Saturday, January 16, 2021

இது உங்கள் இடம்: வாழ்த்துக்கள் ஜெயலட்சுமி

இது உங்கள் இடம்: வாழ்த்துக்கள் ஜெயலட்சுமி

Updated : ஜன 16, 2021 03:28 | Added : ஜன 16, 2021 03:26 



உலக, நாடு, தமிழக நடப்புகள் பற்றி, வாசகர்கள் தினமலர் நாளிதழில் எழுதிய கடிதம்:

வெ.தனசேகரன், மதுராந்தகம், செங்கல்பட்டு மாவட்டத்திலிருந்து அனுப்பிய, 'இ - மெயில்' கடிதம்:

தன் கிராமத்தில், 126 வீடுகளுக்கு கழிப்பறை கட்ட காரணமாக இருந்த மாணவி ஜெயலட்சுமியை, எவ்வளவு பாராட்டினாலும் தகும்.புதுக்கோட்டை மாவட்டம், ஆதனக்கோட்டையைச் சேர்ந்தவர் ஜெயலட்சுமி. அரசு பள்ளியில், பிளஸ் 2 படிக்கிறார். கடந்த ஆண்டு, தனியார் நிறுவனம் ஒன்று நடத்திய போட்டியில் வெற்றி பெற்று, அமெரிக்காவின் விண்வெளி ஆய்வு மையமான, நாசாவிற்கு செல்ல தேர்வானார். சிதைந்த ஓட்டு வீடு, சிறு வயதிலே கைவிட்டுச் சென்ற தந்தை, மனநலம் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட தாய் என, வறுமையில் வாடிய ஜெயலட்சுமியால், நாசா செல்வதற்கான கட்டணத்தை செலுத்த முடியவில்லை.அப்போது மாவட்ட நிர்வாகமும், பல தனியார் நிறுவனங்களும், அவருக்கு நிதியுதவி அளித்தன.

இந்நிலையில், 'கிராமாலயா' என்ற தொண்டு நிறுவனம், ஜெயலட்சுமி நாசாவுக்கு செல்ல உதவுவதாக கூறியுள்ளது. ஆனால் ஜெயலட்சுமி, 'போதிய நிதி சேர்ந்து விட்டதால், எனக்கு எந்த உதவியும் வேண்டாம். என் கிராமத்தில் கழிப்பறை இல்லாமல், பெண்கள் மிகவும் கஷ்டப்படுகின்றனர். முடிந்தால், கழிப்பறை கட்டித் தாருங்கள்' என, கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளார்.இதனால் வியந்த தொண்டு நிறுவனம், ஆதனங்கோட்டையில் கழிப்பறை இல்லாத வீடுகளை கணக்கெடுத்தது. அதன்படி, 126 வீடுகளில், தலா, 20 ஆயிரம் ரூபாய் செலவில், கழிப்பறை கட்டிக்கொடுத்துள்ளது. இதுவரை இயற்கை உபாதைக்காக, 2 கி.மீ., காட்டு பகுதியை கடந்து சென்று வந்த பெண்கள், தற்போது வீட்டருகில் கட்டிய கழிப்பறையை பயன்படுத்தி வருகின்றனர்.


ஜெயலட்சுமி வறுமையில் தான் வாடுகிறார். வீட்டில் சமையல் உட்பட அனைத்து வேலைகளையும், அவர் தான் செய்கிறார். கூலி வேலைக்குச் சென்றபடியே, கல்வியும் கற்றுக்கொள்கிறார். ஒற்றை ஆளாய் தன் குடும்பத்தையும் காப்பாற்றி வருகிறார் ஜெயலட்சுமி.இந்நிலையில் தான், தனக்கென ஏதும் கேட்காமல், ஊரின் சுகாதாரத்திற்காக உதவி கோரியுள்ளார்.ஜெயலட்சுமிக்கு பாராட்டுகள். அவரின், ஐ.ஏ.எஸ்., கனவு நிறைவேறவும் வாழ்த்துக்கள்.

Tasmac earns 417.8 crore in Pongal sales


 

HC judge retires without hearing case physically


HC judge retires without hearing case physically

Justice Satyanarayana Had Joined HC In May 2020

Ajay.Sura@timesgroup.com

16.01.2021

Chandigarh: Justice S N Satyanarayana, who had joined the Punjab and Haryana high court in May 2020, retired on Thursday without holding any physical court or hearing any cases physically in court during his entire tenure as the judge in Chandigarh. However, he had held court proceedings via video conferencing after joining the HC till his superannuation on January 14. It would be a record of sorts in the Punjab and Haryana high court where a high court judge completed his entire tenure without holding court physically. This happened due to the Covid-19 pandemic because of which the HC has not been holding physical court since March 2020.

Justice S N Satyanarayana had joined as a judge of the Punjab and Haryana high court on May 28 after his transfer from Karnataka high court, where he was serving as HC judge since his elevation on June 9, 2008.

