Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Actor Suriya’s plea for income tax interest waiver junked by HC

Actor Suriya’s plea for income tax interest waiver junked by HC

Srikkanth.D@timesgroup.com

Chennai:18.08.2021

The Madras high court has declined to waive the interest on the income tax slapped on actor Suriya between 2007 and 2009.

Suriya, in his petition, contended that he was facing harassment from the I-T officials for quite some time. In October 2010, the department conducted searches at his office and residence and passed an assessment order a year later for 2007-08 and 2008-09. Counsel for the actor argued that compulsion to pay any unjust dues would cause hardships to the actor and he has been asked to pay interest in an unjust manner and cited previous Madras HC judgments in similar cases.

In its response, the I-T department submitted that the actor had not complied with three conditions stipulated under section 220 (2A) of the Income Tax Act for availing waiver of interest. “The case is not one where regular assessment has been passed. There was a search operation conducted in the actor’s premises, based on which the assessment orders were passed. There was noncooperation on part of the petitioner. Even in such circumstances, the petitioner had no intention to pay the interest based on the demand,” counsel submitted.

In such cases, the assessee is bound to pay the interest and thereafter, is at liberty to file an application seeking waiver of interest, counsel stated. While assessment orders were passed in 2011, application seeking waiver of interest was filed only in 2017. “Once the tax demand was not complied with, the department is entitled to claim interest under section 220 (2A) of Income Tax Act,” counsel stated.

Citing a report from officials which showed that the actor took more than 45 days to file return of income after the search, Justice S M Subramaniam said he had not cooperated in completion of the assessment. “The conduct of the assessee throughout the income tax proceedings is vital for the purpose of claiming waiver of interest,” the court observed and dismissed the petition.

Corpn offers free Wi-Fi at 49 places in city

Corpn offers free Wi-Fi at 49 places in city

Chennai:18.08.2021

The Chennai corporation will offer 30-minute free wi-fi at 49 locations, including Anna Tower Park, CDH, Tondiarpet, Gemini Junction, Marina Beach, Ashok Pillar, T Nagar and CMBT, from Tuesday. The service will be offered near smart poles that have CCTV cameras and emergency call buttons connected to the command centre at Ripon Buildings. Users need to select ‘smart city Wi-Fi’ and enter the one-time password sent to their mobile phones. The connection will stop after 30 minutes. The total list of locations of the smart poles are available in the pdf https://chennaicorporation.gov.in/gcc/images/WiFiSmartPol.pdf. TNN

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Two medical students drown


Two medical students drown

TNN | Aug 17, 2021, 04.32 AM IST

Rajkot: Two students of Rajkot’s PDU Medical College drowned in a check-dam on the outskirts of the city late on Saturday evening. The deceased were identified as Dr Chirag Damor (30), a final year student of Doctor of Medicine (MD) and Ravi Rathod (26), an MBBS student.

Damor’s parents who live in Ahmedabad are native of Shyamlaji in North Gujarat, while Rathod is from Ghumli village in Maliya-Hatina taluka of Junagadh.

Damor and Rathod had gone to the check-dam on a bike. They both jumped into the water and later drowned. A passers-by saw the bike and clothes and informed the fire brigade personnel. “Fire brigade personnel fished out both bodies from the check-dam after searching for an hour,” said police.

Rathod was the youngest of four siblings.

Probe reports scam, Jabalpur medical varsity V-C resigns


Probe reports scam, Jabalpur medical varsity V-C resigns

Vice Chancellor T N Dubey, a neurologist, told The Sunday Express, “I was neither able to do justice to my profession as a doctor, nor was able to give time to my family, based in Bhopal. My resignation is completely a personal decision."

Written By Iram Siddique | Bhopal |

August 15, 2021 3:50:15 am

On Saturday, Medical Education Commissioner Warvade told The Sunday Express, “The inquiry committee was sent some queries but a reply is yet to be received. However, it would be best explained by the vice-chancellor, who is dealing with the issue.”

Examinations of over 3,500 students across 30 courses in Madhya Pradesh Medical Science University, Jabalpur, are stuck after an internal inquiry highlighted lapses into working of a Bangalore-based IT firm that was tasked to conduct examinations at the university, leading to the vice-chancellor’s resignationj on Saturday.

While the university authorities had blacklisted the IT firm, Mindlogisticx Infratec, following an inquiry by a government panel, the company moved the Madhya Pradesh High Court, which, in an interim relief to the firm, lifted the blacklisting, restraining the government from any coercive order until August 16, the next date of hearing.

In the midst of allegations, Vice Chancellor T N Dubey resigned, citing personal reasons, even as senior officials claimed that he stepped down after Medical Education Minister Vishwas Sarang set up an inquiry panel to probe the alleged irregularities and had sent Medical Education Commissioner Nishant Warvade to the university to streamline its affairs after receiving multiple complaints.

Dubey, a neurologist, told The Sunday Express, “I was neither able to do justice to my profession as a doctor, nor was able to give time to my family, based in Bhopal. My resignation is completely a personal decision.”

Asked whether his resignation has anything to do with the inquiry set up by the government, Dubey said, “There is nothing beyond the fact that I wanted to be closer to my family. Everything else is baseless.” Dubey refused to comment on the working of Mindlogisticx and the ongoing inquiry, calling it sub judice.

On Saturday, Medical Education Commissioner Warvade told The Sunday Express, “The inquiry committee was sent some queries but a reply is yet to be received. However, it would be best explained by the vice-chancellor, who is dealing with the issue.”

On May 25, Sarang initiated the inquiry after receiving complaints about alleged unauthorised working of Mindlogisticx Infratec. In his letter, the minister stated that students were not getting their degrees, marksheets and the agency tasked to conduct exams did not conduct them in time.

