The Hindu Newsletter - The biggest news stories from today [logo] The Evening Wrap Monday | 24 May, 2021 [The Hindu logo]
Welcome to the Evening Wrap newsletter, your guide to the dayâs biggest stories with concise analysis from The Hindu. [[Arrow]Open in browser]( [[Mail icon]More newsletters]( As Twitter adds âmanipulated mediaâ tag added to tweets of five more BJP leaders, Delhi Police raids its offices Two days after the Centre wrote to Twitter asking the social media giant to remove âmanipulated mediaâ tag from the post of BJP leader Sambit Patra on the âCongress toolkitâ issue, [officers of the Delhi Police Special Cell raided its offices in Delhi and Gurgaon](. A senior police officer said Twitter had been served a notice on the case. âWe want to know what information Twitter has about the toolkit and why they chose to give the âmanipulated mediaâ label. Our team is conducting raids at their Delhi office in Mehrauli and their Gurgaon office on Golf Course Road,â he added. [India has been severely affected by the second wave of COVID-19 that has left people in several states scrambling for oxygen supplies, beds in hospitals, drugs and vaccines.] Meanwhile, tweets related to the so-called âCongress toolkitâ from verified accounts of at least five BJP leaders, including Rajya Sabha MP Vinay Sahasrabuddhe and partyâs national social media in-charge Priti Gandhi, in addition to national spokesperson Sambit Patra, continue to be labelled as âmanipulated mediaâ though the government had asked Twitter to remove the tag. Other leaders whose tweets are on the same issue have been tagged as âmanipulated mediaâ include BJP co-incharge of Andhra Pradesh Sunil Deodhar, partyâs media panellist Charu Pragya, and Delhi general secretary Kuljeet Singh Chahal. The government had on Friday asked Twitter to remove the âmanipulated mediaâ tag from certain tweets by its leaders, including Patra, âwith reference to a toolkit created to undermine, derail and demean the efforts of the government against COVID-19 pandemicâ. However, the microblogging website has not removed the label. According to experts, the government does not have the power under the Information Technology Act to direct Twitter to remove âmanipulated mediaâ tag from certain tweets. Such a move by the Centre had also raised concerns of censorship, they said. Kazim Rizvi, Founder of policy think-tank The Dialogue said, âAll Social media platforms have their Terms of Service which users sign-up for at the time of joining a platform and agree to abide by these Terms. If anyone violates these terms of service, they are subject to a range of enforcements as outlined by the respective platforms.â Rizvi said this was a standard global practice for platforms across the world and not just for Twitter in India. He also pointed out that the IT Act did not empower the Ministry of Electronics and IT to order a platform to undo its enforcement decision (labelling a post) and any attempt to interfere raised concerns of censorship and lack of transparency. [underlineimg] Widespread resentment in Lakshadweep over a slew of new law proposals [Discontent is simmering in the Lakshadweep group of islands over a slew of regulations introduced by the new administrator](, Praful Khoda Patel, in the last five months of his rule, which also saw the archipelago descend from being a âCOVID-free regionâ for nearly a year into one with 6,847 cases until May 24. The stipulation for mandatory quarantine of Dweep-bound travellers in Kochi was done away with under his stewardship. The ten inhabited islands of the Union Territory are under lockdown for two months now and the Dweep administration is accused of exploiting the inability of the public to mobilise to push whatâs widely seen by the islanders as âarbitrary legislationsâ that are out of sync with the social, political and environmental realities of the archipelago. The latest draft regulation for the creation of a Lakshadweep Development Authority (LDA) is widely resented as the people suspect that this might have been issued at the behest of real estate interests seeking to usurp the small holdings of property owned by the islanders, a majority of them (94.8% as per the 2011 census) belonging to the Scheduled Tribes. Hundreds of islanders have written to the administrator demanding that the proposed regulation, which makes âprovision for the orderly and progressive development of land in both urban and rural areas and to preserve and improve the amenities thereof; for the grant of permission to develop land and for other powers of control over the use of land; to confer additional powers in respect of the acquisition and development of land for planning; and for purposes connected with the matters aforesaidâ be withdrawn. One of the petitions seeking the withdrawal of the LDA regulation says the legislation vests such powers with the authority that it can prepare comprehensive development plans for any area and relocate people regardless of their will. It provides for forcible eviction, puts the onus on the owner to develop his holding as per the plan prepared by the authority as also to heavily penalise them in the event of non-compliance. âThe island community is a close-knit group with families living in close proximity. The regulation will destroy the way of life practised by them for generations,â said an islander. Further, proposals to bring real estate development concepts such as âtransferable development rightsâ to the island have raised the hackles of people who fear they would be forced to migrate en masse. âThe draconian regulation is neither ecologically sustainable nor socially viable and the peopleâs representatives were not consulted before drafting it. Also, it comes in the wake of a slew of bad law proposals including the âPrevention of Anti-Social Activities Regulationâ, a âgoonda actâ, in the Dweep which is known for the lowest crime rate in the country,â says Mohammed Faizal, MP from the Dweep. As online campaigns to save Lakshadweep is gaining strength with celebrities including actor Prithviraj raising their voice in solidarity, Elamaram Kareem, Rajya Sabha MP, has written to President Ramnath Kovind urging him to recall the âauthoritarianâ administrator. Kareemâs plea was in reference to the recent âLakshadweep Animals Preservation Regulationâ that bans cattle slaughter and trade, which he said was proposed with scant regard for the islandersâ choice of food and livelihood. As per the 20110 Census, the Lakshadweep population is 96% Muslim, followed by Hindus (2.77%) and Christians (0.5%). [underlineimg] On-site registration, appointment enabled for 18-44 age group on CoWIN [On-site registration and appointment for COVID-19 vaccination is now being enabled for 18-44 years age group on CoWIN](, a statement issued by the Union Health Ministry on Monday said. However, this feature is being enabled only for government COVID Vaccination Centers (CVCs) now and would not be available for private CVCs presently. Private CVCs should publish their vaccination schedules exclusively with slots for online appointments, it stated. In case of sessions exclusively organised with online slots, towards the end of the day, some doses may still be left unutilised in case the online appointee beneficiaries did not turn up on the day of vaccination due to any reason, it noted. âIn such cases, on-site registration of a few beneficiaries may be necessary to minimize the vaccine wastage. This feature would be used only upon the decision of the respective State/Union Territory governments to do so. âState/UT must decide on opening of on-site registrations/facilitated cohortsâ registration and appointments for 18-44 years age group based on the local context just as an additional measure to minimise vaccine wastage and for facilitating vaccination of eligible beneficiaries in the age group 18-44 years,â stated the release. [underlineimg] Supreme Court raps Centre for delay in compiling database of migrant workers The Supreme Court today [pulled up the government for the delay in completing a national database to identify and register migrant workers across the country]( in order to provide them benefits in times of dire need. A Bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan and M.R. Shah acknowledged submissions made by advocate Prashant Bhushan that such a database would have made it easier for the government to identify and provide essentials like food and dry rations to stranded migrant labourers during the second wave of the pandemic. âThe direction [for the database] was issued by this court in 2018...Your process is very slow. We are not satisfied. We will pass orders on this,â Justice Bhushan addressed Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, for the Centre. Prashant Bhushan, who represents activists seeking urgent measures to provide food and life support for migrant workers, said, âPeople are dying⦠24 crore people have been pushed below the poverty line. The situation is worse than last year⦠Government has said they have not been able to even put up a portal for the registration of workersâ. The civil rights lawyer said many of these destitute workers require immediate cash transfers to purchase essentials. The pandemic has left them with no means of livelihood. âA uniform national data grid of migrant workers, in which both the Centre and States provide inputs should be there. This would ensure that benefits meant for migrant workers reach them and no other,â Justice Bhushan said. The court asked the government to clarify what steps it had taken under the Code of Social Security of 2020. âThe government is spending thousands of crores, but is it [benefits] really reaching them [the workers]?â Justice Shah asked Mehta, who promised to file a detailed affidavit in response. The Solicitor General said the Labour Ministry had already started work on the database. He assured the court that he would talk to the Labour Secretary and get the necessary information on its status. [underlineimg] In-flight wedding: DGCA derosters crew A wedding in the skies has invited the wrath of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). On Monday, it [suspended the crew of a SpiceJet chartered plane after a wedding ceremony aboard the aircraft](, over Madurai, in violation of COVID-19 norms. The airline has been ordered to file an FIR against the errant passengers. Pictures viral on social media show the bride and groom exchanging garlands surrounded by relatives and camerapersons. Many can be seen without masks. [Screenshot from the wedding video that went viral. ] Wedding rituals were performed as the aircraft hovered over Madurai Meenakshi temple in the presence of over 160 relatives in the flight. Aviation website flightradar24 showed the plane circling above the temple. âWe have derostered the crew and directed the airline to lodge a complaint against those not following COVID-19 appropriate behaviour with relevant authorities. We will take strict action,â a DGCA official said, adding that they were examining if the use of cameras onboard violated safety protocols. In March, after being pulled up by the Delhi High Court, the DGCA ordered airlines to ensure that passengers comply with COVID-19 norms on mask-wearing and social distancing. It said that if passengers did not pay heed, they must be removed from the aircraft and put on a no-fly list. âThe client was clearly briefed on COVID-19 guidelines to be followed and denied permission for any activity to be performed on board. The approval for this flight was taken as a joy ride for the wedding group,â the airline said in response to a query. [underlineimg] Covid Watch: Numbers and Developments The number of reported coronavirus cases from India stood at 2,69,30,220 at the time of publishing this newsletter, with the death toll at 3,06,865. Addressing a media conference, Dr. Randeep Guleria, head, AIIMS, said that there was no indication so far that the third wave of Covid-19 is more harmful to children. âChildren arenât showing serious infection but there has been a lot of collateral damage to this section of the population. As a society we must come together to help children," he added. [underlineimg] In Brief: The [CBI has approached the Supreme Court against a Calcutta High Court direction]( to place under house arrest the four Trinamool Congress leaders accused in the Narada sting tapes case. On Friday, following a split verdict on the bail of Sovan Chatterjee, Subrata Mukherjee, Firhad Hakim and Madan Mitra, a Division Bench of the High Court ordered them to be put under house arrest while referring the case to a Bench of five judges. The four have been in custody since May 17. The agency moved the Supreme Court some time before midnight on Sunday. As the âvery severeâ Cyclone Yaas hurtles towards the Odisha coast, field level functionaries in coastal pockets have launched [one of the most challenging evacuations they have ever carried out](. Yaas is predicted to cross the coast at 155-165 km per hour, with wind speed going up to 180 km, per hour. With the Covid-19 situation in villages far worse compared to what it was last year, and May 26 being a full moon day, officials are expecting the impact of the sea surge to be magnified further. âTwo types of shelters are being identified â one for COVID-19 and other one for ânormalâ people â a difficult task,â said a Block Development Officer. [underlineimg] Evening Wrap will return tomorrow. Today's Top Picks [[
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