Tag: rules

  • Maharashtra government suspends licenses of six cough syrup makers for violating rules

    Maharashtra government suspends licenses of six cough syrup makers for violating rules

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    Mumbai: The Maharashtra government told the state Legislative Assembly on Friday that the licenses of six manufacturers of cough syrups in the state have been suspended for not following the rules.

    Food and Drugs Administration Minister Sanjay Rathod made the statement while replying to a calling attention notice by Ashish Shelar (BJP) and others.

    Recently, a cough syrup made by a Noida-based firm was alleged to have caused the death of 18 children in Uzbekistan. Noida police on Friday said they had arrested three employees of the firm.

    Rathod said that the Maharashtra government had initiated inquiry against 84 out of 108 manufacturers of cough syrups in the state.

    Four of them were directed to stop production while the licences of six companies were suspended, he said.

    As many as 17 firms were served show-cause notices for violation of rules, the minister added.

    Shelar referred to the deaths of 66 children in Gambia allegedly because of cough syrups imported from India.

    But the minister said that the company which was facing the charge of violation of rules in that case was based in Haryana and had no manufacturing unit in Maharashtra.

    “We have, however, taken a strict action against the violators of rules. We are ensuring that the World Health Organization’s GMP (good manufacturing practises) certification-related rules and Certificate of Pharmaceutical Products are complied with while exporting products (from the state),” he added.

    Presiding officer Sanjay Shirsat said if 20 per cent of manufacturers faced raids because of suspected violation of rules, it needs to be taken very seriously as it was akin to playing with people’s lives.

    Rathod said of 996 allopathic drug manufacturers in the state, 514 manufacturers export their products.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Can’t be a pliable EC’: SC rules panel of PM, LoP, CJI for appointment of CEC, ECs

    ‘Can’t be a pliable EC’: SC rules panel of PM, LoP, CJI for appointment of CEC, ECs

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Thursday ordered that appointment to the posts of Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and the Election Commissioners (EC) should be done by the President on the advice of a committee consisting of the Prime Minister, the Leader of Opposition, and the Chief Justice of India.

    The top court noted that a pliable Election Commission, an unfair and biased overseer of the foundational exercise of adult franchise, which lies at the heart of democracy, who obliges the powers that be, perhaps offers the surest gateway to acquisition and retention of power.

    A five-judge constitution bench, headed by Justice K.M. Joseph and comprising Justices Ajay Rastogi, Aniruddha Bose, Hrishikesh Roy, and C. T. Ravikumar, said: “We are concerned with and the devastating effect of continuing to leave appointments in sole hands of the executive on fundamental values, as also the fundamental rights, we are of the considered view that the time is ripe for the court to lay down norms.”

    “We declare that as far as appointment to the posts of Chief Election Commissioner and the Election Commissioners are concerned, the same shall be done by the President of India on the basis of the advice tendered by a Committee consisting of the Prime Minister of India, the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha and, in case, there is no such leader, the leader of the largest party in the opposition in the Lok Sabha having the largest numerical strength, and the Chief Justice of India. This norm will continue to hold good till a law is made by the Parliament.”

    The bench, in its 378-page judgment, said there cannot be any doubt that the Election Commission is to perform the arduous and unenviable task of remaining aloof from all forms of subjugation by and interference from the executive. “One of the ways, in which, the executive can bring an otherwise independent body to its knees, is by starving it off or cutting off the requisite financial wherewithal and resources required for its efficient and independent functioning,” it noted.

    Making an appeal for a permanent secretariat for the EC, the bench said that a vulnerable commission may cave in to the pressure from the executive and, thus, it would result in an insidious but veritable conquest of an otherwise defiant and independent commission.

    Emphasising on Parliament making a law, the bench said the vacuum exists on the basis that unlike other appointments, it was intended all throughout that appointment exclusively by the executive was to be a mere transient or stop gap arrangement and it was to be replaced by a law made by the Parliament taking away the exclusive power of the executive. “This conclusion is clear and inevitable and the absence of law even after seven decades points to the vacuum,” it added.

