Monday, September 6, 2021

CBI hunts for 3 key players, 10 others linked to JEE (Main) scam


CBI hunts for 3 key players, 10 others linked to JEE (Main) scam

New Delhi:06.09.2021

The CBI is looking for at least three key players and around 10 others who were involved in the racket of manipulating the JEE (Main) exam 2021, reports Rajshekhar Jha. Seven people, including two women have been arrested in the case till now. As per the initial probe, at least 30 candidates are believed to have availed the services of the gang till now.

Among the absconding prime suspects is a senior official of Noida-based firm Affinity Education who has gone underground since the raids and a Bangalore-based suspect who colluded with arrested suspect Ranjeet Thakur and arranged for “expert solvers”.

These solvers took remote access of the computer assigned to their students and then solved the paper for them in order to get them a higher rank. They are supposedly former engineering exam toppers and a few work as teachers as well.

Also under the scanner are a few staffers of the college in Sonipat apart from some invigilators who let the gang take control of the computer systems. CBI is also looking at the role of some other “education consultancy institutes” who were hand in glove with the gang. Certain hawala transactions are also being probed to establish the money trail.

Sunday, September 5, 2021

Rail factory top engineer held for graft


Rail factory top engineer held for graft

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chandigarh:05.09.2021

The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has arrested a principal chief engineer of rail coach factory in Kapurthala, for demanding and accepting bribe of Rs 1 lakh.

A case has been registered against the erring official. It has been alleged that the complainant, a contractor who undertakes works related to civil and horticulture of rail coach factory, Kapurthala, met the official in connection with tender/ payment related work in his office. During the said meeting, the accused allegedly demanded a bribe at the rate of 1% of gross payments received by the complainant’s firm in lieu of completed tender work and also for further continuation of contract work.

CBI laid a trap in Kapurthala and caught the accused red handed while demanding and accepting a bribe of Rs. One lakh. Searches were conducted at the office and residential premises of the accused at Kapurthala and Jaipur which led to the recovery of incriminating documents.

The arrested accused was produced on Friday in the court of Special Judge, CBI cases in Mohali and was remanded to 14-day judicial custody.

NTA identifies 9 cases of impersonation in JEE, puts 419 under scanner


NTA identifies 9 cases of impersonation in JEE, puts 419 under scanner

Manash.Gohain@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:05.09.2021 

Amid a CBI inquiry into alleged malpractices during this year’s JEE (Main) exams and arrest of several people linked to a private institute, the National Testing Agency has identified nine cases of alleged impersonation during the exams conducted during August 26-September 2 and blacklisted 23 test centres so far besides placing 49 exam centres and 419 candidates on the watchlist, sources in education ministry said.

After the ministry too received a few complaints of alleged impersonation, Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan directed NTA to have a transparent system to address such concerns. While denying any breach of its systems and leak of exam papers, NTA director general Vineet Joshi said: “These are cases on impersonation. Last year too, such a case came up in a centre in Guwahati. NTA cancelled the result of the candidate and debarred him for three years.”

Sources said following intervention of Pradhan, NTA had taken a number of additional measures for the first time for the August-September exam. “Nine cases of impersonation could so far be identified and NTA is also looking into other cases,” said an official. The official said the cases of impersonation, possession of unauthorized material and other unfair means have been reported from centres in MP, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Maharashtra, Odisha, UP and Rajasthan and action has been initiated.

Owe them a fair exam: Cong seeks SC-led probe

Congress on Saturday demanded a Supreme Court-monitored probe into the alleged manipulation of JEE (Mains) examination after CBI arrested seven people in connection with the case. Holding the education ministry and National Testing Agency responsible for failure to conduct the examinations in a transparent manner, Congress also asked for accountability to be fixed. Former party chief Rahul Gandhi tweeted, “#JEE (Main) Exam has been breached. Students appearing for such exams prepare very hard, battling difficulties of various kinds. We, as a nation, owe them a fair exam. GOI is better at providing cover-ups.” TNN

Just because a couple is married, consent for sex can’t be presumed


FOR THE RECORD

05.09.2021

Just because a couple is married, consent for sex can’t be presumed

Marital rape is a contentious issue that has divided not just society but also the Indian judiciary. In 1979, Dr Upendra Baxi, professor of law at the University of Warwick, was one of four people who wrote an open letter to the Chief Justice of India on the Mathura rape case. They succeeded in getting the rape laws recast barring the clause on marital rape. In an interview to Himanshi Dhawan, Baxi explains why it’s such a divisive issue

The Chhattisgarh High Court recently said that any sexual act by a husband with his wife could not be rape even if it was by force. What is your reaction?