A total of eight judges of the Punjab and Haryana high court were scheduled to retire in 2021. Of these, two judges - Justice Daya Chaudhary retired on January 9 and Justice S N Satyanarayana retired on January 14. Six other judges, who are due to retire this year include Justice Rekha Mittal on Saturday (January 16), Justice Nirmaljit Kaur on January 27, Justice Hari Pal Verma on April 5, Justice Jitendra Kumar Chauhan on June 5, Justice Arun Kumar Tyagi on August 31 and Justice Sudip Ahluwalia on December 30.

With the retirement of four judges this month, the current strength of the judges of the Punjab and Haryana HC would drop to 48 against the sanctioned strength of 85 judges. The Punjab and Haryana high court is one of the largest high courts of the country having jurisdiction over the states of Punjab and Haryana and UT Chandigarh.

The limited hearing of cases via video conferencing at the high court and shortage of judges has also increased the pendency of cases at the high court. As per data procured by TOI from the National Judicial Data Grid on Friday, a total of 641,722 cases are currently pending before the high court.

Release degree to SC students in 3 days, institutes told

Release degree to SC students in 3 days, institutes told

Chandigarh:  16.01.2021

Taking note of withholding of degrees of SC students by private colleges/institutions owing to non-payment of fees after the closure of post-matric scheme for SC students by the central government in 2017, the Punjab Government on Friday directed all the institutions to release degrees to such students within three days.

The decision was taken during the meeting of the high-powered committee of the group of ministers (GoM) under the chairmanship of finance minister Manpreet Singh Badal to decide on the pending issues of 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20 as a result of closure of the scheme.

After the meeting, Manpreet said that the GoM has extended an invitation to all the colleges and institutions for comprehensive discussions on the pending issues and explore ways for their redressal on January 19. The minister further said the colleges and institutions have been given three days to release degrees to the students. “The meeting would also brainstorm about the ways and means to settle the pending liabilities of three years,” Manpreet said, adding that releasing of degrees within the stipulated three days’ period would be a pre-requisite for the institutions to attend the meeting. TNN

Action against election officials only after its approval, says EC


Action against election officials only after its approval, says EC

Move To Protect Officers From ‘Motivated Harassment’

Bharti.Jain@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:  16.01.2021

Keen to protect chief electoral officers (CEOs) of states and Union Territories from “motivated harassment” stemming from political vendetta for having acted in a free, fair, impartial and fearless manner during polls, the Election Commission on Friday said any disciplinary action against the officials would require clearance.

An EC order said states and UTs should “invariably” obtain its approval before initiating any disciplinary action against CEOs and senior officers during their tenure and also up to one year after they have completed their terms as poll officials.

The EC has drawn on the Supreme Court order of September 21, 2000, upholding that neither can any action be initiated by a state government against officers on election duty nor can the government refuse to act on the EC’s advice to act against errant officials, and a subsequent DoPT order in line with this position.

The EC, in a communication to the cabinet secretary, state chief secretaries, personnel secretary and state CEOs also directed that state and UT governments shall not reduce facilities like vehicle, security and other amenities provided to the office of CEO for proper discharge of his/her duties.

Even though the EC did not specify that it was issuing the direction by virtue of its powers under Article 324 (power of direction and control of elections), it did state that “the commission is sanguine in the expectation that all concerned shall strictly adhere to this regimen in letter as well as in spirit”.

“The EC’s initiative for their protection is timely and appropriate advice,” former chief election commissioner N Gopalaswami told TOI.

The EC direction comes in the wake of instances of “victimisation” of CEOs, including one where then Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrababu Naidu had barged into the then state CEO G K Dwivedi’s office during Lok Sabha poll 2019 and reportedly abused and pushed him for ordering transfers of senior IAS and IPS officers. Dwivedi maintained a stoic silence and stood his ground without getting provoked. He was later rewarded by the EC on National Voters’ Day.

The EC, in its letter on Friday, recalled how CEOs — an extension of the commission in states/UTs and who are on deputation to the EC under Section 13CC of the RP Act, 1950, and Section 13A of the RP Act, 1951 — were targeted “many a times” by slapping disciplinary cases on flimsy grounds for their earlier tenures in the state government after completion of their term.

Full report on www.toi.in


‘NEED STAMP OF APPROVAL’

EC outlines timeline for publishing criminal antecedents thrice by candidates for RS


New Delhi: The Election Commission has outlined the three occasions on which candidates for polls to the Rajya Sabha and state legislative councils shall need to publish details of criminal cases, in accordance with an earlier direction of the Supreme Court. The timeline, as indicated in a letter sent to the president, general secretary or chairperson of all recognised national and state political parties on January 11, requires the criminal antecedents to be published thrice— first within the first two days of withdrawal of nomination, second between the third and fourth days, and third from the fifth to sixth day, prior to the date of poll. TNN

Right time for vaccination, can stop 2nd wave: Expert

Right time for vaccination, can stop 2nd wave: Expert

Sushmi.Dey@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:16.01.2021

As India gears up for Covid vaccination amid a significant decline in active cases, experts say the innoculations is necessary and the timing is apt as it can help avoid a new wave, particularly in the wake of the new UK strain which has higher transmissibility. “We are fortunate to be starting the vaccination drive at this time with the first wave in decline. This will help in timely vaccination of a significant proportion of the population if at all the second wave does hit us,” said Dr A S Soin, chairman of Medanta Liver Institute.