    Justice Joseph, who authored the judgment on behalf of the bench, said: “Criminalisation of politics, with all its attendant evils, has become a nightmarish reality. The faith of the electorate in the very process, which underlies democracy itself, stands shaken. The impact of ‘big money’ and its power to influence elections, the influence of certain sections of media, makes it also absolutely imperative that the appointment of the Election Commission, which has been declared by this court to be the guardian of the citizenry and its fundamental rights, becomes a matter, which cannot be postponed further.”

    The bench added that criminalisation of politics, a huge surge in the influence of money power, the role of certain sections of the media where they appear to have forgotten their invaluable role and have turned unashamedly partisan, call for the unavoidable and unpostponable filling up of the vacuum.

    “Even as it is said that justice must not only be done but seen to be done, the outpouring of demands for an impartial mode of appointment of the members require, at the least, the banishing of the impression, that the Election Commission is appointed by less than fair means,” noted the bench.

    It added that political parties undoubtedly would appear to betray a special interest in not being forthcoming with the law and there is a crucially vital link between the independence of the Election Commission and the pursuit of power, its consolidation and perpetuation.

    “As long as the party that is voted into power is concerned, there is, not unnaturally, a near insatiable quest to continue in the saddle. A pliable Election Commission, an unfair and biased overseer of the foundational exercise of adult franchise, which lies at the heart of democracy, who obliges the powers that be, perhaps offers the surest gateway to acquisition and retention of power,” said the bench.

    The bench noted that the demand for putting in place safeguards to end the pernicious effects of the exclusive power being vested with the executive to make appointment to the Election Commission, has been the demand of political parties across the board.

    “Successive governments have, irrespective of their colour, shied away from undertaking, what again we find was considered would be done by Parliament, by the founding fathers,” it added.

    The top court’s judgment came on a batch of petitions filed by Anoop Baranwal, Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay, NGO Association for Democratic Reforms and Jaya Thakur seeking an independent mechanism for appointment of CEC and ECs.

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    #pliable #rules #panel #LoP #CJI #appointment #CEC #ECs

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rules Changing From Today: From the time of trains to the prices

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    Rules Changing From 1 March 2023: New month has started from today i.e. March has started. From today many rules have changed (Rules Changing From Today) and its effect is going to be on your pocket.

    1 March 2023: New month has started from today i.e. March has started. From today many rules have changed (Rules Changing From Today) and its effect is going to be on your pocket. It is very important for you to know about this. It is very important for you to know about this. From the prices of gas cylinders to bank loans, many rules are going to change. Let us tell you which rules have changed from today-

    How can it affect people

    If you also spend money in the right way and if you do not spend much money. Then this is very bad news for you. Due to change in many things, your pocket is going to be loose from today.

    1. How many days will the banks remain closed in March?

    From today the month of March has started and many rules have also changed. Many festivals including Holi and Navratri will be celebrated in this month. Due to which banks will remain closed for 12 days. For more information about holidays, you can also visit the official link of Reserve Bank of India https://rbi.org.in/Scripts/HolidayMatrixDisplay.aspx.

    2. Bank loan can be expensive

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has increased its repo rate, due to which many banks have also increased their MCLR and increasing it will have a direct impact on people’s pockets. In which home loan, car loan, education loan all will increase. Due to this people may have to take loan now.

     

    3. Change in timings of trains

    Indian Railways has also changed its timing. From today, the Railways has made a lot of changes in the time table of its 5000 freight trains and thousands of passenger trains. If you also travel in the train or are going to travel, then you must check the timing of the train.

    4. Gas cylinder became expensive

    Before Holi, the common man has got another blow of inflation. Domestic gas companies have increased the price of domestic LPG cylinder by Rs 50 after a long time. In the capital Delhi, the price of 14.2 kg domestic LPG cylinder has increased to Rs 1103.

    5. Increased rates of milk

    From today, the price of milk has increased by Rs 5 per liter in Mumbai. The wholesale prices of buffalo milk in Mumbai have increased by Rs 5 per liter from Tuesday midnight.

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    #Rules #Changing #Today #time #trains #prices

    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • ‘A little premature’: Republicans urge Congress not to rush rail rules

    ‘A little premature’: Republicans urge Congress not to rush rail rules

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    Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott, who has criticized Buttigieg for waiting three weeks to visit the site of the Feb. 3 accident, tweeting last week that Buttigieg should “show up, do your job and stop playing politics.”

