their
home village on the
back of her bicycle cov-
ering +1,200 km over 7
days. This beautiful
feat of endurance and
love has captured the
imagination of the In-
dian people and the cy-
cling federation!” Ivan-
ka tweeted.
People on social me-
dia have shown lot of
support to Jyoti. —ANI
Ivanka Trump
lauds 15-yr-old
Jyoti’s cycle trial
Male: An evacuation
flight of Air India un-
der Vande Bharat Mis-
sion departed from
Male with 153 passen-
gers on board for Delhi
on Saturday.
“The first @airindi-
ain evacuation flight
from #Male to #Delhi
under #MissionVan-
deBharat takes off
with 153 passengers
on board,” Indian
embassy here tweeted.
On Friday, an Air In-
dian flight from Male
evacuated 152 Indians,
which landed in Ben-
galuru.
Many Indians from
the Maldives were evac-
uated through Opera-
tion Samudra Setu,
which was launched by
the Indian Navy to
bring Indian citizens
home from foreign
shores in the wake of
COVID-19. On Sunday,
the Indian embassy
here had said that 1,488
Indians from the Mal-
dives have been evacu-
ated so far. —ANI
Evacuation
flight with 153
people departs
from Male
‘Corona crisis:...
be provided ration
through PDS channel.
CM also asked for NFSA
list to be scrutinised to
delete the undeserving
names and add new
names to it. He stressed
on strict action against
black marketers, moni-
toring of PDS outlets
and up gradation of
POS machines while he
praised there role in
fooddistributionduring
corona crisis.
Food & Civil supplies
minister Ramesh Mee-
na stressed on strength-
ening the measuring
and weighing system
through e tuleman por-
tal for effective moni-
toring. He along with
minister Sukhram
Vishnoi expressed need
to add really needy to
the NFSA list. Food &
Civil Supplies secretary
Siddarth Mahajan gave
a presentation listing 46
lakh new beneficiaries,
instructions for new
data base, Wheat lifting
from FCI godowns, ad-
dition of 70 lakh new
NFSA beneficiaries,
distribution of wheat to
4.4 crore people and re-
cord MSP purchase. CS
DB Gupta, ACS (Fi-
nance) Niranjan Arya,
PS (IT) Abhay Kumar
and DIPR Director Ma-
hendra Soni along with
other senior officers
were also present
during the VC.
Corona to...
the GDP growth during
2020-21 is likely to re-
main in the negative ter-
ritory. It projected some
pick-up in growth im-
pulses from second half
(October-March) of
2020-21 onwards.
Last week, the minis-
ter had announced an
economic packages five
tranches, which includ-
ed a Rs 3.70 lakh crore
support for MSMEs, Rs
75,000 crore for NBFCs
and Rs 90,000 crore for
Power distribution
companies, free
foodgrains to migrant
workers, increased allo-
cation for MGNREGS,
tax relief to certain sec-
tions and Rs 15,000
crore allocated to the
healthcare sector to
deal with the pandemic.
The package was
done in consultation
with economists, acade-
micians, ex-bankers,
ex-finance ministry of-
ficials and industry,
Sitharaman said, add-
ing the idea was to
make available more li-
quidity in the economy
and revive demand,
Sitharaman said.
“The package was de-
signed keeping in mind
that we are facing a sit-
uation which is excep-
tional and therefore
whether the contraction
is going to be this much
or that much, we didn’t
have the luxury of data
to guess-estimating
them. However, the spir-
it of that thought has
been kept in mind that
we have to now look at
complete contraction
and if we have to stim-
ulate the economy
keeping that in mind
what is that we have to
do,” she said. —ANI
China brings...
In the midst of the esca-
lating tension, Army
Chief Gen MM Nara-
vane paid a quiet visit
to the headquarters of
14 Corps in Leh on Fri-
day and reviewed with
the top commanders the
overall security scenar-
io in the region includ-
ing in the disputed ar-
eas along the LAC, the
de-facto border between
India and China.
Military sources said
the Indian Army has
also been matching up
to the Chinese build-up
in both Pangong Tso
lake and Galwan Valley
and that it is in a much
advantageous position
in certain other sensi-
tive areas in the region.
The situation in East-
ern Ladakh deteriorat-
ed after around 250 Chi-
nese and Indian sol-
diers were engaged in a
violent face-off on the
evening of May 5 which
spilled over to the next
day before the two sides
agreed to “disengage”
following a meeting at
the level of local com-
manders.
There were reports
of multiple transgres-
sions by Chinese troops
in Eastern Ladakh re-
gion in the last one
week. However, there is
no official confirmation
or reaction to it. —ANI
Come Aug,...
the Civil Aviation Min-
istry. Other airlines did
not respond to PTI when
asked about this matter.
“I am fully hopeful
that before August or
September, we will try
to start a good percent-
age of international
civil aviation opera-
tions, if not complete
international opera-
tions,” he said.
“We must have a
more ambitious goal
(regarding interna-
tional flights). Why not
start them by mid-June
or June-end or in July,”
he added.
The minister said if
some passengers do not
have smartphones, it is
not as if they will not be
allowed to travel for
they do not have Aarog-
ya Setu app. —ANI
FROM PG 1
Katra: Shri Mata
Vaishno Devi shrine
board (SMVDSB) Katra
has been providing
sehri and iftari to over
500 Muslims quaran-
tined at Aashirwad
Bhawan and other
quarantined center
across Katra during the
holy month of Ramzan.
CEO of SMVDSB—
Ramesh Kumar said:
“In the month of
Ramzan, the Board has
been working overnight
to provide sehri and if-
tari to our Muslim and
other meal to the differ-
ent people quarantined
across Katra town,
since March 10, 2020.”
“Those brought to
Aashirwad Bhawan are
mostly labourers from
different parts of the
country, who are fasting
during the month of
Ramzan. So, we decided
to provide them sehri
and iftari every day,”
said the CEO.” —ANI
VaishnoDevishrineservesIftari
to quarantined Muslims
Members of Shrine Board are providing iftari to 500 Muslims.
New Delhi: A senior
doctor at Delhi’s AIIMS-
died of Corona. Dr Ji-
tendra Nath Pande, 78,
was the director and
professor of the Pulmo-
nology department at
the premier hospital,
which has been treating
coronavirus patients
for weeks. Dr Sangita
Reddy, a senior Delhi
doctor, confirmed Dr
Pande’s death “Deeply
saddened to hear that
COVID-19 claimed its
most illustrious victim,
Dr JN Pande, Director
and Professor of Pul-
monology, AIIMS, My
Condolences to his fam-
ily,” she tweeted. —ANI
New Delhi: Delhi HC
has suggested that the
Death Audit Committee
and Delhi government
should publish the data
supplied by the govern-
ment and private hospi-
tals in the national
capital only after prop-
er analysis.
A division bench of
CJ DN Patel & Justice
Prateek Jalan also sug-
gested that the data
should be maintained
properly. —ANI
AIIMS HOD dies
of COVID-19
Publish data from hosps
after proper analysis:HC
Migrants loot water bottles while on way to their native place at DDU Railway Station in Chandauli.
MAYAWATI SPEAK
Delhi violence: SIT
prepares charge-sheet
New Delhi: The spe-
cial investigation
team (SIT) of Delhi
Police, probing the
violence that erupted
in northeast Delhi in
February this year,
has prepared a
charge-sheet in the
matter and is likely
to submit it before a
court soon.
The charge-sheet
is being looked over
by a senior police of-
ficial and will be
submitted before a
court in the last
week of May or the
first week of June.
Over 700 FIRs have
been lodged & SIT
has arrested & de-
tained more than
2,500 people, includ-
ing the suspended
AAP councillor
Tahir Hussain in
cases pertaining to
violence. —ANI
TALKING POINTJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020
07www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
HOW TO SOCIALISE SAFELY AS
CORONAVIRUS RESTRICTIONS EASE
Y
ou can al-
most hear
the collec-
tive sigh of
relief as coronavi-
rus restrictions are
eased across Aus-
tralia.
But as we emerge
from our bunkers
and dust off our so-
cial skills, we must
think about how to
navigate this transi-
tion safely.
The winding back
of restrictions does
not mean the pan-
demic is over, al-
though it is a recog-
nition of how well
we have done to con-
trol the spread of
COVID-19 in Aus-
tralia. There is still
a long way to go,
and it’s everyone’s
responsibility to
limit the chances of
the coronavirus
spreading.
So what should a
social gathering look
like now we’re al-
lowed to get togeth-
er? Here are answers
to some common
questions.
The winding back of
restrictions does not mean
the pandemic is over,
although it is a recognition
of how well we have done to
control the spread of
COVID-19. There is still a
long way to go, and it’s
everyone’s responsibility to
limit the chances of the
coronavirus spreading
HOW BIG SHOULD MY GATHERING BE?
At the time of writing,
you can have five
visitors in your home and
gatherings of up to ten
outdoors in Queensland,
New South Wales and
Victoria. In Tasmania you
can only have two visitors
to your home; in the ACT,
South Australia and the
Northern Territory you
can have ten, while in
Western Australia you can
have 20.
Whatever the restric-
tions in your state or terri-
tory, it’s important not to
crowd too close together.
You need to use common
sense in deciding how
many people to invite.
DO WE STILL NEED
TO SOCIALLY
DISTANCE & WASH
HANDS REGULARLY?
We should carry on
doing the things
that have so far proved
successful in curbing the
coronavirus.
This includes stay-
ing at least 1.5 metres
from other people, and
being vigilant about
hand hygiene. Make sure
you have plenty of hand
sanitiser available if you
are hosting or attending
a social gathering, so you
can disinfect your hands
regularly without having
to go to the bathroom
repeatedly.
SHOULD I BRING MY OWN CUTLERY TO A DINNER PARTY?
Assuming you trust the
general hygiene stand-
ards of your friends (which
I sincerely hope you do),
this is not necessary.
Cutlery should be washed
properly with detergent in
hot water and handled only
with freshly washed hands.
Cutlery is no different to
any other food surface
such as crockery, glass-
ware or chopping boards –
just make sure it’s as clean
as possible.
CAN WE SHARE FOOD?
Although there is no
evidence coronavi-
rus is spread through
food, there is still a risk
of cross-contamination
while eating food from a
shared plate. So this is
probably not a sensible
thing to do right now.
While it might feel
less sociable, avoiding
shared grazing plates is
a simple tactic to limit
the risk of virus trans-
mission. It might even
stop your friend scoffing
all the dip.
Similarly, avoid the
temptation to clink
glasses with your friends.
It’s only a small risk but
we should take every
opportunity to reduce the
virus’s chances.
SHOULD I WEAR
A MASK?
Amask is not es-
sential for social
gatherings, assum-
ing you maintain a
safe distance and
wash your hands
regularly. Having
said that, a mask can
give people some
extra reassurance so
they can relax a bit
more.
That’s assum-
ing it is worn (and
taken off) correctly,
and that people
understand a mask
does not guarantee
protection from
infection. There is no
harm in wearing one,
but remember to be
extra friendly as your
friends can’t see
your smile!
I DON’T FEEL 100% – SHOULD I TAKE A RAINCHECK?
It is important to factor
in your personal health
and risk factors in deter-
mining how you navigate
your newly reinstated
freedoms. For example,
a 75-year-old with a pre-
existing health condition,
such as a heart condition
or asthma, should still be
very careful about limit-
ing their contact with
others, as the implica-
tions of getting sick are
very serious.
You should also
consider your respon-
sibility to other people.
A 25-year-old who feels
slightly unwell should
err on the side of caution
and not socialise, to
protect others.
Despite the lockdown
lifting, we still need to
take responsibility for
our own health and also
be considerate about the
health of others. That
way we can all start to
enjoy one of the most
rewarding aspects of
humanity: being sociable.
HOW SHOULD WE GREET EACH OTHER?
The same rules about physical contact still apply,
so we should not be hugging for now. We could
adopt some of the new ways of greeting, such as
the elbow bump or the foot shake. Or just stick to
saying hello for the moment.
SOURCE: THE CONVERSATION CONCEPT: DIVYA HEMNANI DESIGN: ABHISHEK SHARMA
INVISIBLE HAND
BEHIND YOGI-
PRIYANKA
IMPASSE
Realising the com-
plexityandhumani-
tarian aspect of the jour-
neyof themigrantwork-
ers back home, the issue
is being echoed from
very quarter. Congress
and Priyanka Gandhi
also started raising the
issue prominently. Pri-
yanka asked permission
for 1000 buses from the
UP govt for taking the
migrantworkerstotheir
nativeplaces.Atthefirst
sight, UP CM didn’t find
anything political in the
proposal and he took the
tweet by Priyanka Gan-
dhi casually. It is here
that a senior bureaucrat
intervened in the matter
who was miffed with UP
Congressman Gaurav
Pandhi for raising ques-
tion on his wife, a promi-
nent folk singer, being a
permanent feature in
every big govt function
through a tweet. Pandhi
had hinted that the sing-
er wife got the assign-
mentsduetoherrelation
with the senior bureau-
crat.Sourcessaythatthe
senior bureaucrat re-
vealed his heart burn to
CM Yogi. CM asked him
to take necessary action
on the bus matter. After
getting CM’s nod, the
senior bureaucrat asked
Congress to send all 1000
buses to Lucknow by 10
pmthesamenightwhere
their fitness was to be
checked. Congress sug-
gested that since the
buses were supposed to
enterUPfromNoidabor-
der, so even the fitness
tests should also be done
at Noida. The senior bu-
reaucrat refused this
and on the contrary reg-
isteredacaseagainstUP
Congress chief Ajay Ku-
mar Lallu sighting that
approx150twoandthree
wheelers registration
numbers were found in
thelistof 1000busessub-
mitted by Congress,
which he regarded in-
fringement of lockdown
and fraud on part of
Congress.
WHO GAVE BJP
THE X-RAY EYES?
Who gave this wis-
dom to UP BJP
leaders that there could
be any discrepancy in
the list of buses submit-
ted by Cong for helping
the migrants? When
Cong gave this list to UP
BJP govt, they had no
inkling regarding any
probable discrepancy in
list. Sources say that this
happened due to inside
information given by a
senior Cong leader. This
leader has said to have
conveyed UP BJP govt
that since required num-
ber of buses could not be
arranged, so there has to
be something wrong. If
sourcesaretobebelieved
thentherewasacommu-
nicationgapbetweenRa-
jasthan CM Ashok Ge-
hlot, Dy CM Sachin Pilot
and Priyanka Gandhi’s
secretary Sandeep Sin-
gh.Ortheplanwasdelib-
erately sabotaged? Pri-
yankaGandhishouldget
it inquired as it was her
name which took a beat-
ing in the whole episode.
WHERE DID
PRIYANKA GANDHI
GO WRONG?
Senior Congress lead-
ers believe that Pri-
yanka Gandhi should
have directly talked to
UP CM Yogi for the re-
turnof migrantworkers
rather than tweeting the
offer. It was Priyanka
Gandhi’s secretary
Sandeep Singh who was
communicating with
them. Sandeep has JNU
background where he
didCPIpolitics.Sandeep
was using his own letter-
head to write to UP govt
so the replies too came
fromSDMandRTOlevel
officers.UPstyleof func-
tioning can be very well
understood from an old
incident. It relates to the
time when Mulayam
Singh was UP CM with
Congress supporting it.
The then UP Congress
president ND Tiwari ha-
bitually use to threaten
Mulayam govt of taking
back its support. When
Mulayam was asked as
to why didn’t he respond
to Tiwari’s threats, Mu-
layam said since ND Ti-
wari was Congress state
chief so he better be re-
plied by the state chief
of his party, Ramcharan
Das, and not him. Was
the same UP tradition
followed in case of Sand-
eep Singh too? Priyanka
Gandhi better under-
stand this.
MIRACULOUS
AYURVEDIC
SOLUTION
While the country
wasfacingunprec-
edented corona crisis,
everyone was missing
Baba Ramdev. The prob-
lemwithBabaRamdevis
that now he is more of a
Business Guru than a
YogaGuru.Heallof sud-
den incarnated with his
new business plan. This
time it was in MP where
CM Shivaraj Singh
Chouhan, health minis-
terNarottamMishraand
all senior medical offic-
ers of the state were pre-
sent for VC with Baba.
Baba started with prais-
ing CM for his efforts to
contain corona against
the ground reality in MP
which in fact is compet-
ing with Maharashtra in
terms of the infection.
Most clean city Indore
and capital Bhopal have
maderecordsinregister-
ing single day positive
cases. Baba then came to
hisbusinessplanandan-
nounced that Patanjali
has come up with a Kad-
ha ‘Trikoot’ which will
boosttheimmunity.Now
Shivraj govt seems to be
determined to make the
miraculous ayurvedic
solution for 2 crore peo-
ple in MP.
MAMATA-YECHURY
SHARE SAME
STAGE
All non BJP parties
are coming on same
page to fight corona cri-
sis. A virtual meeting
was held in which most
opposition party leaders
and CMs participated
and dwelled on building
acommonagendawhich
they would repeatedly
raise in front of central
govt. ‘Common Agenda’
theory was out forward
by WB CM Mamata Ba-
nerjee. But since PM
Modi not only did an
aerial survey of WB due
to Amphan cyclone, but
also gave a Rs 1000 crore
package for the state,
Mamta didn’t target PM
Modi but substituted it
with Centre. She said
Centre is not respecting
the federal structure of
thecountrysoallopposi-
tion parties should col-
lectively raise common
agenda. Congress tar-
geted Modi govt of mis-
handling migrant crisis.
CPM leader Sitaram
Yechury raised the issue
of free grains & food and
MSP purchase. What
surprisedeverybodywas
that both Yechury and
Mamata not only shared
theplatformbutalsoline
of action. SP and BSP,
often targeted as B team
of BJP, kept a safe dis-
tance from this exercise.
The author is a
journalist and political
commentator and views
expressed are his
personal
FIRST INDIA SUNDAY SPECIAL
Mamata Banerjee Shivraj Singh ChouhanYogi Adityanath
BY TRIDIB RAMAN
Priyanka Gandhi
There is always something to be
thankful for. In a day we always
learn something, if not a lot at
least a little. Be thankful for the learning
and the success.
—Jagdeesh Chandra, CEO & Editor, First India
JAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
08
2NDFRONTPOSTAL REG NO. JPC/010/2019-21
Laxman Raghav
Churu: it was supposed
tobejustanotherdayfor
the Rajasthan police,
however Saturday
brought with it a grim
incident, one which the
men in Khakhi will not
forget for a long time.
The unfortunate inci-
dent shook the admin-
istration and common
men alike when sta-
tion house officer
(SHO) of Rajgarh po-
lice station Vishnu
Dutt Bishnoi commit-
ted suicide at his gov-
ernment quarter on
Saturday around 11
am. CM Ashok Gehlot
took cognizance of the
incident immediately
and asked DGP Bhu-
pendra Singh to give
him the status report
and to get the whole
matter investigated
from an independent
and competent au-
thority. CM Gehlot paid
his respects to late Bish-
noi by remembering his
exemplary services.
DGP ordered CID
crime branch to take up
the inquiry of the case
after assigning SP Vikas
Sharma the investiga-
tor. DGP Singh said
that the investigation
has been handed over
to senior officers of
the crime branch and
it would be an insult
to the departed officer
to cast aspersions on
the process. SP Vikas
Sharma left for Raj-
garh in the afternoon
while ADG (Crime)
BL Soni is constantly
monitoring the situa-
tion. A shocked Churu
SP Tejaswini Gautam
was among the first sen-
ior police officers to
reach Rajgarh after the
incident. IGP Jose Mo-
han reached Rajgarh
and confirmed that the
suicide note written by
Late SHO mentioned
some pressure but
didn’t blame anybody.
Earlier, as the news of
the SHO Bishnoi started
doing rounds, shocked
residents started flock-
ing at the police station.
Politicians across party
lines started demanding
independent probe in
the unbelievable suicide
of the daredevil officer.
MLAs Krishna Punia,
Bihari Bishnoi and ex
MLA Manoj Nyangali
expressed disbelief and
demanded an enquiry.
Deputy LoP Rajendra
RathorealsoreachedRa-
jgarh in the evening and
wenttothepolicestation
straight away. He de-
manded CBI inquiry,
government job for de-
pendent and a compen-
sationof Rs5croretothe
family. With emotions
at a high after the
SHO’s death, Deputy
LoP Rathore and Dep-
uty SP Rampratap en-
tered in a verbal spat
late in the night in the
Rajgarh police station
premisesafterRathore
and a horde of men en-
quired to hand over
the dead body to the
people of Rajgarh. The
DySPdeniedthatunless
the family says they
wont be able to do so,
however on this the duo
started quarrelling and
this occurred right in
front of the SP and IG.
After both the men
raised their voices, the
senior cops rushed in
and took the DSP to one
side to subdue the heat.
MP Rahul Kaswan,
who was in Delhi, also
reached the spot in
the evening and al-
leged that senior po-
lice officers of the dis-
trict weren’t at ease
with the style of func-
tioning of the honest
SHO. The family was
particularly upset with
the local police to keep
the body of Bishnoi
hanging, till they ar-
rived. They also refused
the postmortem of the
body. The family has de-
manded a judicial in-
quiry, a government job
for a close family mem-
ber and compensation
through Retd Addl SP
Subhash Vishnoi, uncle
of the Late SHO.
A curious twist to the
whole matter came to
light when Advocate
Govardhan Singh made
his WhatsApp chat with
the late SHO public. Ac-
cording to the chat, late
Vishnu Dutt was deeply
disturbed with dirty
politicsgoingonaround
him. Advocate Govard-
han Singh called late
Bishnoi an honest and
admirable officer and
demanded CBI probe.
It is noteworthy that
late Vishnu Dutt was en-
quiring about a firing
incident related to the
liquor mafia which hap-
pened a day ago. People
who know this say that
liquor mafia and its Har-
yana connection is the
root cause of most law
and order problems in
Churu. Now only an in-
dependent inquiry will
reveal what brought the
agile and competent of-
ficer to such a mental
state that he took the ex-
treme step of commit-
ting suicide and not opt
for a VRS which he had
mentioned in his suicide
note. Former CM
Vasundhara Raje,
BJP state chief Satish
Punia and Jaipur ru-
ral MP Rajyavardhan
Singh Rathore too ex-
pressed condolences.
Rajgarh SHO commits suicide, WhatsApp chat shows was under stress
To bolster health infra, CM allots
land for super speciality hospital
A POWERFUL BUT A
SILENT SPECTATOR!
First India Bureau
Barmer: Chief Minis-
ter Ashok Gehlot has
sanctioned 100 beegha
land for a super speci-
ality hospital in Bar-
mer which is being
seen as a big step in
strengthening health
infrastructure in the
border districts of the
state. Barmer MLA Me-
varan Jain also has con-
tribution in the land al-
lotment as he was the
one to demand for a su-
per speciality hospital
from CM Gehlot when
he inaugurated medical
college in Barmer.
CM Gehlot had prom-
ised the people the same
during his address. Ge-
hlot went a notch higher
when he allotted this
land free of cost. MLA
Mevaram Jain has ex-
pressed his gratitude
to the CM, UDH Min-
ister Shanti Dhariwal
and Revenue Minister
Harish Choudhary for
taking such big step.
It is noteworthy that
border districts like
Barmer, Jaisalmer and
Sri Ganganagar are de-
prived of such facilities.
Meanwhile, on Sat-
urday, CM Gehlot con-
demned the arrest of
Uttar Pradesh Con-
gress chief Ajay Lallu
for allegedly flouting
lockdown rules.
CM Gehlot also urged
PM Narendra Modi and
Home Minister Amit
Shah to intervene in the
matter. Taking to Twit-
ter, he said, “Arrest of
UP Congress chief Mr
Ajay Lallu for no fault
of his is highly con-
demnable. Raising a
voice for the common
people is no crime. If all
political parties in pow-
er start doing this it will
set a bad precedent.”
During the day, CM
Gehlot also directed
respective district
collectors of Ra-
jasthan to ensure ad-
equate arrangement
for well-maintained
quarantine centres as
five airports -- Jaipur,
Jodhpur, Jaisalmer,
Bikaner, and Udaipur,
are expected to re-
ceive passengers from
different parts of the
world. Subodh Agarw-
al, ACS Industries &
MSME and Head, State
Level Committee for In-
terstate Migration said,
“Rajasthan Govern-
ment had undertaken
all necessary steps to
ensure smooth and con-
venient screening, test-
ing and exit movement
for people. All travellers
were sent to the institu-
tional quarantine for 14
days. All of them were
given masks, sanitiser,
and snacks with a wel-
come note by key offi-
cials at the Jaipur air-
port.” The Rajasthan
government has espe-
cially spoken to Delhi
and Gujarat Govern-
ments to ensure that
proper arrangements
are made, in terms of
screening, testing, and
maintenance of quar-
antine centres for Ra-
jasthani migrants com-
ing back to their respec-
tive state’s airports.
Anita Hada
New Delhi: During
Congress President
Sonia Gandhi’s VC
with top opposition
leaders of the coun-
try on Corona crisis
on Friday, every top
opposition leader
was curiously watch-
ing the role of a si-
lent spectator and
Sonia’s principal
aide, Ahmed Patel,
who is a familiar
face among almost
all opposition giants
because of his key
role in forging politi-
cal and pre-poll alli-
ances during the last
thirty years, on be-
half of the party
high command. Ac-
cording to sources,
Ahmed Bhai carefully
listened to the views of
his mentor, the lady
Congress President
Mrs Gandhi and a few
other opposition lead-
ers, also made some
brief notes but appar-
ently kept quiet.
In fact one should
learn the art of being
a ‘silent performer’
from Ahmed Bhai.
Even during a recent
Congress buses UP
payment crisis, as the
party treasurer, Patel
ensured the timely
payment of all Pri-
yanka sponsored bus-
es from AICC coffers
and no financial re-
sponsibility was left
either for the Chief
Minister or to the
PCC Chief at Jaipur.
Therefore, someone
has rightly said that
Ahmed Bhai is the
man of all seasons.
Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot Ahmed Patel
Deceased SHO Vishnu Dutt Bishnoi
ed is accepted as
the colour of life
not just because of
the life-giving red
blood which flows
through our veins
and arteries but
also because no other colour is
as much a symbol of life, positiv-
ity, warmth, energy, love and
passion, as red is. Red is associ-
ated with our most physical
needs and our will to survive.
It exudes strong and power-
ful energy.
Many of us turn to wear
red when we need confi-
dence and I personally feel it
really enhances the natural
beauty of women which is prob-
ably why it is the traditional col-
our for the bride and for festive
occasions. Another reason
could be that red awakens
our physical life force and
stimulates deeper and
intimate passions.
Now, you know why
Valentine’s day is
dominated by red.
Red represents both,
the cupid and the
devil. Negatively, it is
also an expression
of anger. Too much
red in the sur-
roundings can
lead to agitation
and irritation.
Red is a highly
visible colour
that is able to draw attention
quickly and get people to make de-
cisionsquicklywhichisfiretrucks
are usually painted red. Flashing
red lights mean danger or emer-
gency, while stop signs and stop
lights use the colour red to alert
drivers about the dangers of the
intersection. Red represents pow-
er and courage. Red’s association
with courage and bravery makes
it a colour that is used often in na-
tional flags, on shields, and in
achievement patches.
Red is used in phrases which
all have different connotations
and meanings like saying “in the
red” means losing money while
the term “red herring” is used
when referencing something
that is deceiving. We all have
used the phrase “paint the town
red” which is associated with
celebration while “red-eye” is as-
sociated with overnight airline
flights. The oft used “red carpet
treatment” refers to making
someone feel special and pam-
pered as if they are a VIP or high
profile person.
CITY FIRST DELVES INTO THE PASSIONATE WORLD OF THE PEOPLE WHO LOVE
THE COLOUR RED AND DECODES THE SIGNIFICANCE OF RED!
JAIPUR, SUNDAY
MAY 24, 2020
www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia
facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia 09
PAINT ME RED!
RISHEE MIGLANI
cityfirst@firstindia.co.in
R
10
ETCJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia
FACEOFTHEDAY
SONAXI CHANANA, Model
YOUR
DAYHoroscope by
Saurabbh Sachdeva
LEO
JULY 24 - AUGUST 23
You will feel energetic,
reinvigorated and will adopt
a new fitness regime. Being
lazy or tired is a thing of
past. Adjust yourself in a new set up.
Do not leave any stone unturned in
working hard academically. Any
negligence in studies may lead to
situation getting out of hands.
LIBRA
SEPT 24 - OCTOBER 22
All those who matters will
appreciate your initiative to
complete all the given work
on or before time. You will
receive a financial boost may be
because of change of job or getting
money back from the borrower. Keep
following a healthy diet to remain in
good shape.
ARIES
MAR 21 - APR 20
You will make some
progress in new direction.
Work hard to overcome
any weakness and
shortcomings for getting good
academic results. You may move to a
new residence. Government
employees will invest for retirement.
Do not get emotional.
SAGITTARIUS
NOV 23 - DEC 22
Your expectation are very
high today from the
company of someone you
love. Your academic
performance will improve like anything.
Taking care of an elderly, loving them
and giving them time will not only
bring you recognition but will also
bring you blessings.
GEMINI
MAY 21 - JUNE 21
Academically stay alert,
don’t fall for any negative
suggestions given by your
competitor. Money is no
constraint in getting successful in
your endeavours. Set a goal and
move in the direction of achieving it.
Read property papers with extra
caution before making any deal.
AQUARIUS
JAN 21 - FEB 19
Today prioritize your health.
Take a break or slow down
on professional front or else
your health will start
suffering. Today is also the best day for
you as you would get the opportunity
to interact with important people. Now
is the time to prove your metal in the
field that you have chosen.
TAURUS
APR 21 - MAY 20
Take preventive measures
for your health will prove
beneficial. Enjoy quality
time with you friends and
family and bury all the resentments
of the past . Todays is your day for
romance. Stars are supporting you,
go ahead be confident about your
emotions and express yourself.
CAPRICORN
DEC 23 - JAN 20
Love will keep you
satisfied. Having correct
attitude is must if you want
to fit in the crowd. To reach
your desired goal, focus on the
teamwork and good management
skills. Avoid being strong headed in
sensitive matters. Please take care of
your health.
VIRGO
AUG 24 - SEP 23
Smile because to your
delight, you will start doing
stuff or something that you
had to discontinue doing in
the past. Prepare well and in
advance if you want to move
mountains in a new and a totally
different field of work. Be careful on
what you spend and how you spend.
CANCER
JUNE 22 - JULY 23
On professional front come
up with new ideas. Invest
your time in making things
work that have been given
up by your co workers, as this will
help you in getting noticed. Don’t
indulge in outspreading rumours as
it may backfire also simply you will
gain nothing out of it.
PISCES
FEB20 - MARCH 20
Please take responsibility
for your actions. Your
ambitions are on hault
because of your will and
once you revive life will be awesome.
Your plan for business expansion
may not go as smoothly as planned
by you because of current situations
but things will settle.
SCORPIO
OCT 23 - NOVEMBER 22
Prove your point by using
facts and figures and a
little more effort from your
end will surprise everyone.
You will feel confident and strong.
Today is your day, professionally you
will be very efficient at workplace.
You will feel secure in terms of
money.
hen Buddhism
spread beyond India,
the first nation in
which it took roots
wasSriLanka.Kandy
is a large picturesque
city in central Sri
Lanka. Covered with lush
green rainforest and sur-
roundedbymountainsIfound
the city extremely beautiful
and mesmerizing. The city is
embraced with many tea plan-
tations in and around like
DAMRO tea estate, etc. It is
famed for sacred Buddhist
sites, including the Temple of
the Sacred Buddha Tooth Rel-
ic. The Buddhist shrine is lo-
cally known as the Sri Dalada
Maligawa. The temple is
spread along the Kandy lake
and located in the royal palace
complex of the former King-
dom of Kandy. It was declared
a world heritage site by UNE-
SCO in 1988.
I got the wonderful opportu-
nity to visit the temple. As I
entered inside the hall of the
main shrine was captivated to
see the old wooden architec-
ture. From the hall two sepa-
ratestaircaseswereultimately
going upstairs (from left and
right directions) where Bud-
dha’s original left upper ca-
ninetoothhasbeenpreserved.
The sacred tooth is conserved
in the inner chamber of the
upper floor of two-storied Sri
Dalada Maligawa temple. The
temple is designed in tradi-
tional style with a decoration
of uniquelybuilt128lotusgold
flowers on the roof. Two large
elephant tusks are placed in
the front of the shrine. Lotus
flower has great significance
inKandy.WhenIwalkedatthe
upper floor people were offer-
inglotusflowersinfrontof the
sacred tooth chamber to fulfill
their wishes.
Journeyof Buddha’ssacred
tooth from India to Kandy, Sri
Lanka- After the parinirvana
of Gautam Buddha, the body
of BuddhawascrematedatUt-
tar Pradesh’s Khushinagar
district in India. Buddha’s left
canine tooth was retrieved
from the funeral by his disci-
ple, Khema. Khema then gave
the tooth to the Kingdom of
Kalinga’s King Brahmadatte.
It became a royal possession
and was kept at Dantapuri in
Odhisha. Thenceforth, the
Tooth relic of the Kalinga be-
came an object of great ven-
eration by generations of Ka-
linga kings. Consequently
several attempts were made to
destroy the Relic by the fanati-
cal rulers. Yet the Tooth relic
was miraculously saved every
time. In the 4th Century AD
thelastIndianrulertopossess
the Tooth relic was Guhasiva
of Kalinga. Guhasiva in order
topreventitspossessionbyhis
enemies who made war sent
thetoothtoSriLankathrough
his daughter Princess He-
mamali and her husband,
Prince Dantha. Princess He-
mamalicarriedGautamaBud-
dha’s tooth relic hidden in her
hair to Sri Lanka. That time
KingKirtiSriMegavannawas
therulerof SriLankaandasa
piousBuddhisthereceivedthe
sacred Tooth Relic with great
veneration. He built a beauti-
fulpalacewithintheRoyalPal-
ace Complex itself and en-
shrined the Relic in it. As time
went on, the land was threat-
ened with foreign invasions,
and the seat of the kingdom
shiftedfromAnuradhapurato
Polonnaruwaandthereafterto
Dambadeniyaandothercities.
With every change of capital,
a new palace was built to en-
shrinetheRelic.Finally,itwas
broughttoKandywhereitisat
present, in the Sri Dalada Ma-
ligawa temple.
AN UNHEARD JOURNEY OF GAUTAM BUDDHA’S SACRED TOOTH RELIC FROM INDIA TO SRI LANKA
AN UNTOLD TALE BUDDHA TOOTH TEMPLE
ANUBHA JAIN
cityfirst@firstindia.co.in
W
T
he tooth temple was refurbished again as
it was attacked by the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE), very recently in 1998.
In early 1998, Sri Lanka was ready to celebrate
its 50th independence anniversary from Great
Britain. Charles, Prince of Wales with a number
of foreign dignitaries were scheduled to arrive
in the following days. Kandy city was chosen as
the host for such important event on February
4th. On 25th January 1998, the LTTE exploded
a massive truck bomb inside the Temple of
the Tooth premises. The attack caused severe
damage to the temple; especially to its roof and
the facade. But neither its inner chambers nor the
tooth relic were harmed. Complete restoration
took more than one and a half years to complete.
Earlier also the temple sustained damage from
bombing in 1989 but was fully restored that time
also. All damaged sculptures were made new,
and damaged paintings on lime plaster were
reassembled and reintegrated with the existing
pieces.
After every 5 years through a grand procession
of ten-days ‘Esala Perahera’ the replica of the
tooth is brought out for public viewing. With
parades of dancers and drummers the procession
is celebrated like a festival to pay homage to the
Sacred Tooth. In the procession, a royal male
elephant carries the great relic of Sacred Tooth.
Since 1990, a casket is carried instead of the relic
due to fear of robbery.
E
lephant Raja Maligawa was the sacred
casket bearer of the procession for around
50 years. On 20th August 1986 former Sri
Lankan President J.R.Javewardene declared
Raja as a national treasure, in recognition
of his valuable services to the religion and
culture of Sri Lanka. Raja died in July 1988
and his death prompted the government to
order a day of national mourning in Sri Lanka.
A postage stamp was issued in its memory on
12 December 1989. Raja’s stuffed remains are
presently kept in a special museum within the
Temple premises.
The shrine complex is surrounded by the
beautiful garden and there are various associated
buildings and structure in the temple such as the
Royal Palace, Audience Hall, and Mahamaluwa.
INSIGHTS!
INSIGHTS!
First india jaipur edition-24 may 2020
First india jaipur edition-24 may 2020

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First india jaipur edition-24 may 2020

  • 1. LIFTING SPIRITS Red balloons dotting the landscape of Myanmar’s ancient city of Bagan, a World Heritage site, look stunning and transpire us into an altogether different world. This incredible scene was captured by photographer Stefano Tomassetti while showcasing the Earth’s beauty during Coronavirus-induced lockdown, when humans have taken a backseat! IVANKA HAILS GIRL WHO CYCLED 1200 KM HOME! Bihar: Jyoti Kumari, 15, who cycled with her wounded father from Gurugram to Darbhanga covering over 1,200 km over 7 days, has proved that “where there is a will there’s a way”. Her feat has not just caught the attention of Cycling Federation of India but also of Ivanka Trump, US President’s daughter. P6 INDIA’S CASES CROSS 1.25 LAKH MARK New Delhi: India saw biggest rise in corona cases in last 24 hrs at 6,654 with the total count going up to over 1.25 lakh on Saturday. The total number of deaths due to COVID-19 has gone up to 3,720 with 137 persons succumbing to disease in the last 24 hours. P5 WEST BENGAL CALLS FOR ARMY SUPPORT Kolkata: West Bengal government has called for Army support, while NDRF and SDRF teams are already working, for the restoration of infrastructure and essential services after Cyclone Amphan wreaked havoc in the state. State Home Department said most essential services are being restored fast. P5 First India Bureau Churu: A Station House Officer (SHO) of Rajgarh police station in Rajasthan’s Churu d i s t r i c t allegedly commit- ted sui- cide, re- p o r t s stated on Saturday (May 23). News agency PTI cited an unnamed police of- ficer as saying that the body of Vishnudutt Bishnoi was found hanging inside his offi- cial accommodation. DGP Bhupendra Sin- gh expressed grief over the death of the Churu SHO saying, “Bishnoi was one of the best po- lice officers and his death has come as a big loss to the police de- partment.” According to prelimi- nary information, Bish- noi was investigating a murder case in the area till Friday night. Later, he reached his official accommodation and committed suicide. P8 Rajgarh SHO ends life, WA chat shows was in stress New Delhi: Chinese military is fast increas- ing its troops in areas around Pangong Tso lake and Galwan Valley along the Line of Actu- al Control in Ladakh, sending a clear signal that it was not ready to end its confrontation with the Indian Army anytime soon, people familiar with the situa- tion in the disputed re- gion said. The Chinese side has particularly bolstered its presence in the Gal- wan Valley, erecting around 100 tents in the last two weeks and bringing in machinery for possible construc- tion of bunkers, not- withstanding the stiff protest by Indian troops, they said. Turn on P6 China brings more troops into LadakhCorona to decide future fiscal policy action: FM New Delhi: A day after the RBI projected eco- nomic contraction in 2020-21, Finance Minis- terNirmalaSitharaman on Saturday said future fiscal policy actions to stimulate the economy will depend on how COVID-19 pandemic pans out. The govern- ment has already an- nounced a Rs 20.97 lakh croreeconomicpackage, which includes Reserve Bank’sRs8.01lakhcrore worth of liquidity meas- ures till May 17. Sitharaman said making a “realistic as- sessment” of economic growth would be diffi- cult at this point of time as there is no clarity on when the pandemic would retreat. “I’m not closing the door at all. I want to keepgettinginputsfrom industry, implement what we have an- nounced and depending on how things pan out we have to respond ac- cordingly. We are only 2-month old in this year, we have 10 months to go,” Sitharaman said in a conversation with BJP leader Nalin Kohli. The Reserve Bank on Friday had said the im- pact of COVID-19 is more severe than antici- pated and Turn on P6 ECONOMY AFTER COVID-19 Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman Come Aug, India to open up global skies Aditi Nagar New Delhi: As India re- sumes domestic flight services from May 25, as part of Centre’s gradual rebootof airtravel,plans areafoottore-startinter- national flights before August amidst the coro- navirus pandemic, said Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Saturday,threedaysafter announcing resumption of domestic flights. India will try to re- start a good percentage of international pas- senger flights, he said. The minister, while addressing a Facebook Live session, clarified again that Aarogya Setu appisnotmandatoryfor air passengers and they can instead give a self- declaration form. Puri said during the session, “I can’t put a date on it (restarting internation- al flights). But if some- body says can it be done by August or Septem- ber? My response is why notearlierdependingon what is the situation.” When asked about the minister’s announce- ment on resuming in- ternational services, Vistara said it will await instructions and guide- lines from Turn on P6 Passenger flights parked at Indira Gandhi International Airport after the government eased coronavirus lockdown with some restrictions, in New Delhi on Friday. —PHOTO BY ANI 23,000 INDIANS REPATRIATED New Delhi: Between 7 May and 21 May, around 23,000 Indians have been repatriated through flights operated by Air India and its subsidiary Air India Express under this mission. Passengers have to pay money to book a seat on any repatriation flight being operated under the Vande Bharat Mission. CORONA ALERT JAIPUR l SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 l Pages 12 l 3.00 RNI NO. RAJENG/2019/77764 l Vol 1 l Issue No. 347 32°C - 43°C OUR EDITIONS: JAIPUR & AHMEDABAD www.firstindia.co.in www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/ thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia instagram.com/thefirstindia COVID-19 UPDATE RAJASTHAN 160 DEATHS 6,742 CONFIRMED CASES INDIA 1,31,385 CONFIRMED CASES 3,868 DEATHS WORLD 3,42,396 DEATHS 53,69,388 CONFIRMED CASES ‘Corona crisis: Raj a model state in giving rations to poor & needy’ First India Bureau Jaipur. The state gov- ernment is committed to providing health fa- cilities to the people, said Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Sat- urday. He encouraged the people to take ben- efit of free consulta- tion, treatment and medicines at Janata clinics, PHCs and CHCs across the state if they have slightest health problem. Taking stock of var- ious departments through VC from CMR, CM Gehlot touched upon most crucial departments that affect the com- mon people directly. He also instructed the collectors from the bor- der districts to keep ex- tra vigil for the locusts whichareexpectedtohit in a big way this year. He asked them to strength- en the Locust Warning System to save the farm- ers from huge losses like they faced last year. Gehlot also reviewed the Food & Civil Sup- plies department at length. He said that Ra- jasthan has emerged as a model state during the corona times by provid- ing ration and food to the poor and needy. Ge- hlot said that the provi- sion under NFSA is to provide wheat at Rs2 per Kg but the state govt has decided to provide it at Rs1 per Kg to the Antyodaya, BPL and State BPL beneficiaries. He said that govern- ment has spent Rs114 crore extra on this in the last fiscal year end- ing March 31, 2020. He also praised the depart- ment for lifting the wheat from FCI every month which was every two months earlier. He also praised lifting of thrice the quantity com- pared to normal times while distributing dou- ble the normal amount in April & May. CM informed that dis- trict administrations had reached out to 3.7 crore needy and desti- tute people during lock- down with dry ration and cooked food. He also mentioned about free 5 Kg wheat distribution for 2 months for the mi- grant workers and per- sons not covered under NFSA. He stressed on the survey of such peo- ple to make data base based on which these people could Turn on P6 Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot during a VC on Saturday where DB Gupta, Niranjan Arya Kuldeep Ranka and others were present. n Gehlot also encouraged people to take benefit of free medicines scheme n Asks collectors of border districts to keep extra vigil on locust menace Vishnudutt Bishnoi
  • 2. NEWSJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 02www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia Satya Narayan Sharma Jaipur: The sister’s rela- tionship is considered to bethemostsacredandthe brother pledges to protect his sister, but a Kalyugi brother severed this sa- cred relationship. A men- tally disturbed minor girl was raped and killed by none other than her brother. The incident re- lated to Todi village near Shahpura under Mano- harpur police station. Accordingtopolice,the brother along with his friends raped his sister before killing and dump- ing her body in the forest. Additional SP Suresh Choudharyinformedthat the police have arrested all four accused. Choud- hary also told that many laborers of UP area work on brick kiln located in Todi village. On May 17, a mentally challenged minor went missing from a brick-kiln here. Her parents had filed the report of her dis- appearance. The police registered the case and started search operation. They found her clothes near drainage and her de- cayed corpse in Mishra- was forest. Policeconductedapost- mortem of the body and started questioning the relatives of the minor on the basis of mobile loca- tion and suspicion. The police started interroga- tion of girl’s parents on the basis of mobile loca- tion. Initially, the accused denied but after strict in- terrogation by the police confessed the crime. At first, the accused triedtomisleadthepolice, but they could not last long due to the strictness of the police. Eventually, the accused Zeeshan con- fessed his crime. Accused Zeeshan told that the wholefamilywasupsetby the retarded minor and that the family was trou- bled by the girl, so he along with his friends Sa- jid, Wajid, and Ahmed took her to the jungle and they gang-raped her and then killed her. To hide the incident, the accused slammed the body into the forest and came home. Police is cur- rently further investigat- ing the case. Vaishali New Delhi: Union Min- ister of State for Finance Anurag Thakur made a strong statement on Sat- urdayclaimingthatModi government has brought Economy back on track. It is notable that the Un- ion government went all out to support and aid the state governments in the fight against Corona. “Regular and consistent efforts are being made to provide employment to the migrant labourers. The death rate in India is much less as compared to other nations due to the farsightedness of BJP government and the pre- ventive measures taken,” the ‘young turk’ in Modi government said while speaking to media on Sat- urday. Thakur reiterated that Modi government en- sured funds to every class and sector. “Be it farmers, labourers or the specially abled, everyone has re- ceivedthedecidedamount in their accounts, with . 52,608 crore rupees being credited in total,” he said, further adding, “Today, India is in a much better positionoverallthaneven the so-called developed nations. People are aware and we have to stay alert against Corona till a vac- cine is developed” Thakur said that the measures taken by the government will result in lesser imports while FDI has been increased to 75% from 49%, even in defence production. Thakur said that Modi government is sensitivetowardstheneed of the migrants and en- suredspecialtrainsforthe migrants to reach home bearing 85% of the fare. —Pic for representational purpose only Vishvendra Singh with Mahant Kailash Sharma on Saturday. Anurag Thakur Brother, friends gang rape and kill mentally disabled minor ‘Govt is committed to provide best facilities to foreign investments post Covid-19’ RMSCL’s 5 lakh PPE kit tender cancelled First India Bureau Jaipur: Rajasthan Medical Services Corporation Ltd, (RMSCL) has it work- ing under the scanner again. It has nul- lified the tender for 5 lakh PPE kits with the logic that as of now there is sufficient stock. New tenders will be long term tenders for two years with specifications provided by the demand of the doctors. New tenders will have separate PPE kit specifications for Operation thea- tres, ICU and OPD. The most surpris- ing aspect is that due to competition the suppliers were ready to supply 5 lakh PPE kits at Rs 296 per kit whereas the RMCL officials have been ordering the same kits for Rs 380 per kit. This puts the ED (Procurement) under the scanner. It is noteworthy that during the co- rona crisis RMCL was ready to pur- chase PPE kits at Rs 705 through short term tenders but the complaint reached the higher officers which forced RMCL to drag its feet. Bharat Dixit Jaipur: TheongoingCov- id-19 pandemic has made an unusual impact both on our society and our economy. With the offline businesses being shut for alongtime,people,aswell as organizations, are now willing to adopt new tech- nologies like IoT, AI, Blockchain, etc. which will further completely transformthewaywelive and work. Against the backdrop, FICCI Ra- jasthan State Council vir- tually organized the 2nd edition of the Rajasthan IoT Summit on Saturday. The objective of the sum- mit was to explore the po- tentialof IoT&AIinrevo- lutionizingthebusinesses post Covid-19. Addressing the Webi- nar, Chief Guest DB Gup- ta, Chief Secretary said, Rajasthanhasledtheway to fight Corona. Our ef- forts and strategies have been applauded and adopted by other states also. During the COV- ID-19, saving lives has been our priority. The fight is still on but we need to learn to live with this along with this it is very important to put our economy back on track. Two arrested for child molestation in Bhilwara Donation to disaster mgmt will be now CSR expenditure First India Bureau Bhilwara: A shameful sentence for misleading innocent by indulging in giving greed for choco- late has emerged in Sub- hash Nagar of Bhilwara. 5 people including a child abuser made the inno- cent child a victim of their cruelty and inhu- man act. The police have arrest- ed two youths in this case which is shameful to hu- manity, while the wanted child abuser has been de- tained in the case. Two of the accused in the group are still absconding. The police have registered a case against them under the POCSO Act. First India Bureau Jaipur: The State Gov- ernment has issued a cir- cular recognizing the amount of contribution made by companies and organizations in the ac- count opened by State Disaster Management Authority for the preven- tionfromCovid-19asCor- porate Social Responsi- bility CSR expenditure. Additional CEO of SDMA and Government Secretary, Department of Disaster Management and Assistance, Mr. Sid- dharth Mahajan said that the new bank ac- count of the authority created for this is RSD- MA CSR COVID 19 and account number 39343146577. The IFSC code of the branch locat- ed at the Secretariat of SBI is SBIN0031031. ‘Modi govt has brought Economy back on track’ Met dept issues heatwave warning for various districts Naveen sharma Jaipur: Amid lockdown, the weather of Rajasthan is certainly facing scorch- ing heat. There is an alert of heat in the state for the last three days. Mean- while, the temperature is increasing. Maximum mercury re- mained 46.6 degrees on the second consecutive day in the state. Churu and Jhunjhunu recorded the highest mercury. At the same time, the mer- cury of 20 cities in the state was more than 41 degrees. At the same time, the mercury of five cities was more than 45 de- grees. The Meteorologi- cal Department has warned of a severe heat- wave in 10 districts from Sunday to May 27. WEATHER REPORT Tourism min conducts inspection at Moti Dungri Ganesh temple Naresh Sharma Jaipur: Tourism and Devasthan Minister Vish- vendra Singh visited Jaipur temples on Satur- day. The Devasthan Min- isteralsoconductedasur- prise inspection at the fa- mous Moti Dungri Ganesh temple in Jaipur and took stock of the ar- rangementsof thetemple. He appeared satisfied with the arrangements made in the temple and said, “I have learned a lot from the arrangements here and this should be followed in other temples as well”. Singh also discussed with Mahant Kailash Sharma of Moti Dungri GaneshTempleonthisoc- casion. DB Gupta SWARM OF LOCUST CROSS BORDER, REACH STATE CAPITAL! A worried farmer walks past swarm of locust that have attacked his crops in a village in Dausa at 3 pm on Saturday. So far, locusts have been reported from more than half of Rajasthan, covering 16 out of 33 districts. It is a major cause of concern for the state amidst the current Coronavirus crisis. —PHOTO BY SUNIL SHARMA Bharatiya Janata Party state president Satish Poonia has attacked the state government over the locust attack in Rajasthan. He argued that, in May last year, the International Agriculture Organisation and GoI’s locust warning organisation had warned of locust attack, but the state government did not take any action on it and due to government’s apathy there was loss of crop worth Rs800 crores in 6 districts. This year too, IAO warned of double the magnitude of the attack, and in May this year itself, the locust reached Sikar, Jaipur, Dausa, far ahead from the border districts. State should immediately form a task force and deploy staff with spray and chemicals, Poonia said. Rajendra Chhabra The Animal Husbandry department is in dire straits these days as there is no Head of the Department (HOD) for last four months. The seat of the post of Director is lying vacant. Just to complete the formalities the additional charge of the post of Director has been given to the Deputy Secretary of the department in the secretariat. Junior RAS Virendra Meena has his hands full due to his own work load so he hardly finds time for this additional charge, Further the post of Director (Animal Husbandry) is purely a technical post and in no way can be handled by a non-technical person like Deputy Secretary. What is most worrying is that Animal Husbandry is not a small department as it has the overall responsibility of the health and medication of the animals/ cattle in the state. There are around 10000 doctors and compounders serving in the department. To elucidate the point just know that there are 2500 veterinary hospitals with as many doctors in the state. Therefore it makes no sense that such a department doesn’t have a HOD for last four months. It is sheer good luck and destiny of the department that IAS Rajesh Sharma is the Secretary of the department sitting in the secretariat. Apart from being an IAS he also holds a graduate degree in veterinary sciences. Further he has held the charge of the post of Director of the department from 2007 to 2011. He has complete know how and experience of handling the affairs of the HOD of the department. Rajesh Sharma has been delegating the duties of the Director despite being the Secretary of the department. If one concludes that it is Rajesh Sharma due to whom the department is functioning somehow, then it won’t be an exaggeration. A DEPT RESPONSIBLE FOR HEALTH OF LIVESTOCK IS HEADLESS OFF THE RECORD
  • 3. RAJASTHANJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 03www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia l Jaipur: Medical teachers-residents caqme out on the road boycotting work over medical teach- ers raising their retirement age. There is a big discussion about increasing re- tirement age from 65 to 70 years. Medical Teachers Association of Rajasthan said, if the government issued such orders, then the Residents- medical teachers will boycott work across the state. l Jaipur: Regular courts of Jaipur District Court area will not open from May 26. District and Sessions Judge of Jaipur District Court took back the orders. The orders were issued to open the courts regarding administrative work arrangements. Court employees were also issued orders to ensure attendance. The new order said - “case will only be heard from 18 to 31 May” l Ajmer: A Bear attacked a forest department team in Ajmer. Sudeep Kaur, Ajmer in-charge of the department, was injured in the attack. Action was being taken for the bear’s rescue. l Jaipur: BJP MP Diya Kumari met En- ergy Minister BD Kal- la, at his residence. She demanded for waiver of 3 months electricity bill, in this regard a memoran- dum was submitted to BD Kalla. Energy Minister BD Kalla said- “Demand from the Center as well”. Kalla has already spoken to the Center on this issue. l Jaipur: SGST took action against pan masala smuggling under onion bags. The goods were being transported by truck without paying bills, GST. Important information was given by trusted sources, stating Pan masala were being taken away in a truck. The action was taken on the direction of Principal Commis- sioner (State Tax) Pri- tam B Yashwant. And the action was taken by SGST’s Rajasthan AE-1 officials. Truck was seized along with goods and was then transported to the regional office. BRIEF in ‘MIGRANTSWELLLOOKEDAFTER, SHOULDFOLLOWPROTOCOLS’ 7 die, 248 new cases found, including 12 from central jail First India Bureau Jaipur: Saturday wit- nessed, 7 deaths, 248 new positive cases. 1 death in Chittorgarh, 2 in Jaipur, Kota and Na- gaur each. Most of the 40 patients came from Nagaur. 6 in Ajmer, 5 in Alwar, 1 in Banswara, 6 in Barmer. 1 in Bharat- pur, 12 in Bhilwara, 3 in Bikaner, 1 in Chittor- garh. 4 in Churu, 2 in Dholpur, 12 in Dungar- pur, 22 in Jaipur, 13 in Jalore. 7 in Jhalawar, 8 in Jhunjhunu, 26 in Jodhpur, 14 in Kota, 23 in Pali. 19 in Rajsa- mand, 2 in Sikar, 4 in Sirohi, 3 in Tonk, 14 pa- tients found positive in Udaipur. Death toll reached 160 in state, and there 6742 patients so far. 1478 of them are migrants. In Jaipur Two pa- tients died, 22 new pos- itives surfaced. 12 Co- rona positive cases identified in Central Jail. Apart from this, 3 in Shastri Nagar, 1 in Brahmapuri, 1 in Ha- numan Nagar, 1 in Raj- ni Vihar Hirapura, 1 in Nehru Bazaar, 1 in Johri Bazaar, 1 in Sita- pura, and 1 patient found in Amer. Till Saturday, the to- tal samples received in the state are 303935, and out of which 6742 is the total number of cumulative positive cases of Corona. The total sample which turned out negative in the state are 292384. There are 4809 samples that are under process. Vikas Sharma Jaipur: Health Minis- ter Dr Raghu Sharma said that every migrant Rajasthani and work- ers coming from out- side, along with medi- cal checkup, are being counseled by psychia- trists in their them ex- cellent quarantine fa- cility so that they do not feel any stress. He said that about 10 lakh migrant Rajastha- ni and workers have come to the state in dif- ferent districts of the state. Out of these, about 7.25 lakh people have been placed in home quarantine while about 34 thousand peo- ple have been kept in 10 thousand institutional quarantine centers. He said that all the neces- sary facilities have been made available. Committees have been made at 3 levels for better facilities. Shar- ma said that every mi- grant coming from out- side, Rajasthani or workers should follow the protocol of Quaran- tine centers and 3 types of committees have been formed to benefit from the facilities. He told that work is being done by forming a com- mittee at the Gram Pan- chayat, Subdivision Headquarters and Dis- trict level, so that the immigrants do not face any kind of problem. Reports are being taken daily, and instruc- tions are being given. Sharma said that the committees have been made at village level 3, include panchayat sar- panch, former sar- panch, headmaster, gram sevak, patwari, NGO, social workers and employees of police and health department. Monitoring being done every day. Instructions are given every day through video confer- encing so that no per- son violates the quaran- tine period. 1300 migrant have been found positives from 17 districts. The Health Minister said that at present about 2600 people have been identified as Corona positive in the state, out of which more than 1300 are migrants com- ing from outside. He said that more than 1300 positive cases have come in 17 districts in- cluding Dungarpur, Sirohi, Pali, Jalore, Bi- kaner. He said that the number of positive cas- es may increase further in the coming days, but if all people spend the quarantine period with discipline, then there will be no problem. Home quarantine is also being monitored. He said that for home quarantine, a bond is being filled bounding them to stay inside for 14 days and not to break the protocol, with two of their neighbors as witnesses. Dr Raghu Sharma First India Bureau Jhunjhunu: Three per- sons including two em- ployees of railway and a camper driver died in a road accident near Goga ji temple ahead of Bakhtawarpura village under Bagad police sta- tion in Jhunjhunu dis- trict on Saturday. According to reliable sources, trolley men Ramlal Yadav of Kotdi Udaipurwati and Vikas Jat of Rampura Malsi- sar, Mate Hari Singh of Chidawa were return- ing from Ratan Shaher, when ahead of Bakhta- warpura village, the driver Manish lost con- trol over the steering and the vehicle rammed into a tree. On hearing the noise of the crash, people in the nearby areas reached the spot and helped the injured reach the government hospital in Bagad. How- ever, another person was found dead under the camper. Of the three injured, two were de- clared dead by the doc- tors, on arrival. Ramlal has been shifted to a hospital in Jhunjhunu because of his critical condition. The police said that they had gone to Ratan Shaher in relation to an under construction of a tunnel. The police have hand- ed over their bodies to their relatives after postmortem. Car crashes into a tree as driver loses control, three die, one critical Two mobile sims found in Sevar jail cell Experts praise CM’s economic management First India Bureau Bharatpur: Security at one of the highly pro- tected jails in the state has come into question. During an intensive search operation in Se- var jail, the authorities have found two mobile sim and other material from notorious gang- ster Lawrence Bishnoi. Bishnoi was linked to a murder during recent gangwar in Churu. Cops traced mobile call’s location in Sevar jail. ADM city Rajesh Goyal and additional SP Mool Singh Rana led a search in which two mobile sim and a Blue- tooth was found from the cell of Lawrence. A case was registered against him. First India Bureau Jaipur: On Saturday, Bikaner Technical Uni- versity organised an online dialogue on “Economy after Cov- id-19: Mahatma Gan- dhi’s Village Swarajya”. Inaugurating the pro- gram, Chief Guest, Dr Subhash Garg praised the economic manage- ment done by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot during the lockdown in- duced by coronavirus. The speaker of the pro- gramme was Prof Su- darshan Iyengar. For- mer Vice Chancellor of Gujarat Vidyapeeth, Ahmedabad, also pre- sented his views on the subject, appreciating the Chief Minister’s Gandhi Darshan. A LPG gas cylinder delivery man near Ramganj area. Joshi distributes food materials in religious places, visits 300 temples BJP leaders greet Satish on his birthday Yogesh Sharma Jaipur: Chief Whip Dr Mahesh Joshi seems to be on a secular journey, with his donation to all religious places with- out discrimination. He visited nearly 300 temples in the last 6 days and distributed over 1 kg of desi ghee and free ration materi- al kits for free. Joshi’s family and his team have also been participating in this harmonious practice. In temples, he do- nated for Thakurji’s bhog and lamp light- ing. It seems that his goal is to make dona- tion in every religious institution in the Hawa Mahal assembly constituency. Joshi also donated for lang- ars in Gurudwaras. In fact on the occasion of Eid, Joshi plans to en- sure that sevayas and food items be provided in mosques. Aishwarya Pradhan Jaipur: On BJP’s Na- tional Joint General Secretary (Organisa- tion) V Satish’s birth- day, on Saturday, all the central leaders of BJP and the leaders and ac- tivists of various states, gavehimbirthdaygreet- ings and best wishes through social media and phone calls. V Sat- ish stayed at the BJP state office when he was in Jaipur during the lock down. Since then, he has been attending meetings through VC or audio bridge. He was greeted by Un- ion Minister Nitin Gad- kari, Piyush Goyal, Nar- endra Singh Tomar, Sm- riti Irani, Thavarchand Gehlot, Arjun Ram Meghwal, Gajendra Sin- gh Shekhawat, Kailash Chaudhary, CM Shivraj Singh Chauhan, former CM Vasundhara Raje, State President of BJP, Dr Satish Poonia, LoP Gulabchand Kataria, Deputy Leader of Oppo- sition Rajendra Rathore and State Organization General Secretary Chandra Shekhar, MP RamcharanBohra,Diya Kumari and CP Joshi among others. No direct flights from Jpr to major cities, worrying Kashiram Chaudhary Jaipur: Domestic flights will start operating at airports in the country from Monday. A total of 21 flights will operate from Jaipur Airport. Howev- er, there will no longer be di- rect flights from Jaipur to many major cities. Due to the reduction in the number of flights, passengers will have to face quite some trouble. The resumption of air ser- vices in the country is relief for passengers. Now it will be easy to travel from one city to another again. However, in view of the transition of Co- rona, the Central Govern- ment has appealed to the pas- sengers to travel only when necessary. It is worth noting that before the lock-down, 63 flights were operated from Jaipur Airport, of which 7 were international and 56 do- mestic flights. While now only 21 flights will start operating. There will be no flights from Jaipur to major cities like Ahmedabad, Chennai, Jais- almer, Dehradun, Bhopal, Lucknow etc. Now passengers will need to change flights from Delhi to these cities. Airlines could not make the schedule according to the re- quirement of passengers. There is a good, daily pas- senger load, from Jaipur to Ahmedabad. There were 4 daily flights from Jaipur to Ahmedabad before the lock down. 1 IndiGo, 1 Go Air and 2 Flight SpiceJet were operat- ing. But now not a single air- line has given schedule for Ahmedabad. SpiceJet and Air India had 2 flights before the lock down for Bhopal. But now not a single flight will run for Bhopal. There will be no direct flight from Jaipur to Chennai. To get to these cities, first you have to take a flight to Delhi. From there, connecting flights will enable passengers to reach other cities. NUMBER OF REDUCED FLIGHTS Mahesh Joshi’s sister, known to many as ‘Behen ji’ has been helping him with the offerings. V Satish during a VC —PHOTOBYNAIMKHAN
  • 4. PERSPECTIVEJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 04www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia G Vol 1 G Issue No. 347 G RNI NO. RAJENG/2019/77764. Printed and published by Anita Hada Sangwan on behalf of First Express Publishers. Printed at Bhaskar Printing Press, D.B. Corp Limited, Shivdaspura, Tonk Road, Jaipur. Published at 304, 3rd Floor, City Mall, Bhagwan Das Road, C-Scheme, Jaipur-302001, Rajasthan. Phone 0141-4920504. Editor: Jagdeesh Chandra, responsible for selection of news under the PRB Act EID FESTIVITIES FALL VICTIM TO THE PANDEMIC ot very long ago, Eid-ul-Fitr was celebrated with piety, joy and enthusiasm. Photographs of hundreds of devout together of- fering first the Alvida (last Fri- day of Ramzan) prayers and then Eid prayers a few days later splashed across newspapers was as common as cooking of vermicelli in Muslim homes. Iftaar par- ties, in which non-Muslims also partici- pated, were also an important part of Eid festivity. Enter novel coronavirus followed by a lockdown described as the strictest in the world and Ramzan’s traditions and rituals were disrupted for both rich and poor. Closed businesses and shops, job losses, people forced to lead a frugal life in virtual confinement, a palpable fear of catching the virus, and death, is not what Eid is all about. It is about celebration and the mood has been conspicuously missing. As shops remain closed until a week before Eid and with social distancing still in place, the enthusiasm that marks festival shopping was missing. One report said that this was the most depressing Eid for several clothing brands. Even street side vendors selling dif- ferent varieties of vermicelli sprung up late but only in non-containment zones. Even if traditional vermicelli is bought and pre- pared, there will be no guests to savour them just as there will be few to admire ones new apparels as socializing is still forbidden. Such is the dread of the new virus. The almost negligible shopping for Eid has hit the retail sector the most. Already facing an estimated loss of Rs 5.50 lakh crore, the partial lifting of curbs was too late and too little. There are approximately seven crore retailers in the country. “Indian retailers do a daily business of Rs 15,000 crore and since the country is in a lock- down there has been a huge loss of Rs 5.50 lakh crore of business which is done by 7 crore traders of the country,” the secretary- general of Confederation of All-India Trad- ers Praveen Khandelwal was quoted as saying. Besides, there are 2.5 crore small and micro traders for whom the lockdown must be nothing less than a catastrophe. It is not that only Indian Muslims have to face the adverse impact of this nationwide clampdown. Saudi Arabia announced impo- sition of curfew from May 23 to May 27, fol- lowing the end of the holy month of fasting as Covid-19 cases have been rising. Mosques, too, will remain shut for Eid prayers. The kingdom has reported highest number of cases in the Gulf region. Egypt also stopped movement of all public transport for six days starting May 24. Curfew too was imposed. In United Arab Emirates, the Dubai government’s media office was quoted as saying on Twitter that mosques will remain closed. The tweet banned customs like family vis- its and giving money or gifts to children. Despite the odds, one can still say Eid Mubarak! IN-DEPTH N OVID-19 has c o n f r o n t e d the world with a horrific cri- sis. Because developing a vaccine will likely take at least a year, governments need to buy time to keep health-care facilities from being overwhelmed and to minimize the number of people who fall ill and die, not least by reducing the rate of new infections. In rich countries, the ar- senal has included social distancing, sheltering in place, shuttering nones- sential businesses (or more telecommuting), and recommending or requir- ing face masks. Though the economic costs of these first-phase measures have been dreadful, they are preferable to the hu- man and economic costs that would follow from let- ting COVID-19 spread un- checked. The second round of the fight can start when the numbers of new cases and deaths are flat or falling, and when testing and contact-trac- ing capabilities have been deployed widely enough to spot and contain potential outbreaks. But the pandemic will never be under control as long as there are still rising infection rates elsewhere in the world. A viral contagion is like a wildfire: it takes only a few sparks to trigger a resurgence. No matter how rigorously rich countries try to prevent the virus from crossing their borders, there will always be enough leak- ages to cause a new out- break. Thus, to combat the pandemic in the ab- sence of a universally available vaccine, the vi- rus also must be con- tained in poorer coun- tries, all of which are woefully ill-equipped for the task. After all, social distanc- ing and sheltering in place are impossible in crowded urban areas with commu- nity wells and toilets, where many families live from hand to mouth on a day laborer’s pay. Even if they were enforceable, lockdowns in these situa- tions would mean starva- tion for many people. Moreover, most poor countries have inade- quate health-care infra- structure (too few hospi- tal beds, scarce personal protective equipment) and underfunded and understaffed public- health systems. They also lack the domestic resources to finance so- cial programs, as well as the foreign-exchange re- serves to import criti- cally needed supplies and equipment. Many governments are already in dire fiscal shape, and cannot provide even minimal support for un- employed workers and their families. Poorer countries thus have two overarching needs. First, they require additional support for their health systems, so that they can provide suf- ficient medical care to all who become infected. Oth- erwise, COVID-19 cases, not to mention the mortal- ity rate, will grow – possi- bly exponentially. Second, most poorer countries need financing to avert widespread starvation and penury. While a few have at least some fiscal space to increase their expendi- tures, most do not. Coordination among rich countries will be necessary to address both needs. So far, there has been some progress with respect to finance, but not nearly enough when it comes to address- ing the health crisis. FOR FULL REPORT LOG ON TO WWW.PROJECTSYNDICATE.COM The rich world’s pandemic imperative C While the advanced economies reckon with the costs of the COVID-19 lockdown phase, developing and emerging economies are facing an even deeper disaster He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless. —Isaiah 40:29 Spiritual SPEAK Top TWEET Dharmendra Pradhan @dpradhanbjp Urged all my Odia friends to stay safe and take necessary precautions to minimise the risk of novel coronavirus infection. Together we have dealt with many catastrophes in the past and have emerged stronger. By the grace of Lord Jagannath, we will win this battle too. Piyush Goyal @PiyushGoyal 24x7 Movement of Essential Commodities: Railways is working in a mission mode to maintain a continuous supply chain during lockdown, delivering essentials to every corner of the nation. Railways has moved 23.2 lakh wagons, of which 13.5 lakh wagons carried essential goods. he top priority on the inter- national agenda at the mo- ment must be to combat coronavirus and find a cure for it. Regrettably this is not happening. Regional dis- putes continue to simmer. Take for example the current cartographic differences be- tween Nepal and India. I have in the past been intimately associ- atedIndo-Nepalrelations.Ihave nohesitationinemphasisingthe fact that, with one or two excep- tion the Prime Ministers of Ne- pal have not been up to the job. The Nepalese government has taken objection to a map India issued in 2019 to em- phasise the changed status of Jammu & Kashmir into a Un- ion Territory. It asserted that the 330 square kilometre Kalapani area near the Indo- Nepal border should not have been shown as a part of In- dia. We have assured our clos- est and largest landlocked neighbour that we would be willing to discuss the matter through diplomatic channels after coronavirus pandemic is over, even though the terri- tory has been a part of India for centuries. Not only that Nepal endorsed India’s claim for 150 years. A word or two about Prime Minister KP Oli. He is a crypto communist, not on good terms with the Nepal Communist Par- ty which is at present in power. By all accounts he is an indiffer- entadministrator.Unfortunately we played into his hands by the manner in which we intervened when a new constitution of Ne- palwasunderdiscussionin2015. We sent to Kathmandu, the then foreign secretary with a list of sex amendments. This was an unnecessary interference in the internal affairs of Nepal which was deeply resented. China’s diplomatic, terri- torial and political ambi- tions in Nepal are all too well known. Without Bei- jing’s encouragement Prime Minister Oli would not even think of antagonising India. The so called “dispute” will eventually be resolved through deft diplomacy. The sooner that happens the better it would. A prolonged estrangement is not in the interest of either country. For the first time since the death of Deng Xiao Ping China is on the defensive. Its mishandling of the corona- virus pandemic has been widely condemned. It’s not coming clean is damaging her image. The economy for the first time since 1992 has taken a beating. President Trump is leading the charge against the Peoples Republic. That is, quite obvi- ously not having the desired re- sults. President Trump’s goofs onthecoronavirushavebrought down his rating to seventy per- cent negative. On the political fieldheisrunningelevenpoints behind Joe Biden. President TrumpcallingformerPresident Barak Obama names is a peril- ous exercise. It only enhances President Obama’s stature. If elections were held to- day in the USA President Trump could find himself in serious electoral trouble. If the pandemic continues till November, and the President does not mend his ways, he would find himself back in Trump Towers in New York. Friends ask me how I spend my days in what they call un- wanted solitary confinement. My answer is, “I am discover- ing the virtues of solitude”. As we all know, the world is a noisy place. India is among the noisiest places on earth. No wonder Mahatma Gandhi ob- served a day of silence. The Gymkhana club, has been in the news for all the wrong reasons. I became a member in 1955. I was elect- ed President in 1984 unop- posed. The fifteen members of the General Committee were on my list of candi- dates. All were elected. This was unprecedented. The Imperial Gymkhana club was founded in 1913. The word Imperial was dropped in 1947. From 1913 to 1947 only Britishers became President of club. Sir Harcourt Butter ICS was the first President. The first Indian to be elected President was Sir Usha Nath Sen, CBE i.e Com- mander of the British Em- pire. Between 1952 to 1970 seven Indian ICS officers were elected Presidents. According to the Oxford Dic- tionary a club “is an associa- tion dedicated to a particular interest or activity, an organi- zation constituted to play matches…. An organization of- fering members social ameni- ties, meals and residence.” The club has over a dozen tennisgrasscourts,eighthard courts, a squash and badmin- ton court, a swimming pool, a billiards room. A room is used for Bridge players. The cottages are well fur- nished, with a spacious bed room, sitting room, a bathroom and a small store room. I lived in cottage number 22 from 1958 to 1961 and 1966 to 1967. Few, if any members would know that Lord Irvin, the Viceroy and Mahatma Gandhi had a meeting in the club in 1931. A farewell party was held for Lord and Lady Mountbatten on 21 June 1948. Jawaharlal Nehru was among the guests. A handful of members have gone to court against the President and the Com- mittees for actions not in keeping in mind the tradi- tions of the club. The Central Government wants to take over the running of the club. That would be un- fortunate. Governments must govern not run clubs. A five member committee of five for President should be formed to sort out the dif- ferences between the two op- posing groups. Otherwise Government will intervene. In that event the Gymkhana Club will become a sub-sec- tion of one of the ministries of the central government. What a melancholy prospect. THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY THE AUTHOR ARE PERSONAL REGIONAL DISPUTES CONTINUE TO SIMMER T The Nepalese government has taken objection to a map India issued in 2019 to emphasise the changed status of Jammu & Kashmir into a Union Territory. It asserted that the 330 square kilometre Kalapani area near the Indo- Nepal border should not have been shown as a part of India China’s diplomatic, territorial and political ambitions in Nepal are all too well known. Without Beijing’s encouragement Nepal’s PM Oli would not even think of antagonising India K NATWAR SINGH The author is Former Minister of External Affairs of India
  • 5. To Receive Free Newspaper PDF Daily Whatsapp: http://bit.ly/whatsappjpr Telegram: https://t.me/firstindiajaipur Click the above link☝ & subscribe us on your preferred platform.
  • 6. INDIAJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 05www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia Kolkata: The West Bengal government sought support of the Indian Army, railways and port for restoring essential infrastructure and services in the are- as ravaged by Cyclone Amphan. It also urged private entities to pro- vide manpower and equipment for the pur- pose. In a series of tweets, the department said, “GOWB mobilises maximum strength in unified command mode on 24×7basis for imme- diate restoration of es- sential infrastructure and services asap. Army support has been called for; NDRF and SDRF teams deployed; Rlys, Port & private sector too requested to supply teams and equipment.” West Bengal CM- Mamata Banerjee also wrote to Indian Rail- ways asking them not to send Shramik Special trains to state till May 26 in view of Cyclone Amphan. “District ad- ministration involved in relief and rehabilita- tion works after cyclone Amphan. It won’t be able to receive special trains for the next few days,” the CM said. The death toll due to the cy- clone rose to 86 on Sat- urday. The cyclone, which weakened into a depression, was further reduced to a well- marked low-pressure area over North Bangla- desh and neighbouring area. “It is very likely to continue to move north- northeastwards & weaken further into a low-pressure area dur- ing the next 12 hours,” a bulletin released by IMD stated. —PTI BENGAL SEEKS ARMY SUPPORT CYCLONE AMPHAN District administration involved in relief works after the calamity Spokesperson Ministry of Home Affairs @PIBHomeAffairs 10 additional @NDRFHQ teams deployed in West Bengal for post cyclone #Amphan management. Additional deployment of 10 teams will bring the total deployment to 36 teams of NDRF, across the 6 districts of WB af- fected by the Cyclone. We are doing whatever possible to restore elec- tricity. Cyclone Amphan was a disaster. It is not the right time to do politics. We have spoken to Calcutta Electric Supply Corporation (CESC) for restoration. I would like to request people to have patience. —Mamata Banerjee West Bengal, CM People stand in a queue outside a shop to buy a generator due to power cut, after the passage of Cyclone Amphan in Kolkata on Saturday. New Delhi: India wit- nessed the biggest ever spike of 6,654 positive cases in the last 24 hours, taking the total number of COVID-19 cases to 1,25,101, accord- ing to the Union Minis- try of Health and Fam- ily Welfare. As many as 137 deaths have been re- ported in the last 24 hours, taking the death toll to 3,720. Out of the total number of cases, 69,597 are active and 51,784 have been cured/discharged or have migrated. Maharashtra contin- ues to remain the worst-affected state with 44,582 COVID-19 cases. It is followed by Tamil Nadu (14,753), Gujarat (13,268), and Delhi (12,319). The nationwide lock- down has been extend- ed till May 31. —ANI With biggest spike of 6,654 cases, India’s tally@ 1,25,101 591 NEW POSITIVE CASES REPORTED IN DELHI 14 NEW CONTAINMENT ZONES IN DELHI New Delhi: As many as 591 new COVID-19 cases and no deaths have been reported in Delhi in last 24 hours, taking the total number of cases in the national capital to 12,910, including 6,412 active cases, said the Delhi Health Department. 370 patients have recov- ered while 6,267 patients have recov- ered so far. Meanwhile, India witnessed the biggest ever spike of 6,654 positive cases in the last 24 hours. —ANI New Delhi: Fourteen new areas were added to the list of containment zones in Delhi taking the total number of such zones to 92 in the national capital. Till date, 34 areas have been ‘de-contained in the Delhi. 11,659 persons have tested positive for COVID-19 in the national capital. 5,567 persons have been cured while the death toll is 194 in Delhi, ac- cording to the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. —ANI New Delhi: A total of 1,15,364 samples were tested for COVID-19 in the last 24 hours in the country, said the In- dian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) on Sat- urday. As per ICMR’s bul- letin, a total of 28,34,798 samples of coronavirus have been tested so far. India on Saturday wit- nessed the biggest ever spike of 6,654 positive cases in the last 24 hours, taking the total number of COVID-19 cases to 1,25,101, said Health Ministry. —ANI ‘TOTAL 1,15,364 SAMPLES TESTED IN LAST 24 HRS’ Mumbai: Former BJP MP Kirti Somaiya has written a letter to Ma- harashtra Health Min- ister Rajesh Tope alleg- ing black marketing and hoarding of masks by many traders and manufacturers and de- manded to cap MRP of N95 masks.He also de- manded strict action against traders and manufacturers who are involved in black mar- keting of masks. “All Doctors in Mumbai are raising concern about availability and price of N95 mask. Cost is the same but the sale price is different. The exploi- tation of the situation by a few manufacturers and traders. I request the government to fix prices of masks, it must be treated as an essen- tial commodity and it should be covered un- der Medical Emergency Act/Provisions,” So- maiya wrote in the letter.”I request strong actionagainstallhoard- ers” he added. —ANI BJP demands capping of MRP of N95 masksPanaji: Goa Governor Satya Pal Malik said that during his tenure in J& K he had succeed- ed in holding panchay- at elections, devoid of violence, despite the top leaders of the union territory not cooperat- ing under pressure from Pakistan. Malik served as the Governor of J-K till Oc- tober 2019, following which he has taken over the same role in Goa. “The Prime Minister had said that we will conduct panchayat elec- tions in Jammu and Kashmir. I broke proto- col and went to Omar Abdullah and Mehboo- ba Mufti’s residence. They refused to partici- pate under Pakistan’s pressure. Terrorists also threatened yet elections were held successfully, Hurriyat boycotted them. But the elections were still held with record vot- ing, barring a few plac- es, and no violence took place during the elec- tions,” Malik said. He also said that the then administration was able to do so be- cause the people of the union territory had ac- cepted the system, as it was benefitting them. “We had conducted an exercise which re- vealed that close to 50,000 government jobs were lying vacant in the state. We had an- nounced we will give jobs to 50 thousand Kashmiri youth. I hope that the government will give them to the people soon. As J&K Guv, I opened the Raj Bhavan for everyone, Malik said. —ANI Panchayat polls under Pak’s pressure: Malik VHP PANEL MEETS HARYANA CM OVER ‘ANTI-HINDU ACTIVITIES’ New Delhi: A high-level delegation of Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) along with various social and religious organisa- tions of Haryana, led by VHP central Joint General Secretary, Surendra Jain, met Haryana Chief Min- ister Manohar Lal Khattar on Friday in connection with the “anti-national and anti-Hindu activities in Mewat.” The delega- tion apprised Khattar of the report of high-level inquiry committee and its conclusions and recom- mendations. Apart from that, some new facts that had emerged were also given to him. He was also informed about “facts of the temples which were occupied and converted into mosques.” HUNAR HAAT TO REOPEN FROM SEPT 25, SAYS MIN NAQVI New Delhi : Hunar Haat, where an opportunity is given to artisans from across the country to showcase their handmade and indigenous products, would reopen with a theme of ‘local for global’ from September 25, said Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi on Saturday. “Hunar Haat, which has provided employment to more than 5 lakh Indian artisans, craftsmen, associated with them in the last 5 years, have become popular among the people. Now it will restart on the theme of local to global.” DAATI MAHARAJ BOOKED FOR DOING PUJA IN LOCKDOWN New Delhi: Delhi Police have registered a case against self-styled godman Daati Maharaj and his supporters who were seen offering prayers at Shani Dhaam temple in South Delhi’s Asola. According to lockdown guidelines, temples and other places of worship have been closed to control the spread of coronavirus. On Saturday, when videos and photos of the religious ceremo- ny at the temple went viral on social media, the DM and the DCP of the South district sought an inquiry into the matter. ARMY CHIEF VISITS LADAKH TO REVIEW LAC SITUATION Leh, Ladakh: At a time when there is stand- off at three locations in Ladakh sector with Chinese troops, Army Chief Gen MM Naravane visited Leh to review the ongoing situation with field commanders. The top military field Com- manders in Leh including Lt Gen YK Joshi, Lt Gen Harinder Singh and other senior officers briefed the Army Chief on LAC situ- ation. Sources said there is stand-off situation at three locations including Galwan Nala area where over 300 troops each from Chinese side have come to stake claim. Army been holding talks with their Chinese coun- terparts on the situation & finding a way out of it. INFRASTRUCTURE GETTING RESTORED: GOVT CENTRE SENDS 5 ARMY COLUMNS The Bengal government said multiple depart- ments are at work to cut and remove the trees that had fallen during Cyclone Amphan. “Drinking water and drainage infrastructure getting restored fast. PHE asked to supply water pouches in gap pockets. Generators being hired where necessary. More than a hundred teams from multiple depart- ments and bodies working for cutting of fallen trees which is the key to restoration of power in locali- ties. WBSEDCL & CESC asked to deploy maximal manpower, even while lockdown significantly affects the deployment potential of the latter. Police on high alert,” Bengal’s home department tweeted. The Defence Ministry on Saturday decided to send five columns of Indian Army to help Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to restore infrastructure in state capital Kolkata. The Centre’s decision fol- lowed a request from the West Bengal government that appeared to have been overwhelmed by the magnitude of the relief work needed in the state battered by cyclone Amphan. “Based on the request from the government of West Bengal, Indian Army has provided five columns to assist the Kolkata City Civil Administration in the aftermath of Cyclone Amphan,” a person familiar with the development said. Each column has about 35 personnel. Kolkata: West Bengal Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar targeted state government over the handling of Cyclone Amphan. Dhankar said that he could not have any discussions with the Mamata Banerjee- ledTrinamoolCongress government. He said that the state did not have any contingency and questioned Kolkata Municipal Corpora- tion’s work. Cyclone Amphan Toll Rises to 85 in West Bengal; People in Kolkata Stage Pro- tests Demanding Resto- ration of Power, Water Supply. “I couldn’t have any discussion with state govt. It’s unfortunate. I had extensive discus- sions with Indian Coast Guard & BSF, they did a great job. I spoke to the Army, they were ready for relief work. What did Kolkata Municipal Corporation do?” Dhankar said. Why could they not anticipate? Most of the deaths were caused due to uprooting of trees. Why was there no contingency plan? Why were arrange- ments not done before- hand?” he added. The death toll due to the cyclonic storm in West Bengal has risen to 85. The residents of Kolkata staged a protest earlier in the day, over the administration’s failure to restore nor- malcy even three days after Cyclone Amphan. According to PTI sourc- es, nearly 1.5 crore people of the state are directly affected over 10 lakh house have been destroyed due to the cyclone. —PTI ‘What did Kolkata Municipal Corporation Do?’ Why could they not anticipate? Most of the deaths were caused due to up- rooting of trees. Why was there no con- tingency plan? Why were arrangements not done beforehand? —Jagdeep Dhankhar, West Bengal Governor When I was the Jammu and Kash- mir Governor, I opened the Raj Bhavan for everyone. All my advi- sors were tasked to hear people’s complaints once a week. 95,000 complaints were received by my office, I resolved 93,000 of them before coming to Goa. People felt comfortable because of this, they felt it was their government. Thus, anger was low. —Satya Pal Malik, Goa Governor Lucknow: Amid the nationwide lockdown, UP CM Yogi Adityanath on Saturday held a meeting with the of- ficers of the ‘COV- ID-19 management Team-11’ here. While reviewing the lockdown meas- ures, he asked for effective police pa- trolling which ac- cording to him would help in pre- venting the acci- dents in the border areas as well as on highways and expressways. He also underlined the utility of foot- patrolling in the markets. —ANI CM Yogi holds COVID-19 review meet
  • 7. INDIAJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 06www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia New Delhi: Indian Railways has prepared a schedule to transport another 36 lakh mi- grant labourers to 16 destination states from originating points in 19 states over the next 10 days, revealed the rail- way ministry. The min- istry in a media address added that it had al- ready transported a to- tal of 45 lakh migrants through inter and intra- state services provided since May 1. The announcement of Shramik special schedule comes at a time when railways has also announced a grad- ual resumption in its normal passenger ser- vices with 100 pair of trains from June 1 in addition to 15 pairs of Rajdhani special ser- vices in operation to ad- dress the rising demand for interstate travel with the easing of re- strictions from lock- down clamped to con- tain the spread of coro- navirus pandemic. “A total of 2,600 Shra- mik Special trains will run for the next 10 days, originating from 19 states for destinations in 16 states, carrying 36 lakh passengers,” the official said. —ANI Rlys to carry 36L migrants in 2,600 Shramik special trains New Delhi: Two hun- dred Mail Express trains will be run from June 1, said Railway Board Chairman Vinod Kumar Ya- dav here on Satur- day. Ad- dressing a press con- f e r e n c e here, Ya- dav said: “In an effort towards returning to normalcy, the Ministry of Railways will run 200 Mail Express trains starting June 1.” He said that 80 per cent of the train journeys were undertaken by the mi- grant labourers of UP & Bihar. “Shramik Spe- cial trains were started on May 1. Free meals and drinking water were provided to all passengers.” —ANI 200 MAIL EXPRESS TRAINS FROM JUNE 1 RAHUL GANDHI@RahulGandhi My brother and sisters, you are the strength of this country, you carry the weight of this country on your shoulders. The entire country wants there should be justice (nyay) with you. It is our duty to empower this strength of the country. FOUR SECRETARIES IN GOVT OF INDIA RETIRING IN MAY Four Secretaries with various Ministries and Departments, are due to retire on May 31, 2020. They include: Binoy Kumar, Secretary, Ministry of Steel; Chandra Kishore Mishra, Secretary, Min- istry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change; Injeti Srinivas, Secretary, Ministry of Corporate Affairs; P Raghavendra Rao, Secretary, Chemicals and Petrochemicals. VIJAY PRAKASH RETURNS TO PARENT CADRE Vijay Prakash, Director in the Department of Land Resources, has been given premature repatriation to his parent cadre with the condition of extended cooling off. He is a 1996 batch ITS officer. FOUR IIS OFFICERS GET NEW POSTINGS MIB has given new postings to 4 IIS officers. Accordingly, Dhiraj Singh has been posted as Di- rector, DPD, Manish Gautam, Director, PIB, Delhi, Ravinder Chaudhary, Chief Media, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and HP Kunappareddy posted as Dy Director, PIB, Hyderabad. PANKAJ KUMAR GOSWAMI TO JOIN AS DIRECTOR (OPE), OIL INDIA ON JUNE 1 Pankaj Kumar Goswami, CGM, OIL, will be taking over the charge as Director (Operations), Oil India Limited (OIL) on June 1, 2020. He will succeed PK Sharma retiring in May this year. AJOY CHOUDHURY TO TAKE OVER AS DIRECTOR (FIN), REC ON JUNE 1 Ajoy Choudhury, ED, REC, will be taking over the charge as Director (Finance), Rural Electrification Corporation (REC) on June 1, 2020. RAJESH KUMAR SAHU APPOINTED DS/DIRECTOR, TOURISM Rajesh Kumar Sahu has been appointed as Depu- ty Secretary/ Director in the Ministry of Tourism. He is a 2010 batch IRS-C&CE officer. M THENNARASAN APPOINTED MEMBER IN GUJARAT M Thennarasan, vice-chairman & managing director, Gujarat Industrial Development Corpo- ration been appointed as member of the expert advisory committee to guide the government on reviving the state’s economy. He is 2000 batch IAS officer of Gujarat cadre. SEVEN ITS OFFICERS RETIRING THIS MONTH Seven Indian Telecom Service (ITS) officers are retiring this month. These officers belong to four batches. They are- Raman Lal of 1982 batch, Rajendra P Sharma of 1984 batch, I Thirunavuk- karasu of 1984 batch, Dev Kumar of 1984 batch, SS Thampi of 1985 batch, Tushar Kanti Roy of 1986 batch and George Methew of 1986 batch. POST OF TWO MEMBERS ARE LYING VACANT IN TDSAT Two posts of Members in TDSAT are vacant. In- terested can apply for the post till June 25, 2020. Details can be seen from DoT website. SANJAY GUPTA SHIFTED TO WESTERN RAILWAYS Sanjay Gupta on his return from deputation at DFCCIL, is being posted in Western Railways. He is an IRSE officer. ABHINAV GUPTA SHIFTED TO NORTH WESTERN RAILWAYS Abhinav Gupta on his repatriation from DFCCIL, is being posted in North Western Railways. He is an IRAS officer. RK JHA POSTED AS OSD IN MHA Ratnesh Kumar Jha presently posted in Northern Railways, has been posted as OSD in the Ministry of Home Affairs. He is an IRTS officer. POWERGallery Darbhanga: Fifteen- year-old Jyoti Kumari, who cycled with her wounded father from Gurugram in Haryana to Darbhanga in Bihar covering over 1,200 km over 7 days, has proved to the world that “where there is a will there’s a way”. The feat of endur- ance of this lion-heart- ed girl has not just caught the attention of Cycling Federation of India (CFI) but also of Ivanka Trump, US Pres- ident Donald Trump’s daughter. Ivanka on Friday took to the Twit- ter and heaped praises on Jyoti, stating that the “beautiful feat of endurance and love has captured the imagina- tion of the Indian people and the cycling federation”. Jyoti will now be al- lowed to give a trial to become a trainee at the National Cycling Acad- emy in the IGI Stadium complex in the nation- al capital. “15 yr old Jyoti Ku- mari, carried her wounded father to their home village on the back of her bicycle cov- ering +1,200 km over 7 days. This beautiful feat of endurance and love has captured the imagination of the In- dian people and the cy- cling federation!” Ivan- ka tweeted. People on social me- dia have shown lot of support to Jyoti. —ANI Ivanka Trump lauds 15-yr-old Jyoti’s cycle trial Male: An evacuation flight of Air India un- der Vande Bharat Mis- sion departed from Male with 153 passen- gers on board for Delhi on Saturday. “The first @airindi- ain evacuation flight from #Male to #Delhi under #MissionVan- deBharat takes off with 153 passengers on board,” Indian embassy here tweeted. On Friday, an Air In- dian flight from Male evacuated 152 Indians, which landed in Ben- galuru. Many Indians from the Maldives were evac- uated through Opera- tion Samudra Setu, which was launched by the Indian Navy to bring Indian citizens home from foreign shores in the wake of COVID-19. On Sunday, the Indian embassy here had said that 1,488 Indians from the Mal- dives have been evacu- ated so far. —ANI Evacuation flight with 153 people departs from Male ‘Corona crisis:... be provided ration through PDS channel. CM also asked for NFSA list to be scrutinised to delete the undeserving names and add new names to it. He stressed on strict action against black marketers, moni- toring of PDS outlets and up gradation of POS machines while he praised there role in fooddistributionduring corona crisis. Food & Civil supplies minister Ramesh Mee- na stressed on strength- ening the measuring and weighing system through e tuleman por- tal for effective moni- toring. He along with minister Sukhram Vishnoi expressed need to add really needy to the NFSA list. Food & Civil Supplies secretary Siddarth Mahajan gave a presentation listing 46 lakh new beneficiaries, instructions for new data base, Wheat lifting from FCI godowns, ad- dition of 70 lakh new NFSA beneficiaries, distribution of wheat to 4.4 crore people and re- cord MSP purchase. CS DB Gupta, ACS (Fi- nance) Niranjan Arya, PS (IT) Abhay Kumar and DIPR Director Ma- hendra Soni along with other senior officers were also present during the VC. Corona to... the GDP growth during 2020-21 is likely to re- main in the negative ter- ritory. It projected some pick-up in growth im- pulses from second half (October-March) of 2020-21 onwards. Last week, the minis- ter had announced an economic packages five tranches, which includ- ed a Rs 3.70 lakh crore support for MSMEs, Rs 75,000 crore for NBFCs and Rs 90,000 crore for Power distribution companies, free foodgrains to migrant workers, increased allo- cation for MGNREGS, tax relief to certain sec- tions and Rs 15,000 crore allocated to the healthcare sector to deal with the pandemic. The package was done in consultation with economists, acade- micians, ex-bankers, ex-finance ministry of- ficials and industry, Sitharaman said, add- ing the idea was to make available more li- quidity in the economy and revive demand, Sitharaman said. “The package was de- signed keeping in mind that we are facing a sit- uation which is excep- tional and therefore whether the contraction is going to be this much or that much, we didn’t have the luxury of data to guess-estimating them. However, the spir- it of that thought has been kept in mind that we have to now look at complete contraction and if we have to stim- ulate the economy keeping that in mind what is that we have to do,” she said. —ANI China brings... In the midst of the esca- lating tension, Army Chief Gen MM Nara- vane paid a quiet visit to the headquarters of 14 Corps in Leh on Fri- day and reviewed with the top commanders the overall security scenar- io in the region includ- ing in the disputed ar- eas along the LAC, the de-facto border between India and China. Military sources said the Indian Army has also been matching up to the Chinese build-up in both Pangong Tso lake and Galwan Valley and that it is in a much advantageous position in certain other sensi- tive areas in the region. The situation in East- ern Ladakh deteriorat- ed after around 250 Chi- nese and Indian sol- diers were engaged in a violent face-off on the evening of May 5 which spilled over to the next day before the two sides agreed to “disengage” following a meeting at the level of local com- manders. There were reports of multiple transgres- sions by Chinese troops in Eastern Ladakh re- gion in the last one week. However, there is no official confirmation or reaction to it. —ANI Come Aug,... the Civil Aviation Min- istry. Other airlines did not respond to PTI when asked about this matter. “I am fully hopeful that before August or September, we will try to start a good percent- age of international civil aviation opera- tions, if not complete international opera- tions,” he said. “We must have a more ambitious goal (regarding interna- tional flights). Why not start them by mid-June or June-end or in July,” he added. The minister said if some passengers do not have smartphones, it is not as if they will not be allowed to travel for they do not have Aarog- ya Setu app. —ANI FROM PG 1 Katra: Shri Mata Vaishno Devi shrine board (SMVDSB) Katra has been providing sehri and iftari to over 500 Muslims quaran- tined at Aashirwad Bhawan and other quarantined center across Katra during the holy month of Ramzan. CEO of SMVDSB— Ramesh Kumar said: “In the month of Ramzan, the Board has been working overnight to provide sehri and if- tari to our Muslim and other meal to the differ- ent people quarantined across Katra town, since March 10, 2020.” “Those brought to Aashirwad Bhawan are mostly labourers from different parts of the country, who are fasting during the month of Ramzan. So, we decided to provide them sehri and iftari every day,” said the CEO.” —ANI VaishnoDevishrineservesIftari to quarantined Muslims Members of Shrine Board are providing iftari to 500 Muslims. New Delhi: A senior doctor at Delhi’s AIIMS- died of Corona. Dr Ji- tendra Nath Pande, 78, was the director and professor of the Pulmo- nology department at the premier hospital, which has been treating coronavirus patients for weeks. Dr Sangita Reddy, a senior Delhi doctor, confirmed Dr Pande’s death “Deeply saddened to hear that COVID-19 claimed its most illustrious victim, Dr JN Pande, Director and Professor of Pul- monology, AIIMS, My Condolences to his fam- ily,” she tweeted. —ANI New Delhi: Delhi HC has suggested that the Death Audit Committee and Delhi government should publish the data supplied by the govern- ment and private hospi- tals in the national capital only after prop- er analysis. A division bench of CJ DN Patel & Justice Prateek Jalan also sug- gested that the data should be maintained properly. —ANI AIIMS HOD dies of COVID-19 Publish data from hosps after proper analysis:HC Migrants loot water bottles while on way to their native place at DDU Railway Station in Chandauli. MAYAWATI SPEAK Delhi violence: SIT prepares charge-sheet New Delhi: The spe- cial investigation team (SIT) of Delhi Police, probing the violence that erupted in northeast Delhi in February this year, has prepared a charge-sheet in the matter and is likely to submit it before a court soon. The charge-sheet is being looked over by a senior police of- ficial and will be submitted before a court in the last week of May or the first week of June. Over 700 FIRs have been lodged & SIT has arrested & de- tained more than 2,500 people, includ- ing the suspended AAP councillor Tahir Hussain in cases pertaining to violence. —ANI
  • 8. TALKING POINTJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020 07www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia HOW TO SOCIALISE SAFELY AS CORONAVIRUS RESTRICTIONS EASE Y ou can al- most hear the collec- tive sigh of relief as coronavi- rus restrictions are eased across Aus- tralia. But as we emerge from our bunkers and dust off our so- cial skills, we must think about how to navigate this transi- tion safely. The winding back of restrictions does not mean the pan- demic is over, al- though it is a recog- nition of how well we have done to con- trol the spread of COVID-19 in Aus- tralia. There is still a long way to go, and it’s everyone’s responsibility to limit the chances of the coronavirus spreading. So what should a social gathering look like now we’re al- lowed to get togeth- er? Here are answers to some common questions. The winding back of restrictions does not mean the pandemic is over, although it is a recognition of how well we have done to control the spread of COVID-19. There is still a long way to go, and it’s everyone’s responsibility to limit the chances of the coronavirus spreading HOW BIG SHOULD MY GATHERING BE? At the time of writing, you can have five visitors in your home and gatherings of up to ten outdoors in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. In Tasmania you can only have two visitors to your home; in the ACT, South Australia and the Northern Territory you can have ten, while in Western Australia you can have 20. Whatever the restric- tions in your state or terri- tory, it’s important not to crowd too close together. You need to use common sense in deciding how many people to invite. DO WE STILL NEED TO SOCIALLY DISTANCE & WASH HANDS REGULARLY? We should carry on doing the things that have so far proved successful in curbing the coronavirus. This includes stay- ing at least 1.5 metres from other people, and being vigilant about hand hygiene. Make sure you have plenty of hand sanitiser available if you are hosting or attending a social gathering, so you can disinfect your hands regularly without having to go to the bathroom repeatedly. SHOULD I BRING MY OWN CUTLERY TO A DINNER PARTY? Assuming you trust the general hygiene stand- ards of your friends (which I sincerely hope you do), this is not necessary. Cutlery should be washed properly with detergent in hot water and handled only with freshly washed hands. Cutlery is no different to any other food surface such as crockery, glass- ware or chopping boards – just make sure it’s as clean as possible. CAN WE SHARE FOOD? Although there is no evidence coronavi- rus is spread through food, there is still a risk of cross-contamination while eating food from a shared plate. So this is probably not a sensible thing to do right now. While it might feel less sociable, avoiding shared grazing plates is a simple tactic to limit the risk of virus trans- mission. It might even stop your friend scoffing all the dip. Similarly, avoid the temptation to clink glasses with your friends. It’s only a small risk but we should take every opportunity to reduce the virus’s chances. SHOULD I WEAR A MASK? Amask is not es- sential for social gatherings, assum- ing you maintain a safe distance and wash your hands regularly. Having said that, a mask can give people some extra reassurance so they can relax a bit more. That’s assum- ing it is worn (and taken off) correctly, and that people understand a mask does not guarantee protection from infection. There is no harm in wearing one, but remember to be extra friendly as your friends can’t see your smile! I DON’T FEEL 100% – SHOULD I TAKE A RAINCHECK? It is important to factor in your personal health and risk factors in deter- mining how you navigate your newly reinstated freedoms. For example, a 75-year-old with a pre- existing health condition, such as a heart condition or asthma, should still be very careful about limit- ing their contact with others, as the implica- tions of getting sick are very serious. You should also consider your respon- sibility to other people. A 25-year-old who feels slightly unwell should err on the side of caution and not socialise, to protect others. Despite the lockdown lifting, we still need to take responsibility for our own health and also be considerate about the health of others. That way we can all start to enjoy one of the most rewarding aspects of humanity: being sociable. HOW SHOULD WE GREET EACH OTHER? The same rules about physical contact still apply, so we should not be hugging for now. We could adopt some of the new ways of greeting, such as the elbow bump or the foot shake. Or just stick to saying hello for the moment. SOURCE: THE CONVERSATION CONCEPT: DIVYA HEMNANI DESIGN: ABHISHEK SHARMA
  • 9. INVISIBLE HAND BEHIND YOGI- PRIYANKA IMPASSE Realising the com- plexityandhumani- tarian aspect of the jour- neyof themigrantwork- ers back home, the issue is being echoed from very quarter. Congress and Priyanka Gandhi also started raising the issue prominently. Pri- yanka asked permission for 1000 buses from the UP govt for taking the migrantworkerstotheir nativeplaces.Atthefirst sight, UP CM didn’t find anything political in the proposal and he took the tweet by Priyanka Gan- dhi casually. It is here that a senior bureaucrat intervened in the matter who was miffed with UP Congressman Gaurav Pandhi for raising ques- tion on his wife, a promi- nent folk singer, being a permanent feature in every big govt function through a tweet. Pandhi had hinted that the sing- er wife got the assign- mentsduetoherrelation with the senior bureau- crat.Sourcessaythatthe senior bureaucrat re- vealed his heart burn to CM Yogi. CM asked him to take necessary action on the bus matter. After getting CM’s nod, the senior bureaucrat asked Congress to send all 1000 buses to Lucknow by 10 pmthesamenightwhere their fitness was to be checked. Congress sug- gested that since the buses were supposed to enterUPfromNoidabor- der, so even the fitness tests should also be done at Noida. The senior bu- reaucrat refused this and on the contrary reg- isteredacaseagainstUP Congress chief Ajay Ku- mar Lallu sighting that approx150twoandthree wheelers registration numbers were found in thelistof 1000busessub- mitted by Congress, which he regarded in- fringement of lockdown and fraud on part of Congress. WHO GAVE BJP THE X-RAY EYES? Who gave this wis- dom to UP BJP leaders that there could be any discrepancy in the list of buses submit- ted by Cong for helping the migrants? When Cong gave this list to UP BJP govt, they had no inkling regarding any probable discrepancy in list. Sources say that this happened due to inside information given by a senior Cong leader. This leader has said to have conveyed UP BJP govt that since required num- ber of buses could not be arranged, so there has to be something wrong. If sourcesaretobebelieved thentherewasacommu- nicationgapbetweenRa- jasthan CM Ashok Ge- hlot, Dy CM Sachin Pilot and Priyanka Gandhi’s secretary Sandeep Sin- gh.Ortheplanwasdelib- erately sabotaged? Pri- yankaGandhishouldget it inquired as it was her name which took a beat- ing in the whole episode. WHERE DID PRIYANKA GANDHI GO WRONG? Senior Congress lead- ers believe that Pri- yanka Gandhi should have directly talked to UP CM Yogi for the re- turnof migrantworkers rather than tweeting the offer. It was Priyanka Gandhi’s secretary Sandeep Singh who was communicating with them. Sandeep has JNU background where he didCPIpolitics.Sandeep was using his own letter- head to write to UP govt so the replies too came fromSDMandRTOlevel officers.UPstyleof func- tioning can be very well understood from an old incident. It relates to the time when Mulayam Singh was UP CM with Congress supporting it. The then UP Congress president ND Tiwari ha- bitually use to threaten Mulayam govt of taking back its support. When Mulayam was asked as to why didn’t he respond to Tiwari’s threats, Mu- layam said since ND Ti- wari was Congress state chief so he better be re- plied by the state chief of his party, Ramcharan Das, and not him. Was the same UP tradition followed in case of Sand- eep Singh too? Priyanka Gandhi better under- stand this. MIRACULOUS AYURVEDIC SOLUTION While the country wasfacingunprec- edented corona crisis, everyone was missing Baba Ramdev. The prob- lemwithBabaRamdevis that now he is more of a Business Guru than a YogaGuru.Heallof sud- den incarnated with his new business plan. This time it was in MP where CM Shivaraj Singh Chouhan, health minis- terNarottamMishraand all senior medical offic- ers of the state were pre- sent for VC with Baba. Baba started with prais- ing CM for his efforts to contain corona against the ground reality in MP which in fact is compet- ing with Maharashtra in terms of the infection. Most clean city Indore and capital Bhopal have maderecordsinregister- ing single day positive cases. Baba then came to hisbusinessplanandan- nounced that Patanjali has come up with a Kad- ha ‘Trikoot’ which will boosttheimmunity.Now Shivraj govt seems to be determined to make the miraculous ayurvedic solution for 2 crore peo- ple in MP. MAMATA-YECHURY SHARE SAME STAGE All non BJP parties are coming on same page to fight corona cri- sis. A virtual meeting was held in which most opposition party leaders and CMs participated and dwelled on building acommonagendawhich they would repeatedly raise in front of central govt. ‘Common Agenda’ theory was out forward by WB CM Mamata Ba- nerjee. But since PM Modi not only did an aerial survey of WB due to Amphan cyclone, but also gave a Rs 1000 crore package for the state, Mamta didn’t target PM Modi but substituted it with Centre. She said Centre is not respecting the federal structure of thecountrysoallopposi- tion parties should col- lectively raise common agenda. Congress tar- geted Modi govt of mis- handling migrant crisis. CPM leader Sitaram Yechury raised the issue of free grains & food and MSP purchase. What surprisedeverybodywas that both Yechury and Mamata not only shared theplatformbutalsoline of action. SP and BSP, often targeted as B team of BJP, kept a safe dis- tance from this exercise. The author is a journalist and political commentator and views expressed are his personal FIRST INDIA SUNDAY SPECIAL Mamata Banerjee Shivraj Singh ChouhanYogi Adityanath BY TRIDIB RAMAN Priyanka Gandhi There is always something to be thankful for. In a day we always learn something, if not a lot at least a little. Be thankful for the learning and the success. —Jagdeesh Chandra, CEO & Editor, First India JAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia 08 2NDFRONTPOSTAL REG NO. JPC/010/2019-21 Laxman Raghav Churu: it was supposed tobejustanotherdayfor the Rajasthan police, however Saturday brought with it a grim incident, one which the men in Khakhi will not forget for a long time. The unfortunate inci- dent shook the admin- istration and common men alike when sta- tion house officer (SHO) of Rajgarh po- lice station Vishnu Dutt Bishnoi commit- ted suicide at his gov- ernment quarter on Saturday around 11 am. CM Ashok Gehlot took cognizance of the incident immediately and asked DGP Bhu- pendra Singh to give him the status report and to get the whole matter investigated from an independent and competent au- thority. CM Gehlot paid his respects to late Bish- noi by remembering his exemplary services. DGP ordered CID crime branch to take up the inquiry of the case after assigning SP Vikas Sharma the investiga- tor. DGP Singh said that the investigation has been handed over to senior officers of the crime branch and it would be an insult to the departed officer to cast aspersions on the process. SP Vikas Sharma left for Raj- garh in the afternoon while ADG (Crime) BL Soni is constantly monitoring the situa- tion. A shocked Churu SP Tejaswini Gautam was among the first sen- ior police officers to reach Rajgarh after the incident. IGP Jose Mo- han reached Rajgarh and confirmed that the suicide note written by Late SHO mentioned some pressure but didn’t blame anybody. Earlier, as the news of the SHO Bishnoi started doing rounds, shocked residents started flock- ing at the police station. Politicians across party lines started demanding independent probe in the unbelievable suicide of the daredevil officer. MLAs Krishna Punia, Bihari Bishnoi and ex MLA Manoj Nyangali expressed disbelief and demanded an enquiry. Deputy LoP Rajendra RathorealsoreachedRa- jgarh in the evening and wenttothepolicestation straight away. He de- manded CBI inquiry, government job for de- pendent and a compen- sationof Rs5croretothe family. With emotions at a high after the SHO’s death, Deputy LoP Rathore and Dep- uty SP Rampratap en- tered in a verbal spat late in the night in the Rajgarh police station premisesafterRathore and a horde of men en- quired to hand over the dead body to the people of Rajgarh. The DySPdeniedthatunless the family says they wont be able to do so, however on this the duo started quarrelling and this occurred right in front of the SP and IG. After both the men raised their voices, the senior cops rushed in and took the DSP to one side to subdue the heat. MP Rahul Kaswan, who was in Delhi, also reached the spot in the evening and al- leged that senior po- lice officers of the dis- trict weren’t at ease with the style of func- tioning of the honest SHO. The family was particularly upset with the local police to keep the body of Bishnoi hanging, till they ar- rived. They also refused the postmortem of the body. The family has de- manded a judicial in- quiry, a government job for a close family mem- ber and compensation through Retd Addl SP Subhash Vishnoi, uncle of the Late SHO. A curious twist to the whole matter came to light when Advocate Govardhan Singh made his WhatsApp chat with the late SHO public. Ac- cording to the chat, late Vishnu Dutt was deeply disturbed with dirty politicsgoingonaround him. Advocate Govard- han Singh called late Bishnoi an honest and admirable officer and demanded CBI probe. It is noteworthy that late Vishnu Dutt was en- quiring about a firing incident related to the liquor mafia which hap- pened a day ago. People who know this say that liquor mafia and its Har- yana connection is the root cause of most law and order problems in Churu. Now only an in- dependent inquiry will reveal what brought the agile and competent of- ficer to such a mental state that he took the ex- treme step of commit- ting suicide and not opt for a VRS which he had mentioned in his suicide note. Former CM Vasundhara Raje, BJP state chief Satish Punia and Jaipur ru- ral MP Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore too ex- pressed condolences. Rajgarh SHO commits suicide, WhatsApp chat shows was under stress To bolster health infra, CM allots land for super speciality hospital A POWERFUL BUT A SILENT SPECTATOR! First India Bureau Barmer: Chief Minis- ter Ashok Gehlot has sanctioned 100 beegha land for a super speci- ality hospital in Bar- mer which is being seen as a big step in strengthening health infrastructure in the border districts of the state. Barmer MLA Me- varan Jain also has con- tribution in the land al- lotment as he was the one to demand for a su- per speciality hospital from CM Gehlot when he inaugurated medical college in Barmer. CM Gehlot had prom- ised the people the same during his address. Ge- hlot went a notch higher when he allotted this land free of cost. MLA Mevaram Jain has ex- pressed his gratitude to the CM, UDH Min- ister Shanti Dhariwal and Revenue Minister Harish Choudhary for taking such big step. It is noteworthy that border districts like Barmer, Jaisalmer and Sri Ganganagar are de- prived of such facilities. Meanwhile, on Sat- urday, CM Gehlot con- demned the arrest of Uttar Pradesh Con- gress chief Ajay Lallu for allegedly flouting lockdown rules. CM Gehlot also urged PM Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah to intervene in the matter. Taking to Twit- ter, he said, “Arrest of UP Congress chief Mr Ajay Lallu for no fault of his is highly con- demnable. Raising a voice for the common people is no crime. If all political parties in pow- er start doing this it will set a bad precedent.” During the day, CM Gehlot also directed respective district collectors of Ra- jasthan to ensure ad- equate arrangement for well-maintained quarantine centres as five airports -- Jaipur, Jodhpur, Jaisalmer, Bikaner, and Udaipur, are expected to re- ceive passengers from different parts of the world. Subodh Agarw- al, ACS Industries & MSME and Head, State Level Committee for In- terstate Migration said, “Rajasthan Govern- ment had undertaken all necessary steps to ensure smooth and con- venient screening, test- ing and exit movement for people. All travellers were sent to the institu- tional quarantine for 14 days. All of them were given masks, sanitiser, and snacks with a wel- come note by key offi- cials at the Jaipur air- port.” The Rajasthan government has espe- cially spoken to Delhi and Gujarat Govern- ments to ensure that proper arrangements are made, in terms of screening, testing, and maintenance of quar- antine centres for Ra- jasthani migrants com- ing back to their respec- tive state’s airports. Anita Hada New Delhi: During Congress President Sonia Gandhi’s VC with top opposition leaders of the coun- try on Corona crisis on Friday, every top opposition leader was curiously watch- ing the role of a si- lent spectator and Sonia’s principal aide, Ahmed Patel, who is a familiar face among almost all opposition giants because of his key role in forging politi- cal and pre-poll alli- ances during the last thirty years, on be- half of the party high command. Ac- cording to sources, Ahmed Bhai carefully listened to the views of his mentor, the lady Congress President Mrs Gandhi and a few other opposition lead- ers, also made some brief notes but appar- ently kept quiet. In fact one should learn the art of being a ‘silent performer’ from Ahmed Bhai. Even during a recent Congress buses UP payment crisis, as the party treasurer, Patel ensured the timely payment of all Pri- yanka sponsored bus- es from AICC coffers and no financial re- sponsibility was left either for the Chief Minister or to the PCC Chief at Jaipur. Therefore, someone has rightly said that Ahmed Bhai is the man of all seasons. Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot Ahmed Patel Deceased SHO Vishnu Dutt Bishnoi
  • 10. ed is accepted as the colour of life not just because of the life-giving red blood which flows through our veins and arteries but also because no other colour is as much a symbol of life, positiv- ity, warmth, energy, love and passion, as red is. Red is associ- ated with our most physical needs and our will to survive. It exudes strong and power- ful energy. Many of us turn to wear red when we need confi- dence and I personally feel it really enhances the natural beauty of women which is prob- ably why it is the traditional col- our for the bride and for festive occasions. Another reason could be that red awakens our physical life force and stimulates deeper and intimate passions. Now, you know why Valentine’s day is dominated by red. Red represents both, the cupid and the devil. Negatively, it is also an expression of anger. Too much red in the sur- roundings can lead to agitation and irritation. Red is a highly visible colour that is able to draw attention quickly and get people to make de- cisionsquicklywhichisfiretrucks are usually painted red. Flashing red lights mean danger or emer- gency, while stop signs and stop lights use the colour red to alert drivers about the dangers of the intersection. Red represents pow- er and courage. Red’s association with courage and bravery makes it a colour that is used often in na- tional flags, on shields, and in achievement patches. Red is used in phrases which all have different connotations and meanings like saying “in the red” means losing money while the term “red herring” is used when referencing something that is deceiving. We all have used the phrase “paint the town red” which is associated with celebration while “red-eye” is as- sociated with overnight airline flights. The oft used “red carpet treatment” refers to making someone feel special and pam- pered as if they are a VIP or high profile person. CITY FIRST DELVES INTO THE PASSIONATE WORLD OF THE PEOPLE WHO LOVE THE COLOUR RED AND DECODES THE SIGNIFICANCE OF RED! JAIPUR, SUNDAY MAY 24, 2020 www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia 09 PAINT ME RED! RISHEE MIGLANI cityfirst@firstindia.co.in R
  • 11. 10 ETCJAIPUR | SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2020www.firstindia.co.in I www.firstindia.co.in/epaper/ I twitter.com/thefirstindia I facebook.com/thefirstindia I instagram.com/thefirstindia FACEOFTHEDAY SONAXI CHANANA, Model YOUR DAYHoroscope by Saurabbh Sachdeva LEO JULY 24 - AUGUST 23 You will feel energetic, reinvigorated and will adopt a new fitness regime. Being lazy or tired is a thing of past. Adjust yourself in a new set up. Do not leave any stone unturned in working hard academically. Any negligence in studies may lead to situation getting out of hands. LIBRA SEPT 24 - OCTOBER 22 All those who matters will appreciate your initiative to complete all the given work on or before time. You will receive a financial boost may be because of change of job or getting money back from the borrower. Keep following a healthy diet to remain in good shape. ARIES MAR 21 - APR 20 You will make some progress in new direction. Work hard to overcome any weakness and shortcomings for getting good academic results. You may move to a new residence. Government employees will invest for retirement. Do not get emotional. SAGITTARIUS NOV 23 - DEC 22 Your expectation are very high today from the company of someone you love. Your academic performance will improve like anything. Taking care of an elderly, loving them and giving them time will not only bring you recognition but will also bring you blessings. GEMINI MAY 21 - JUNE 21 Academically stay alert, don’t fall for any negative suggestions given by your competitor. Money is no constraint in getting successful in your endeavours. Set a goal and move in the direction of achieving it. Read property papers with extra caution before making any deal. AQUARIUS JAN 21 - FEB 19 Today prioritize your health. Take a break or slow down on professional front or else your health will start suffering. Today is also the best day for you as you would get the opportunity to interact with important people. Now is the time to prove your metal in the field that you have chosen. TAURUS APR 21 - MAY 20 Take preventive measures for your health will prove beneficial. Enjoy quality time with you friends and family and bury all the resentments of the past . Todays is your day for romance. Stars are supporting you, go ahead be confident about your emotions and express yourself. CAPRICORN DEC 23 - JAN 20 Love will keep you satisfied. Having correct attitude is must if you want to fit in the crowd. To reach your desired goal, focus on the teamwork and good management skills. Avoid being strong headed in sensitive matters. Please take care of your health. VIRGO AUG 24 - SEP 23 Smile because to your delight, you will start doing stuff or something that you had to discontinue doing in the past. Prepare well and in advance if you want to move mountains in a new and a totally different field of work. Be careful on what you spend and how you spend. CANCER JUNE 22 - JULY 23 On professional front come up with new ideas. Invest your time in making things work that have been given up by your co workers, as this will help you in getting noticed. Don’t indulge in outspreading rumours as it may backfire also simply you will gain nothing out of it. PISCES FEB20 - MARCH 20 Please take responsibility for your actions. Your ambitions are on hault because of your will and once you revive life will be awesome. Your plan for business expansion may not go as smoothly as planned by you because of current situations but things will settle. SCORPIO OCT 23 - NOVEMBER 22 Prove your point by using facts and figures and a little more effort from your end will surprise everyone. You will feel confident and strong. Today is your day, professionally you will be very efficient at workplace. You will feel secure in terms of money. hen Buddhism spread beyond India, the first nation in which it took roots wasSriLanka.Kandy is a large picturesque city in central Sri Lanka. Covered with lush green rainforest and sur- roundedbymountainsIfound the city extremely beautiful and mesmerizing. The city is embraced with many tea plan- tations in and around like DAMRO tea estate, etc. It is famed for sacred Buddhist sites, including the Temple of the Sacred Buddha Tooth Rel- ic. The Buddhist shrine is lo- cally known as the Sri Dalada Maligawa. The temple is spread along the Kandy lake and located in the royal palace complex of the former King- dom of Kandy. It was declared a world heritage site by UNE- SCO in 1988. I got the wonderful opportu- nity to visit the temple. As I entered inside the hall of the main shrine was captivated to see the old wooden architec- ture. From the hall two sepa- ratestaircaseswereultimately going upstairs (from left and right directions) where Bud- dha’s original left upper ca- ninetoothhasbeenpreserved. The sacred tooth is conserved in the inner chamber of the upper floor of two-storied Sri Dalada Maligawa temple. The temple is designed in tradi- tional style with a decoration of uniquelybuilt128lotusgold flowers on the roof. Two large elephant tusks are placed in the front of the shrine. Lotus flower has great significance inKandy.WhenIwalkedatthe upper floor people were offer- inglotusflowersinfrontof the sacred tooth chamber to fulfill their wishes. Journeyof Buddha’ssacred tooth from India to Kandy, Sri Lanka- After the parinirvana of Gautam Buddha, the body of BuddhawascrematedatUt- tar Pradesh’s Khushinagar district in India. Buddha’s left canine tooth was retrieved from the funeral by his disci- ple, Khema. Khema then gave the tooth to the Kingdom of Kalinga’s King Brahmadatte. It became a royal possession and was kept at Dantapuri in Odhisha. Thenceforth, the Tooth relic of the Kalinga be- came an object of great ven- eration by generations of Ka- linga kings. Consequently several attempts were made to destroy the Relic by the fanati- cal rulers. Yet the Tooth relic was miraculously saved every time. In the 4th Century AD thelastIndianrulertopossess the Tooth relic was Guhasiva of Kalinga. Guhasiva in order topreventitspossessionbyhis enemies who made war sent thetoothtoSriLankathrough his daughter Princess He- mamali and her husband, Prince Dantha. Princess He- mamalicarriedGautamaBud- dha’s tooth relic hidden in her hair to Sri Lanka. That time KingKirtiSriMegavannawas therulerof SriLankaandasa piousBuddhisthereceivedthe sacred Tooth Relic with great veneration. He built a beauti- fulpalacewithintheRoyalPal- ace Complex itself and en- shrined the Relic in it. As time went on, the land was threat- ened with foreign invasions, and the seat of the kingdom shiftedfromAnuradhapurato Polonnaruwaandthereafterto Dambadeniyaandothercities. With every change of capital, a new palace was built to en- shrinetheRelic.Finally,itwas broughttoKandywhereitisat present, in the Sri Dalada Ma- ligawa temple. AN UNHEARD JOURNEY OF GAUTAM BUDDHA’S SACRED TOOTH RELIC FROM INDIA TO SRI LANKA AN UNTOLD TALE BUDDHA TOOTH TEMPLE ANUBHA JAIN cityfirst@firstindia.co.in W T he tooth temple was refurbished again as it was attacked by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), very recently in 1998. In early 1998, Sri Lanka was ready to celebrate its 50th independence anniversary from Great Britain. Charles, Prince of Wales with a number of foreign dignitaries were scheduled to arrive in the following days. Kandy city was chosen as the host for such important event on February 4th. On 25th January 1998, the LTTE exploded a massive truck bomb inside the Temple of the Tooth premises. The attack caused severe damage to the temple; especially to its roof and the facade. But neither its inner chambers nor the tooth relic were harmed. Complete restoration took more than one and a half years to complete. Earlier also the temple sustained damage from bombing in 1989 but was fully restored that time also. All damaged sculptures were made new, and damaged paintings on lime plaster were reassembled and reintegrated with the existing pieces. After every 5 years through a grand procession of ten-days ‘Esala Perahera’ the replica of the tooth is brought out for public viewing. With parades of dancers and drummers the procession is celebrated like a festival to pay homage to the Sacred Tooth. In the procession, a royal male elephant carries the great relic of Sacred Tooth. Since 1990, a casket is carried instead of the relic due to fear of robbery. E lephant Raja Maligawa was the sacred casket bearer of the procession for around 50 years. On 20th August 1986 former Sri Lankan President J.R.Javewardene declared Raja as a national treasure, in recognition of his valuable services to the religion and culture of Sri Lanka. Raja died in July 1988 and his death prompted the government to order a day of national mourning in Sri Lanka. A postage stamp was issued in its memory on 12 December 1989. Raja’s stuffed remains are presently kept in a special museum within the Temple premises. The shrine complex is surrounded by the beautiful garden and there are various associated buildings and structure in the temple such as the Royal Palace, Audience Hall, and Mahamaluwa. INSIGHTS! INSIGHTS!