Vaccination is urgently required at a point when herd immunity is yet to develop and the economy and travel are opening up, increasing the risk of a wider infection spread, experts said.

“Vaccination is necessary because you do not know when a second wave can potentially start and various other countries have witnessed a second and a third wave with severe cases or a more infectious strain,” says Public Health Foundation of India president Prof K Srinath Reddy.

“There is no herd immunity against Covid-19 as it is a new disease. Vaccine against Covid can help in reducing the spread of infection and severity. Though the active infections are currently low but we are not sure about the trajectory of this pandemic,” said Dr Atul Kakar, senior consultant and Vice Chairman of Internal Medicine at Ganga Ram Hospital.

“Since the availability of the vaccines will be a constraint, the vaccination drive may stretch over a year or more. So social discipline and Covid-appropriate behaviour will remain the cornerstones of our Covid protection policy,” says Dr Soin.

Full report on www.toi.in

SHOT AT IMMUNITY: Vaccination is needed as herd immunity is yet to be reached and economy and travel are opening up

Finally, a single-dose Covid vaccine is within sight


Finally, a single-dose Covid vaccine is within sight

While all the coronavirus vaccines launched so far need two doses, Johnson & Johnson designed theirs to work with a single shot. Early data shows it is effective, and it could be approved for use by March

Abhilash.Gaur@timesgroup.com

All Covid vaccines so far work best with two doses, but the UK, which is battling an explosion of cases, last month decided to delay the second dose and give everyone their “first dose first.” The aim was to ensure some immunity in all, rather than full immunity in some.

Experts abroad were aghast. “I would not be in favour of that,” declared Dr Anthony S Fauci, a trusted voice in America. Some said the UK was straying from science and resorting to “Wild West” measures, dishonesty and short-termism.

But it now looks like America will follow the UK’s first-dose-first approach. President-elect Joe Biden “supports releasing available doses immediately, and believes the government should stop holding back vaccine supply (for second dose) so we can get more shots in Americans’ arms now,” says a CNN report.

There are valid concerns about first-dose-first. For example, a single dose might not produce sufficient immunity in the elderly, who need it the most. Also, the virus could mutate inside people who have not been fully immunised.

It’s a compromise either way, but as Tim Harford writes in the Financial Times, the question is whether giving one dose is like a bicycle with one wheel (useless) or a car with one headlight (not ideal but workable). “If forced to drive in the dark, I would rather that every car on the road had one headlight than some two and some none.”

What if such a compromise were not needed at all, if vaccines worked well enough with one dose? It would make everyone’s life easy. Fewer vials and syringes and warehouses. Fewer deliveries. And no repeat visits to clinics.

Pharma giant Johnson & Johnson took the single-dose road, and new data from human trials suggests its vaccine, called Ad26.COV2.S for now, is good.

Plenty Of Antibodies

A report in Time says the J&J vaccine produces a “long-lasting” immune response. “More than 90% of participants made... neutralising antibodies within 29 days.” By the 57th day, everyone had antibodies, and the immune response did not wane throughout the 71-day trial period.

The single-dose J&J vaccine makes more antibodies than single doses of the current crop of vaccines, as it should. A report in Stat says, after a single dose of Pfizer and Moderna’s mRNA vaccines, “only 60% of participants appeared to have neutralising antibody levels.”

How does J&J’s single dose compare with two doses of other vaccines? The company’s chief scientific officer, Paul Stoffels, told Time the response is “in the same range.” He said they had aimed for 60% overall effectiveness, and hoped and planned for 70%. He now thinks the results could be even better. Moncef Slaoui, the top scientist on America’s ‘Operation Warp Speed’ vaccine development project, agrees. He has said he “anticipates J&J’s oneshot vaccine will show 80% to 85% effectiveness against Covid-19.”

Final results of the vaccine’s trial on 45,000 volunteers are expected in two-weeks, and if it exceeds 80% efficacy, it will have emergency use authorisation in the US by March, Reuters says quoting Slaoui.

Second Dose

While the other vaccines focused only on a two-dose course, J&J is running a separate large trial with two doses. Unlike other vaccines, which are given 21-28 days apart, J&J’s booster dose is given after 57 days, so the pressure on supplies is less.

Stat says the booster dose makes the vaccine even more effective: “It doubled or tripled their levels of neutralising antibodies.” But if a single dose works well enough, the second dose might be unnecessary for most healthy people.

The vaccine has been tested in two age groups: 18-55 years, and 65-plus, and in both, Time says, “There was no difference in the immune response.” Common side effects included fever, fatigue, headache, muscle pain and injection-site pain.

NEWS TODAY 15.07.2026