    Asked on Tuesday what Congress should do after the Ohio derailment, Scott would only say that lawmakers should “start doing our oversight and stop approving people that don’t know how to do the job.”

    Other Republicans say they want to wait until the National Transportation Safety Board, the independent agency probing the accident, finishes its work. That could take up to 18 months.

    “A lot of people have a lot of ideas right now,” Nehls told POLITICO. “The NTSB had their preliminary report. There’ll be more information coming.”

    One of DOT’s requests for Congress is an increase in the maximum penalties to railroads for safety violations — an idea Nehls dismissed, instead praising the industry’s safety record.

    “The rail industry has a very high success rate of moving hazardous material — to the point of 99-percent-plus,” Nehls said. “Let’s not have more burdensome regulations and all this other stuff.”

    Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ark.), who served as top Republican on the rail panel before the House flipped control, agreed on waiting for the experts to weigh in “before we start speculating on what legislative fixes might be offered, if it’s necessary, and if so what would they be.”

    “Probably a little premature at this point,” he added.

    And Graves told Fox News Digital on Feb. 16 that he wants to “fully understand the facts involved” before considering legislation, noting that the NTSB is still investigating. Then, he said, “Congress can consider what steps may be necessary.”

    Democrats on the whole have been much swifter to call for changes — including Buttigieg, who has pledged to tighten the way his agency regulates trains, but has also asked Congress to increase the $225,455 cap on fines his agency can level and to strengthen braking and tank car requirements.

    A few Republicans are showing signs they’re willing to join Democrats sooner rather than later.

    Ohio Republican Sen. J.D. Vance, for example, is working with Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) on a rail-safety bill expected to be out soon. Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, who has called for Buttigieg’s resignation over the derailment, has said he’s interested in teaming up on their bill.

    “There’s a Vance-Sherrod Brown bill that we’re looking at, that we’re very interested in maybe being a part of,” Rubio said in an interview Tuesday.

    Brown said the bill he’s working on will likely include provisions including setting minimum requirements for how many employees should be on board a train, along with train length, speed limits and notifications to states when hazardous materials are on their way, he told reporters Tuesday.

    He noted that the 150-car train that derailed in East Palestine, carrying hazardous chemicals such as vinyl chloride, had “one trainee and two staff people” aboard when the disaster occurred.

    A Brown-Vance team-up may seem to some like an odd couple pairing, but Rubio and Vance previously wrote to Buttigieg asking whether a two-person crew is adequate. Democrats have pushed to enshrine a two-person minimum crew in federal regulations, a move opposed by the railroad industry and, historically, most Republicans. The Trump administration backed the railroad industry when it mothballed a rule that would have mandated at least two crewmembers on board every train. That rule had originally been proposed under the Obama administration.

    “Republicans have seen what’s happened, too,” Brown said, explaining the bipartisan interest he’s seen so far. “The rail companies have done pretty effective lobbying in keeping Congress and the administration, the [Federal Railroad Administration] and others from doing what we ought to be doing.”

    Indeed, Rubio said Tuesday that the freight rail industry’s “push for efficiency — the desire to put more cargo, longer lines, longer stretches and less people” — creates vulnerabilities.

    “We have not just dangerous but important cargo being transported on longer [trains] with less people,” he said.

    Other legislation has been floated in the House. Rep. Chris Deluzio (D-Pa.), whose district includes the area affected by the Ohio spill, has introduced a bill along with a dozen other Democrats that seeks to include more types of trains under stricter laws governing hazardous materials transport. That means more types of materials would be subject to tougher safety requirements such as slower speeds, newer rail cars and better braking equipment.

    The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will hold a hearing on the derailment, featuring the Environmental Protection Agency, top committee Republican Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia said Tuesday. She said the Senate Commerce Committee would also hold a hearing, though as yet nothing has been scheduled.

    Like many of her GOP colleagues, Capito didn’t have many positive words for the Biden administration.

    The federal response to the derailment “has been, I think, miserable to watch,” she said.