On June 8, a probe team headed by J K Gupta, then university registrar, and comprising two IT experts submitted their report. The report found there was no digital interface created for conducting the examination. All data was exchanged using emails, leading to delay and irregularities in results, as well as mark-sheets, it stated.

It was also pointed out that all passwords and email IDs were handed over to a grade-III employee, identified as Nilesh Jaiswal, giving him complete access. This, the inquiry team noted, was in violation of the secrecy of the process and gave rise to malpractices.

Two months before the inquiry was initiated, the then examination controller in-charge, Trupti Gupta, on April 24 wrote an email to deputy registrar J K Gupta. She pointed out that ntratec without informing the university authorities Mindlogisticx had changed marks.

Based on the committee’s report, registrar Gupta blacklisted the firm on July 5. Gupta also pointed out that despite repeated attempts to call the firm for explanation, they continued to give excuses. The agreement with the company was terminated three years after it was signed in July 2018.

Registrar Gupta along with Trupti Gupta, on whose inquiry the firm was blacklisted, were repatriated to their parent department on July 14, within eight months of being posted at the university on a two-year deputation.

Meanwhile, Mindlogisticx, challenged the order to blacklist it in High Court. The firm contended that all changes made to mark-sheet, as quoted by Trupti Gupta, were done after receiving an official mail. The email, the firm stated, was used by Dr Vrinda Saxena, who held the post of the varsity’s examination controller but was on sick leave at the time.

Medical officer suspended for molesting nurse in Odisha's Paradip


Medical officer suspended for molesting nurse in Odisha's Paradip

Sources said the victim was performing her duty in the hospital on Tuesday night when Badal Singh allegedly grabbed her hand and forced himself on her.

Published: 15th August 2021 10:13 AM 

By Express News Service

PARADIP: The medical officer of Paradip Port Hospital was placed under suspension on Saturday after being booked by police for allegedly outraging the modesty of a nurse while she was on duty.

The accused was identified as Badal Singh. Sources said the victim was performing her duty in the hospital on Tuesday night when Singh allegedly grabbed her hand and forced himself on her. When she resisted, the doctor touched her inappropriately and molested her.

Following the incident, the nurse approached the hospital authorities but no action was taken against the accused. She lodged an FIR with Paradip Model police on Friday. Basing on her complaint, police registered a case. Paradip Model IIC Rajanikant Mishra said police interrogated the accused doctor and released him after serving notice under section 41 of CrPC.

“We are waiting for the report of the hospital’s internal complaints committee and further investigation is on,” he added. Chief medical officer of the hospital Prahallad Panda said the authorities of Paradip Port Trust have suspended the accused doctor.

Hospital salutes UP doctor who worked 20 hours/day for 2 years, names lab after mom


Hospital salutes UP doctor who worked 20 hours/day for 2 years, names lab after mom

TNN | Aug 14, 2021, 04.04 AM IST


MEERUT: The day Dr Atul Srivastava’s mother died, over 300 Covid test reports were lying on his desk, waiting for his approval. It was April 30. The microbiologist at Muzaffarnagar Medical College rushed to his mother’s funeral for just two hours, cremated her and made his way back to the lab he had been painstakingly putting together for over a year.

Since April last year, the Covid research and diagnostics lab at the hospital was all he had worked for — 20 hours a day, testing over 20,000 samples without a single day of leave. On Friday, the hospital formally inaugurated the lab with a salute to the doctor — it was named ‘Smt Jai Shri Sinha Diagnostic and Research Laboratory’ after his mother.

“For me, this is dedicated to all frontline warriors who went down fighting the disease and saving lives,” Srivastava, 40, said. An MBBS from Lala Lajpat Rai Memorial Medical College in Meerut, he did his microbiology postgraduation from Christian Medical College in Ludhiana before joining the Muzaffarnagar Medical College’s microbiology department in April 2016. It was in April last year, when the country had just begun to realise the seriousness of the pandemic, that he was asked to set up the lab.

“We started working day and night to structure the lab … It was difficult. There was no technical knowhow because the labs that were around were either new or working overtime. I had to depend on my instincts and the literature available on the internet. I spoke to equipment manufacturers, learnt about things on my own and, now, we have an 18-room lab,” he said. In October, the Indian Council of Medical Research allowed the lab to start conducting tests. Since then, he has tested 20,662 samples. “I had three assistants and we worked round the clock to ensure there was no report backlog.”

HC: Seeking dad’s info for IVF kids affront to women’s dignity


HC: Seeking dad’s info for IVF kids affront to women’s dignity

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kochi:17.08.2021

Requiring a single parent or unwed mother who conceived through assisted reproductive technology (ART) such as IVF to reveal sperm donor’s name for registration of baby’s birth violates right to privacy, the Kerala High Court has held.

The ruling was given by Justice Sathish Ninan after considering a petition filed, through advocate A Aruna, by a divorcee who opted for IVF. It was contended by the petitioner that the form for registration of birth requires disclosure of the child’s father’s name.

The identity of the sperm donor has been kept anonymous by the clinic and requiring her to reveal it violates right to privacy, liberty, and dignity, the petition said.

After referring to the Supreme Court’s judgments on right to privacy, including KS Puttuswamy vs Union of India, the court perused a copy of The Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill, 2020. The court noted that right of a single woman to maintain confidentiality is being maintained in the bill too. In the judgment, the court said, “Having conceived through ART procedure, the identity of the sperm donor cannot be disclosed except in circumstances as may be compelled for, under law. It falls within the realm of the ‘right of privacy’.”

NEWS TODAY 13.07.2026