The Chhattisgarh HC judge discharged the accused on rape charges because there was no offence in the law book. We do not want police to book anyone on an offence that does not exist. It is a question of civil liberties. But the court could have expressed itself better on the subject. It is high time that offence of marital rape is enacted. But as long as there is no such law, the judge cannot be faulted.

What about the contradictions in court observations? The Kerala HC said that this is a form of violence and a ground for divorce but stopped short of giving direction to the government.

The Supreme Court has fiddled with this idea and said all sexual intercourse below 18 years, married or not, is rape. So, courts have the power to do what the legislature is not doing. It has done so in the case of legalising homosexuality or decriminalising adultery.

In 2000, Law Commission chairman Justice B P Jeevan Reddy said in half a line, “Time is not ripe to amending Indian Penal Code and making marital rape an offence,” but in 2013 the Justice Verma Committee recommended that marital rape be made part of the rape law amendments. So, justices tend to vary among themselves, as does legislature, and media. It is a highly divisive issue. But it does not mean that non-consensual sexual relations can be forced by one spouse on the other.

Some cite the example of the anti-dowry law and the domestic violence law to argue that it will be misused by women to settle scores in a marital dispute.

Misuse is happening because violated people are being empowered for the first time in decades. The SC has repeatedly ruled that misuse or use of power is not ground for denial of power. Every law whether for public security or economic offences has been misused. We see police misusing power, arresting people, filing 2,000 pages of a chargesheet that is often worth nothing.

We must tighten the criminal justice system against wrongful use of power. Harassment is a fear that is expressed but compare it to the oppression that is going on. How do you correct that?

Also, we should look at the percentage of misuse instead of merely labelling it. There have been instances like the Atrocities Act and 498A where some courts have declared misuse without any empirical evidence.

An often-used argument is that marriage implies consent forever. How do you counter that view?

The Constitution empowers both men and women with the fundamental right to human dignity and justice. Consent to sexual aggression within a marriage cannot be presumed. In a sound marriage, both sides should live in dignity and equality.

We have seen how judicial intervention has brought changes in laws for women such as the Vishakha guidelines that were a precursor to the workplace harassment law. And yet courts seem to shy away in this case?

You can’t blame only one side. There are three agencies of social change in a society — religion, education and law. Law can only take us so far. Religion and education must play their part. It is easy to put pressure on courts but that doesn’t change social behaviour. Courts can say what is a good society, but they cannot by themselves deliver a good society.

On marital rape, there is a tremendous difference of opinion which I feel can be resolved through public and Parliamentary debate. The ideal solution would be for Parliament to enact the law, and cast responsibility on various state governments, civil society and business houses to create a fund for destitute women. So, if a woman needs financial help to live in dignity when she files charges for marital rape, she has a support system. Bringing criminal law is the first step but associated steps are also important. We have not paid sufficient attention to the renovation of the architecture of the legal system. Criminal law reform is only symbolic if the rest is not in place.

You and three other professors wrote an open letter in 1979 asking for amendments to the rape law. How effective was that?

The letter sparked discussions and ultimately all our suggestions in recasting of the rape law were adopted barring the one on marital rape. Marital rape needs more intense discussion. Give me your best arguments and I will give you mine, and then let the superior argument prevail. We have to find a middle way. We need to keep at it.

Let go of temporary staff hired sans nod, varsities told


Let go of temporary staff hired sans nod, varsities told

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Mysuru:05.09.2021

The higher education department has ordered all state-run varsities to relieve temporary employees, outsourced workers and those employed on contract basis without prior government approval.

The registrars of 23 varsities, including University of Mysore (UoM), Mandya Cluster University and Karnataka State Open University (KSOU), have been issued a directive to this effect. According to the government circular, the varsities have to relieve both teaching and non-teaching staff of their duties.

Coincidentally, Mysuru MP Pratap Simha recently levelled allegations of irregularities in the recruitment of 400 daily-wage labourers at UoM. However, its vice-chancellor Prof G Hemantha Kumar had dismissed the allegations. KSOU officials too may have to answer a few difficult questions given the recent recruitment of teachers, who were hired on a contractual basis at the varsity.

The government pointed out that those who have been hired by varsities without its consent may move the court seeking regularisation of their employment, with all the benefits it entails. In a bid to pre-empt such a scenario, the government asked all varsities to relieve those recruited without its permission.

UoM registrar R Shivappa said the varsity is yet to receive any directions from the government in this regard.

“We will take a decision once we receive the order,” Shivappa said. Former UoM syndicate member MSS Kumar blamed the protracted delay in appointment of regular staff to universities for the present problem.

“Nearly 60% of staff at universities are not regularised workers. Such being the case, no state university will be able to follow the government’s direction. The only solution to this is to initiate recruitment to all vacant posts at the earliest,” Kumar said.

The state-run universities have to relieve both teaching and non-teaching staff, hired on contract basis, of their duties

Man to bear wife’s travelling costs for court hearings: HC


Man to bear wife’s travelling costs for court hearings: HC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:05.09.2021

The Gujarat high court has ordered a man to pay Rs 1,500 travelling and food allowance to his wife for each court hearing that she has to attend in a suit for dissolution of marriage filed by the man.

The petition for transfer of case was filed by the wife, who lives in Porbandar with her daughter.

She shifted to Porbandar from Una town in Gir Somnath district after a matrimonial dispute. In 2019, her husband approached the court in Una and filed a suit for dissolution of marriage.

The woman has to travel 200km from Porbandar to Una to attend court proceedings.

In January 2020, she moved the high court and requested for shifting of the suit proceedings to a court in Porbandar so that she does not have to face the hardships of travelling long distances with her minor daughter. The husband got apprehensive that if the case gets transferred, he would be at the receiving end and the hardship of travelling would fall on him.

The husband opposed the transfer of the case to Porbandar court and made a proposal that he would bear the travelling cost for his wife and daughter, when they have to come to Una for the hearings.

The court accepted this proposal and ordered him to pay Rs 1,500 to his wife towards the cost of their travelling and food for the wife and daughter for every hearing that she attends. The HC did not accept the woman’s request for transfer of the case.

The HC also requested the court in Una to see that the case is heard and completed as expeditiously as possible.

It also set a deadline of March 31, 2022 for the lower court to complete the case.

The petition for transfer of case was filed by the wife, who lives in Porbandar and has to travel 200km to attend court proceedings

Language instructor who built ‘learning apps’


Language instructor who built ‘learning apps’

Nimesh.Khakhariya@timesgroup.com

05.09.2021

When schools were locked due to the Covid pandemic, educators were left with no option but to search for learning tools to overcome the distance barrier.

But many years before the lockdown, Nahid Khan Ligari, a teacher working at a district panchayat-run school in Junagadh district, had tapped on to the benefits of alter native modes of learning and developed ‘learning apps’. What more, he also devised a way to overcome the internet connectivity issue, by developing apps that worked in offline mode too.

What makes his efforts even more praiseworthy is that apart from facing the usual ‘limited or no resources issue’, Ligari also had no ‘technical or software’ background. A language teacher, Ligari teaches Gujarati, Hindi and English. Yet he took the pains of learning the basics of app developing.

The desire to make education accessible to all drove him on, says Ligari. “I was always thinking of making education available to students at their doorsteps,” Ligari said.

Ligari’s work was recognized by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT). He was recently conferred the ‘National Information Communication & Technology’ award by NCERT.

Ligari has developed two apps so far — an encyclopedia and a dictionary. Once downloaded on mobile phones, the two apps work in offline mode. The Internet is needed only at the time of app update.

கார்த்திகையில் அணைந்த தீபம்!

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