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had sounded a similar theme Monday, accusing Buttigieg of seeming “more interested in pursuing press coverage for woke initiatives and climate nonsense than in attending to the basic elements of his day job.”

    But so far, McConnell hasn’t said what, if any, legislation he thinks is needed to make rail safer.

    Buttigieg shot back Tuesday.

    “The freight rail industry has wielded a lot of power here in Washington,” he said on CNN. “I would love to see Leader McConnell join us in standing up to them.”



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    #premature #Republicans #urge #Congress #rush #rail #rules
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • PIL in SC seeks framing of rules for live-in relationships; mentions Shraddha Walkar’s killing

    PIL in SC seeks framing of rules for live-in relationships; mentions Shraddha Walkar’s killing

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    New Delhi: A PIL was filed in the Supreme Court seeking a direction to the Centre to frame rules for registration of live-in relationships as it cited increase in crimes like rape and murder allegedly committed by live-in partners.

    The plea, which referred to the recent killing of Shraddha Walkar allegedly by her live-in partner Aaftab Amin Poonawala, also sought framing of rules and guidelines for registration of such relationships.

    The PIL said registration of live-in relationship would lead to accurate information being available to both the live-in partners about each other and also to the government about each of them regarding their marital status, their criminal history and other relevant details.

    Besides the increase in crimes like rape and murder, the plea, filed by lawyer Mamta Rani, said there has been a “huge increase in the false rape cases being filed by the women wherein the women claims to be living in live-in relationships with the accused and it is always difficult for the courts to find out from the evidence whether the fact of living in live-in relationship is proved by the backing of evidence”.

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    #PIL #seeks #framing #rules #livein #relationships #mentions #Shraddha #Walkars #killing

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  •  JK High Court Notifies Rules For Live Streaming

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    SRINAGAR: The High Court of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh on Monday issued regulations governing the live broadcasting and recording of proceedings in courts and tribunals in the Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh.

    The High Court Registrar General, Shahzad Azeem, released the rules on Monday under the title “Live Streaming and Recording of Court Sessions Rules of the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, 2023.”

    Per rule 5, it is strictly forbidden to record proceedings on audio, video, or by any other method than what is required by the regulations.

    The laws further state that live streaming is prohibited during court procedures involving marriage, gender-based violence against women, sexual offenses, and instances covered by the Protection of Children from Sexual Offenses Act (POCSO Act).

    Also, cases that the bench believes may incite animosity among communities and perhaps lead to a breakdown of law and order will not be streamed live.

    Furthermore, cases that the bench believes may incite animosity among communities and perhaps lead to a breakdown of law and order will not be streamed live.

    Moreover, live streaming will not be available for any other matters in which the Chief Justice or the bench has given a special directive.

    Any individual or organization is prohibited under Rule 9 from recording, distributing, or transmitting live-streamed proceedings or archival data through print, electronic, or social media.

    It further states that any unauthorized usage of the live stream will be punishable as an offense under the Indian Copyright Act of 1957, the Information Technology Act of 2000, and other provisions of law including the law of contempt of court.

    Without the prior written consent of the Court, the live stream cannot be reproduced, copied, transferred, uploaded, posted, edited, published, or reprinted in any way.

    As per the Rules, court proceedings in matrimonial matters, cases concerning gender-based violence against women, cases concerning sexual offences and cases under the POCSO Act would stand excluded from live streaming.

    Read Rules Here / Live_Streaming_Rules

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    #High #Court #Notifies #Rules #Live #Streaming

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Health – Spain rules out a suspected case of contagion of the Marburg virus

    Health – Spain rules out a suspected case of contagion of the Marburg virus

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    First modification:

    After the outbreak has already claimed nine lives in Equatorial Guinea, alarms were raised in Spain by a traveler who arrived from the African country and who had symptoms compatible with the disease. With Dr. Óscar Franco, we review the real risk involved in this rare virus, not very contagious, but very lethal.

    #Health #Spain #rules #suspected #case #contagion #Marburg #virus

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    #Health #Spain #rules #suspected #case #contagion #Marburg #virus
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • New rules applicable: Big news! These 5 major changes are

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    Rules Changes From March 2023: The month of February is about to end. The month of March is about to start soon and many new rules will become effective from 1st March and some rules may affect your spending plan.

    On March 1, social media, bank loans, LPG cylinders and others can be big. At the same time, the schedule of Indian Railways has also been changed. Let us know which new rules will be applicable in March and how they can affect your monthly expenses.

    Bank loan can be expensive

    The Reserve Bank of India has recently increased the repo rate. After which many banks have increased their MCLR rates. This will directly affect the loan and EMI. The burden of EMI and rising loan interest rates can trouble the common man.

    LPG and CNG prices hiked

    Gas prices for LPG, CNG and PNG are fixed at the beginning of every month. Although the price of LPG cylinder was not increased last time, but this time it is being speculated that there may be an increase in the prices due to the festival.

    change in train schedule

    Indian Railways can make some changes in the schedule of trains as soon as summer approaches. The list can be made public in March. According to media sources, from March 1, the schedule of 5,000 goods trains and thousands of passenger trains can be changed.

    Bank holiday

    Banks will remain closed for 12 days including Holi and Navratri in March. This also includes weekly bank holidays.

    Changes to the Social Media Terms and Conditions

    The Government of India has recently amended the IT rules. Now, social media sites like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram will have to comply with the new Indian rules. The new policy will be effective for posts that incite religious sentiments. The new rule may come into force in March. Incorrect posts can also result in fines for users.

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    #rules #applicable #Big #news #major

    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Lobbyists to Biden: Unless you want to cede to China, relax microchip rules

    Lobbyists to Biden: Unless you want to cede to China, relax microchip rules

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    The chip industry’s push underscores the tension between President Joe Biden’s plans to resurrect high-tech manufacturing in the U.S. and his administration’s effort to strengthen environmental protections. Even as the White House pushes for an advantage in the tech race with China, an exemption for federally funded chip projects would run counter to Biden’s recent rollback of Trump-era rules that sought to limit the ability of federal agencies to conduct environmental reviews.

    A spokesperson for the Commerce Department’s CHIPS Program Office declined to comment.

    At issue is the National Environmental Policy Act, a decades-old law that puts extra environmental review requirements on construction projects in which the federal government plays a major role. While many industries, like highway builders or other infrastructure contractors, have decades of experience dealing with the law, it’s something new for the semiconductor industry — and it’s hoping to avoid it, arguing that any delays could spell trouble for Washington’s broader chip plans.

    “Time is of the essence,” David Isaacs, vice president of government affairs at SIA, told POLITICO on Thursday.

    In a separate filing, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — the largest lobbying group in the country — also pushed the Biden administration to provide new chip projects with an exemption to the review process. The Chamber highlighted the “vital and strategic role semiconductors play in both economic and national security,” and warned that NEPA reviews could cause some projects to take “as much as 7 years to be approved.”

    The semiconductor industry has also been working lawmakers on Capitol Hill. In a hearing on Feb. 1, House Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) said chip manufacturers “are coming to us looking for exemptions from NEPA, because the federal dollars are triggering long and erroneous environmental reviews for them.”

    In a Friday statement, McMorris Rodgers warned that Washington will be unable to beat China in the fight over microchips and other tech if new projects are “bogged down and delayed by America’s burdensome regulatory and permitting environment.” She said the issue “should have been addressed before Congress spent tens of billions of dollars” on chip subsidies, but added that House Republicans “will continue to lead on solutions that address permitting issues for every industry in our economy.”

    The Biden administration remains worried by the concentration of advanced chip production in Taiwan, which sits just 90 miles from an increasingly hostile China. Sujai Shivakumar, director of the Renewing American Innovation Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank, said environmental concerns shouldn’t interfere with the national security goals that underpin the CHIPS and Science Act’s billions of dollars in manufacturing subsidies.

    “Some of these environmental assessments can take anywhere from two years to 4½ years,” Shivakumar said. “To some real extent, what CHIPS and Science giveth, NEPA could taketh away.”

    Some environmentalists disagree with that claim. Brett Hartl, government affairs director at the Center for Biological Diversity, said the chip lobby’s fears “feel like unnecessary paranoia that’s mostly stemming from an unfamiliarity with how NEPA works.” He said the law is frequently trotted out by industry as an “umbrella scapegoat for all types of delays in approvals of projects.” While Hartl could not say there’s a “zero chance” that taking federal chip subsidies would by itself prompt a NEPA review, he called it “a relatively unlikely thing that would trigger it.”

    But the chip lobby is still spooked. On Thursday, Isaacs said a “balance can be struck” on NEPA that allows new chip manufacturing facilities to begin operations “in a timely and environmentally responsible way, achieve the goals of the CHIPS Act, and reinforce America’s economic and national security.”

    Some lawmakers question why the chip industry didn’t make more noise about NEPA until after Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law last summer. In the February hearing, McMorris Rodgers said she had previously urged manufacturers to ask Congress for permitting reform along with the federal subsidies.

    “Unfortunately, that seemed to fall on deaf ears,” McMorris Rodger said. “[The manufacturers] were really interested in the money.”

    The lobbying effort is going down to the wire. In a Thursday speech at Georgetown University, Raimondo said the Commerce Department will officially launch the application process for chip subsidies on Tuesday. But without clarity on federal environmental reviews, Shivakumar said chipmakers will struggle to draft the manufacturing proposals Commerce hopes to receive.

    “What the semiconductor companies want is some certainty,” Shivakumar said. While the companies have already factored state and local environmental procedures into their plans, Shivakumar said NEPA “is an unknown to them.”

    Chip factories use huge amounts of energy and are notoriously thirsty. The facilities require vast quantities of purified water to wash the silicon wafers used to make chips — and while much of it is later “recycled” back into the environment, the purification process is so thorough that salts and other minerals must be added back into the water before it returns to nature. Chip facilities also use a variety of corrosive chemicals to etch chips into the wafers, potentially raising additional contamination concerns.

    For industries to receive a categorical exclusion from NEPA, they must show that the “class of actions” under review (in this case, chipmaking) “do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment.” But Hartl said that even if the Commerce Department wanted to grant that exclusion, they’d first have to kick off a rulemaking process.

    “That is a two-year, three-year process,” said Hartl — likely small comfort for the chip lobby, whose members are hoping to receive the subsidies within the next year.

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    #Lobbyists #Biden #cede #China #relax #microchip #rules
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Bengal: English question paper appears on social media; state board rules out leak

    Bengal: English question paper appears on social media; state board rules out leak

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    Kolkata: Purported image of a few pages of the English second language question paper was circulated on social media, sometime after the class 10 state board examinations began in West Bengal on Friday, the second day of the exams.

    The image of the question paper was uploaded on WhatsApp from an exam centre in Malda district, Education Minister Bratya Basu said.

    West Bengal Board of Secondary Education (WBBSE) President Ramanuj Ganguly said it cannot be termed a leak as only three of the 16 pages of the question paper were circulated on WhatsApp one and a half hours after the three-hour-long exam started at 12 noon.

    “How can it be called a leak? The candidates were inside the exam centres and the exams were already in progress. You can describe it as an attempt by someone to sabotage the smooth conduct of the examination process. The board will not treat the issue lightly,” he said when contacted by PTI.

    Ganguly, who is touring exam centres in various districts since Friday, said the board has requested the state administration to trace the origin of this WhatsApp post which was later forwarded many times.

    “The image of the question paper was circulated from an exam centre in Malda district. As stated by the Board president, I also think it is an act of sabotage. The board President will probably submit a report by tomorrow,” the education minister told reporters on the sidelines of an event.

    A guardian of an examinee in a north Kolkata school, who got the image on her WhatsApp number, said it was forwarded from one of her acquaintances in Murshidabad district.

    Altogether 6,98,627 candidates are writing papers in 2,867 centres in the Madhyamik Examination conducted by the WBBSE. The exams began on February 23 and will continue till March 4.

    In 2022, a purported image of the English question paper similarly surfaced on social media but the Board had said it was fake with no resemblance to the original one.

    In past editions of the Madhyamik exams between 2017 and 2019, there had been similar instances when images of purported question papers of English, Physical Science and other subjects circulated on social media after the start of the exams. However, each time they did not tally with the original.

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    #Bengal #English #question #paper #appears #social #media #state #board #rules #leak

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )