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Friday 31 July 2020

Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline snag $2.1 billion funding from US govt in biggest coronavirus vaccine deal yet

The French drugmaker Sanofi said Friday that it had secured an agreement of up to $2.1 billion to supply the US federal government with 100 million doses of its experimental coronavirus vaccine, the largest such deal announced to date.. This multiagency effort, known as Operation Warp Speed, is placing bets on multiple vaccines and is paying companies to manufacture millions of doses before clinical trials have been completed.

“The global need for a vaccine to help prevent COVID-19 is massive, and no single vaccine or company will be able to meet the global demand alone,” Thomas Triomphe, executive vice president and global head of Sanofi Pasteur, the company’s vaccine division, said in a statement.

Also on Friday, the European Union said it was working on a deal with Sanofi to buy up to 300 million doses of potential vaccines to distribute to citizens in its 27 member countries. The announcements came two days after a deal with the British government to supply up to 60 million doses of the vaccine. Financial details of those deals were not disclosed.

Under the US deal, Sanofi and its partner, the British pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, will receive federal funding to pay for clinical trials as well as for manufacturing the vaccine. Sanofi said the deal also includes an option for the company to supply an additional 500 million doses. The company expects to begin clinical trials to test for safety in September, followed by late-stage efficacy trials before the end of this year. Sanofi said it could apply for regulatory approval in the first half of next year.

If the vaccine is successful, it would be made available to Americans at no cost, other than what providers charge to administer it, the federal government said in a statement.

The head of Operation Warp Speed, Moncef Slaoui, is a former GSK executive who as of May held just under $10 million in GSK stock. Slaoui’s financial ties to some of the companies that are pursuing coronavirus vaccines have raised questions about conflicts of interest.

Slaoui is not a federal employee, instead working under a $1 contract that exempts him from federal rules that would require him to list his outside positions, stock holdings and other potential conflicts. Slaoui said in an interview in May that he was determined to avoid any conflicts of interest, but that his GSK stock represented his retirement from 29 years at the company, and that he had told federal officials he would not take the job if he had to sell it.

Sanofi and GSK did not say how much of the federal money would go to each company, only that Sanofi would receive the most. GSK did not comment on whether Slaoui had recused himself from negotiations over the deal. A senior administration official said that all agreements were negotiated by federal “acquisition professionals” and that Slaoui did not play a role in the negotiations.

A handful of other vaccine candidates are already in late-stage clinical trials, and some, such as AstraZeneca and Moderna, have said a vaccine could be ready before the end of this year.

Sanofi’s coronavirus vaccine relies on a protein-based technology that the company already uses to produce an influenza vaccine. It is similar to a technique used by another company, Novavax, that will receive up to $1.6 billion from the defense department and the Department of Health and Human Services to develop its experimental vaccine. GSK is supplying the Sanofi vaccine with an adjuvant, an ingredient used in many vaccines that boosts the immune response.

Sanofi is also developing a separate vaccine in partnership with Translate Bio that uses so-called messenger RNA to provoke an immune response in the body. That vaccine is expected to enter clinical trials in the fall.

As a French company, Sanofi has had to carefully navigate the geopolitics of vaccine development. In May, the company’s chief executive, Paul Hudson, faced backlash after he said the United States would get the largest number of doses because they were investing the most.

The remarks caused the company to backpedal, explaining that “We have always been committed in these unprecedented circumstances to make our vaccine accessible to everyone.”

Katie Thomas c.2020 The New York Times Company



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As Joe Biden's hunt for running mate enter last leg, top contenders and their advocates make final push

Washington: As Joe Biden nears the announcement of his vice presidential choice, the top contenders and their advocates are making final appeals.

The campaign hasn't finalised a date for naming a running mate, but three people who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the plans said a public announcement likely wouldn't happen before the week of 10 August.

Biden said in May that he hoped to name his pick around 1 August and told reporters this week that he would “have a choice in the first week of August.” He notably stopped short of saying when he would announce that choice.

Running mates are often announced on the eve of a convention. As he prepares to make his choice, a committee established to vet possible running mates has provided Biden with briefing materials. Biden will likely soon begin one-on-one conversations with those under consideration, which could be the most consequential part of the process for a presidential candidate who values personal connections.

The leading contenders include California Senator Kamala Harris, California Representative Karen Bass and Obama national security adviser Susan Rice. The deliberations remain fluid, however, and the campaign has reviewed nearly a dozen possible running mates.

“For Joe Biden, this is crunch time. After all the vetting, all the investigations into the prospective nominees, it’s now up to Joe. It’s personal,” said former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, who was vetted for vice president in 2008. “It’s now about his gut feeling.”

Representatives for Biden declined to comment for this story.

The selection amounts to the most significant choice Biden has confronted in his nearly five-decade political career. He has pledged to select a woman and is facing calls to choose the first Black woman to compete on a presidential ticket.

Given the historic significance of the moment, some are urging Biden not to let the announcement linger too long.

“My sense is that the VP himself, having been through this process, is aware of and mindful of not letting people hang out there too long,” said Democratic strategist Karen Finney. “There certainly seems to be a bit of a media frenzy, and I think we have to be aware that at a point, it becomes unfair to the candidates being considered."

As a decision looms, the camps are jockeying for position.

Harris' allies mobilized this week after Politico reported that the co-chair of the vetting committee, former Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd, was concerned about Harris’ tough debate stage performance and that she hasn’t expressed regret.

Several California elected officials and labor leaders initiated a call with the vetting team to emphasise that Harris has strong support among labor and political leaders in her home state. The call was organized by Lt Governor Eleni Kounalakis and included the mayors of Oakland, Long Beach and Stockton and former governor Gray Davis.

“A group of us really felt we needed to organise and speak out and correct the record because she has tremendous support,” Kounalakis said.

Beyond emphasizing their strong relationships with Harris, they also pushed back against the idea that Harris wouldn’t be a loyal partner.

Dodd said “very supportive” things about Harris, Kounalakis said, though she did not give specifics.

Biden has sought feedback on his pick from former president Barack Obama, who has provided advice but has insisted the choice is his to make, according to a person who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private conversations.

Biden allies say his wife, Jill, and sister, Valerie Biden Owens, are likely to play a key role in the decision, as they have with many of Biden’s biggest political decisions throughout his career. Jill has held online campaign events and fundraisers with virtually all the potential contenders in recent weeks, as has Biden himself, effectively offering the contenders a try-out opportunity with the presumptive Democratic nominee.

On Thursday night, Bass joined Biden for a virtual fundraiser that raked in $2.2 million. She has also taken steps to build her national profile, including providing interviews to multiple outlets over the past week.

On Friday night, Biden held a virtual fundraiser with Elizabeth Warren, who has also been considered as a running mate. Biden said the event raised more than $1.7 million from over 50,000 grassroots donors. That's about a quarter of the $6 million the Massachusetts senator brought in during her first online fundraiser for the former vice president last month that appealed to higher-dollar donors.

“We've known each other a long time. Her fearless work for a just America has transformed lives and inspired millions, including me," Biden said. "She is something else. You all know her.”

Warren said, “This is a time of unprecedented crisis.”

“But I wake up every single day with a heart full of hope and here is why: vice-president Biden is meeting the moment,” she added. The two talked for nearly an hour but did not mention the vice presidential selection process.

Some Biden donors have already begun to plan prospective fundraising events ahead of the formal announcement. Biden’s team expects his running mate to contribute immediately to his fundraising operation.

Of the finalists, Harris is thought to be the most formidable traditional fundraiser, while Warren’s ability to attract small-dollar donations from the party’s progressive base is also viewed as a major asset.



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US appeals court overturns Boston Marathon bomber’s death sentence; 'just don't understand', says victim's mother

A federal appeals court Friday threw out Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s death sentence in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, saying the judge who oversaw the case did not adequately screen jurors for potential biases.

A three-judge panel of the first US Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a new penalty-phase trial on whether the 27-year-old Tsarnaev should be executed for the attack that killed three people and wounded more than 260 others.

“But make no mistake: Dzhokhar will spend his remaining days locked up in prison, with the only matter remaining being whether he will die by execution,” Judge O. Rogeriee Thompson wrote in the ruling, more than six months after arguments were heard in the case.

An attorney for Tsarnaev said they are grateful for the court's “straightforward and fair decision: if the government wishes to put someone to death, it must make its case to a fairly selected jury that is provided all relevant information."

“It is now up to the government to determine whether to put the victims and Boston through a second trial, or to allow closure to this terrible tragedy by permitting a sentence of life without the possibility of release," David Patton said in an email.

A spokesperson for the US Attorney’s office in Boston said they were reviewing the opinion and had no immediate comment. Prosecutors could ask the full appeals court to hear the case or go straight to the US Supreme Court.

The mother of Krystle Campbell, the 29-year-old killed in the attack, expressed outrage at the court's decision.

“I just don’t understand it,” Patricia Campbell told The Boston Globe. “It’s just terrible that he’s allowed to live his life. It’s unfair. He didn’t wake up one morning and decide to do what he did. He planned it out. He did a vicious, ugly thing.”

Former Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority officer Dic Donohue, who was severely injured in a gunfight with the brothers, said the ruling was not surprising to him. “And in any case, he won’t be getting out and hasn’t been able to harm anyone since he was captured," he tweeted.

Tsarnaev's lawyers acknowledged at the beginning of his trial that he and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, set off the two bombs at the marathon finish line. But they argued that Dzhokar Tsarnaev is less culpable than his brother, who they said was the mastermind behind the attack.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev died in a gunbattle with police a few days after the 15 April, 2013, bombing. Dzhokar Tsarnaev is now behind bars at a high-security supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.

Tsarnaev was convicted on 30 charges, including conspiracy and use of a weapon of mass destruction. The 1st Circuit upheld all but a few of the convictions.

Prosecutors told jurors that the men carried out the attack to punish the United States for its wars in Muslim countries. In the boat where Tsarnaev was found hiding, he had scrawled a confession that referred to the wars and wrote, among other things, “Stop killing our innocent people and we will stop.”

Tsarnaev’s attorneys identified a slew of issues with his trial, but said in a brief filed with the court that the “first fundamental error” was the judge’s refusal to move the case out of Boston. They also pointed to social media posts from two jurors suggesting they harbored strong opinions even before the 2015 trial started.

One juror had said in Twitter posts that that she was “locked down” with her family during the manhunt and retweeted another post calling Tsarnaev a “piece of garbage,” but later told the court she had not commented on the case or been asked to shelter in place, the defense said. On the day of Tsarnaev’s sentencing, the juror changed her Facebook profile picture to an image that said “BOSTON STRONG,” a rallying cry used in the wake of the bombing, the attorneys said.

Tsarnaev's lawyers pushed several times to move the trial out of the city where the bombs exploded, arguing the intense media scrutiny and number of people touched by the attack in Boston would taint the jury pool. But US District Judge George O’Toole refused, saying he believed a fair and impartial jury could be found in the city.

The 1st Circuit said the “pervasive” media coverage featuring “bone-chilling still shots and videos” of the bombing and days-long manhunt required the judge to run a jury selection process “sufficient to identify prejudice." But O'Toole fell short, the judges found.

The judges said O'Toole deemed jurors who had already formed the opinion that Tsarnaev was guilty qualified “because they answered ‘yes’ to the question whether they could decide this high-profile case based on the evidence.” Yet he didn't sufficiently dig into what jurors had read or heard about the case, it said.

"By not having the jurors identify what it was they already thought they knew about the case, the judge made it too difficult for himself and the parties to determine both the nature of any taint (e.g., whether the juror knew something prejudicial not to be conceded at trial) and the possible remedies for the taint," Thompson wrote.

All three judges agreed that the death sentence should be tossed. In a concurring opinion, Judge Juan Torruella wrote that the case should never have been tried in Boston. “If this case did not present a sufficient basis for a change of venue, there are no set of circumstances that will meet this standard, at least not in the First Circuit,” he wrote.

President Donald Trump weighed in on the ruling during an address to supporters on the tarmac of Tampa International Airport. "I see in Boston, where you have the animal that killed so many people during the Boston Marathon,” Trump said. “They just sent this conviction for the death penalty back to the lower courts so they’ll argue about that for a long time. It’s ridiculous.”



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Coronavirus LIVE Updates: India's COVID-19 fatality rate of 2.18% among lowest, says Harsh Vardhan

08:56 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in Assam LATEST updates

Nine-day-old girl youngest COVID-19 patient in Assam

A nine-day old girl from Hailakandi district became the youngest person in Assam to test positive for the novel coronavirus on Friday.

The infant has been taken to the Silchar Medical College and Hospital for treatment. The test result of the mother, who gave birth to the baby at home, turned out to be negative, the district spokesperson said.

08:26 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in India LATEST updates

India's COVID-19 recovery rate is 64.54%, says health ministry 

Chairing the 19th meeting of the Group of Ministers (GoM) on COVID-19 through video-conference on Friday, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said India has achieved the milestone of more than 10 lakh recoveries, a recovery rate to 64.54 percent.

08:09 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in India LATEST updates

India's COVID-19 fatality rate of 2.18% among lowest, says Harsh Vardhan 

Of the total coronavirus active cases, 0.28 percent patients are on ventilators, 1.61 percent patients required ICU support and 2.32 percent are on oxygen support, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said on Friday following the 19th meeting of the Group of Ministers (GOM) on COVID-19.

He added that India has one of the lowest case fatality rates globally, which is also steadily decreasing.

08:07 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in India LATEST updates 

India's COVID-19 toll tops 35,000, fifth highest in world now

India now has the fifth highest COVID-19 toll in the world after overtaking Italy's fatality count of 35,132. The country’s overall toll stood at 35,748 on Friday night. 

Of these, 18,356 have come in July alone, more than all COVID-19 deaths in the previous months put together.

08:02 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in Madhya Pradesh LATEST updates 

No public events in Madhya Pradesh for two weeks: Minister

Madhya Pradesh Home Minister Narottam Mishra said on Friday that the Chief Minister had directed all public representatives to not hold public events until 14 August, in view of several legislators and BJP leaders having contracted coronavirus.

"If necessary, they can do it virtually. More than five persons can’t visit public representatives together," said Mishra.

07:59 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak in Mizoram LATEST updates 

Mizoram records 412 coronavirus cases

Mizoram registered a total of 412 COVID-19 infections as on Saturday with 165 active cases. According to the Department of Information and Public Relations, the state has recorded 247 COVID-19 recoveries so far.

Coronavirus LATEST Updates: India's COVID-19 case fatality rate is progressively declining and now stands at 2.18 percent, one of the lowest globally, while just 0.28 percent of the total active patients are on ventilator, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said on Friday.

With a record single-day surge of 55,078 infections, India's COVID-19 caseload raced past 16 lakh on Friday, just two days after it reached the 15-lakh mark, while the number of recoveries rose to 10,57,805, according to Union Health Ministry data.

The country has so far registered 16,38,870 instances of the coronavirus infection. The toll increased to 35,747 with 779 fatalities being reported in 24 hours, the data updated at 8 am showed.

This is the second consecutive day that COVID-19 cases have increased by more than 50,000.

There are 5,45,318 active COVID-19 cases in the country. The recovery rate rose to 64.54 percent while the fatality rate dropped further to 2.18 percent.

According to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), a cumulative 1,88,32,970 samples have been tested up to 30 July with 6,42,588 being examined on Thursday.

However, Union health minister Harsh Vardhan said India's COVID-19 case fatality rate is progressively declining and now stands at 2.18 percent, one of the lowest globally.

In Delhi, the next round of sero-prevalence survey is slated to begin on Saturday, with authorities gearing up for the five-day exercise to comprehensively analyse the COVID-19 situation in the capital.

India's fatality rate among lowest globally, says Vardhan

Chairing the 19th meeting of the Group of Ministers (GoM) on COVID-19 through video-conference, Vardhan said India has achieved the milestone of more than 10 lakh recoveries, a recovery rate to 64.54 percent.

"This shows that the active cases under medical supervision are only 33.27 pc or approximately 1/3rd of total positive cases,” he was quoted as saying in a health ministry statement.

“India's Case Fatality Rate is also progressively reducing and currently stands at 2.18 percent, one of the lowest globally," he said.

Minister of External Affairs S Jaishankar, Minister of Civil Aviation Hardeep Puri, MoS Shipping (Independent Charge) Mansukh Lal Mandaviya, MoS Health Ashwini Kumar Choubey and MoS Home Nityanand Rai joined the meeting.

Speaking on the severity of the disease, Vardhan said, "Out of the total active cases, only 0.28 pc patients are on ventilators, 1.61 pc patients needed ICU support and 2.32 pc are on oxygen support.”

On the country's testing capacity, he said 6,42,588 tests were conducted in a span of 24 hours through a network of 1,331 labs — 911 government and 420 private – which has taken the cumulative number to more than 1.88 crore tests so far.

The GoM was briefed on the current status of COVID-19 in India and was apprised about the ramping up of the domestic production capacities of various sectors for manufacturing PPEs, masks, ventilators and drugs such as hydroxychloroquine, the statement said.

In terms of healthcare logistics, cumulatively 268.25 lakh N-95 masks, 120.40 lakh PPEs and 1,083.77 lakh HCQ tablets have been distributed to states/UTs and Central institutions, it said.

State-wise cases and deaths

Of the 779 deaths reported on Friday, 266 were from Maharashtra, 97 from Tamil Nadu, 83 from Karnataka, 68 from Andhra Pradesh and 57 from Uttar Pradesh.

West Bengal registered 46 deaths, Delhi 29, Gujarat 22, Jammu and Kashmir 17, Madhya Pradesh 14 and Rajasthan and Telangana 13 each.

Ten fatalities have been reported from Odisha, nine from Punjab, five from Jharkhand, four each from Bihar, Haryana, Manipur and Uttarakhand, three each from Goa and Chhattisgarh, two each from Assam, Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Kerala while Ladakh and Puducherry recorded one fatality each.

Manipur has for the first time reported COVID-19 fatalities.

Among the 35,747 deaths reported till now, Maharashtra accounts for the maximum 14,728 fatalities, followed by Delhi with 3,936 deaths, Tamil Nadu 3,838, Gujarat 2,418, Karnataka 2,230, Uttar Pradesh 1,587, West Bengal 1,536, Andhra Pradesh 1,281 and Madhya Pradesh 857.

So far, 663 people have died of COVID-19 in Rajasthan, 505 in Telangana, 417 in Haryana, 370 in Punjab, 365 in Jammu and Kashmir, 282 in Bihar, 169 in Odisha, 103 in Jharkhand, 94 in Assam, 76 in Uttarakhand and 70 in Kerala.

Chhattisgarh has registered 51 deaths, Puducherry 48, Goa 42, Tripura 21, Chandigarh and Himachal Pradesh 14 each, Ladakh seven, Meghalaya and Nagaland five each, Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Manipur four each, Arunachal Pradesh three, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu two and Sikkim one.

Delhi govt's sero-survey to begin from tomorrow

The next sero-prevalence survey is scheduled to be conducted from 1-5 August.

Delhi Health Minister Satyendar Jain had on 22 July announced that after analysing the results of the last survey, it was decided that more such exercises would be undertaken every month to formulate better policies for tackling the COVID-19 situation in the city.

A senior government official said 15,000 samples would be collected over a span of five days and the survey would kickstart in four districts, including north and northwest Delhi.

It would follow the same protocol as that of the survey conducted earlier by the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

All CDMOs will be tasked with carrying out the survey in their districts. Random people will be tested for antibodies.

The health department has prepared a detailed plan under which every district medical officer has been asked to conduct the survey in their respective jurisdictions, officials said.

The last sero-prevalence survey was conducted by the Delhi government in association with the NCDC from 27 June to 10 July.

UK PM halts lockdown easing

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Friday applied brakes on further easing of lockdown measures, due from this weekend, in England, fearing a spike in the COVID-19 cases.

Addressing a briefing at Downing Street in London, Johnson said, "we must squeeze the brake pedal" to keep the virus under control and also announced that face coverings will become mandatory across many more indoor settings, such as cinemas, besides just public transport and shops and supermarkets.

"The prevalence of the virus in the community, in England, is likely to be rising for the first time since May," said Johnson, referring to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) data.

“That means until August 15 at the earliest casinos, bowling alleys, skating rinks and the remaining close-contact services must remain closed. Indoor performances will not resume, pilots of larger gatherings in sports venues and conference centres will not take place, and wedding receptions of up to 30 people will not be permitted," he said.

The UK PM insisted that progress against coronavirus continues, with the daily and weekly number of deaths falling, but warned that some European countries are "struggling" to control it.

“The UK must be ready to react," he said.

With inputs from PTI



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China only wants peace and harmonious relations... Stop the record, we've heard all this before

The sense of déjà vu, that the sense of déjà vu is inescapable, is inescapable.

That "China's basic policy towards India remains unchanged" is the most — and dare I say, only — key takeaway from Chinese Ambassador to India Sun Weidong's address at a webinar titled 'China-India Relations: The Way Forward' organised on Thursday by the Institute of Chinese Studies. And the basis for this pithy — and it could be argued, somewhat unkind — assessment is that this is how it has been for much of the recent past.

Through Depsang, Doka La and now Galwan Valley, it's always been the same old story: China is not a threat, China wants peaceful cooperation and China will uphold its sovereignty. There's also the "Expansion? What expansion?" asked with the mix of genuine shock and hurt one feels after being slapped across the face with a cold wet fish.

After the Depsang incursion in 2013, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said, "Our troops are patrolling on the Chinese side of the [Line of Actual Control] and have never trespassed the line." In 2017, as the Doka La standoff was escalating, the ministry spokesperson Lu Kang displayed photographs of the border at a press briefing and accused India of having "transgressed", "trespassed" and mounted an "incursion" into Chinese territory. And in June after Galwan Valley, spokesperson Zhao Lijian said, "None of the responsibility lies with China... it is the Indian border troops who crossed the line first...  it is the Indian side that violated bilateral consensus and started provocations first...  it is the India side that violated international rules and attacked the Chinese side first" and so on.

What must be understood clearly is that it is never China's fault.

After all, as Sun claimed, "China has never claimed any land outside its own territory" and that "[the] label of 'expansionist' cannot be pinned on China". Instead, as the ambassador went to great lengths to explain, "China has always emphasised win-win cooperation in its development. While developing itself rapidly, China has contributed more than 30 percent to world economic growth and over 70 percent to global poverty reduction for many years in a row. China never exported refugees, let alone wars. Instead, China has shared its development dividends with others. China's contributions to the world are obvious to all."

Was it one of those 'obvious to all' contributions — this time in the South China Sea — of which the ambassador speaks that saw Malaysia issue an 'unusually strong statement' against China at the United Nations? Don't bother answering that one; let's move on.

Borders, boundaries and lines

Over the decades, the two Asian countries have set up countless mechanisms to facilitate dialogue on a variety of topics relevant to the bilateral relationship, not least of which is the geographical delineation of the two countries. Whether the two sides wish to call it a border, a boundary or a line, there is very little clarity on exactly where it lies and this isn't helped by Chinese evasiveness when it comes to exchanging maps with India so that both sides can figure out each other's point of view. And as the next section will point out, this is not on account of a misunderstanding or anything of the sort.

The LAC that spans 4,056 kilometres is broadly divided into three sectors: The western sector at Ladakh, the middle sector at Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh and the eastern sector at Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh. India and China have over the years held 22 Special Representatives meetings with a view to settling the lingering question of just where the border lies. And in this time, only maps pertaining to the middle sector have changed hands formally (in 2001). It is here that the two countries have identified a few disagreements on where they differ on the LAC.

When it comes to the eastern sector, the matter is off the table, considering Beijing believes Arunachal Pradesh is a part of a Chinese region called Southern Tibet. As for the western sector, as this article points out, "The last clarification of the LAC occurred in 2002 when the Indian and Chinese sides shared the maps of their respective LACs in the western sector pertaining to Ladakh. The Chinese delegation refused to accept the map, and the maps were not formally exchanged."

And as it stands, China's position is that it will not exchange maps because then that would formalise it as the international boundary. But dialogue about the line between the two countries continues despite there being no consensus on where said line lies. That's cartography with Chinese characteristics for you.

Basic policy remains unchanged

When Xi Jinping was appointed general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in 2012, he publicly used the phrase "qiang zhongguo meng" which translates loosely to "strong nation dream", a variation on the "Chinese dream". Following the relative calm, within China and beyond its borders, of Hu Jintao's presidency came the Xi era that saw him embark on a number of measures including securing his own future as 'president for life', launching  Document 9 that targeted those accused of rebelling against or colluding with western elements against Chinese ideology, putting in place military reform and tightening his grip on the people of Xinjiang province, Tibet, Taiwan and most recently, Hong Kong. "To him, seizing control was the only way to ensure security," as this article neatly summarises. This is an appropriate point at which to revisit Sun's remarks at Thursday's webinar.

First, he said, "I want to point out emphatically that Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and Xizang (Tibet) affairs are totally China's internal affairs and bear on China's sovereignty and security. While China doesn't interfere in other country's domestic affairs, it allows no external interference and never trades its core interests either." Alternating between dismissing criticism about its actions by claiming they are 'internal' matters — something India has begun to do with greater regularity of late — and playing the victim card (most notably when it is accused of cyber espionage) is a tried and tested formula under Xi and Beijing isn't going to be rushing to change that any time soon.

Second, the Chinese ambassador began his address by touching upon India-China relations and added, "[The] precious experience we have learned is that, we should unswervingly adhere to the strategic guidance of our leaders." At first sight, for a democracy like India, that sentence is jarring anyway, but a closer look unveils a subtext that only becomes clear over the course of the envoy's full set of remarks. Beneath all the warm fuzzy tautologies about "developing good-neighbourly and friendly relations", the message being driven is that China is the undisputed leader in the region and the other countries will do well to 'unswervingly adhere'. After all, it isn't a major coincidence, a curious set of circumstances, a language barrier or a major misunderstanding that has seen 22 Special Representative meetings pass without an exchange of a complete set of maps.

It is that way because Beijing wants it to be that way.

And why not? China is the big power and can afford to string the smaller powers along. So whether it's Depsang, Doka La, TikTok, Tibet, Tuting or Galwan Valley, it is as the ambassador said: "Basic policy remains unchanged."



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All India Bar Examination scheduled for 16 August postponed, new dates to be announced soon

The All India Bar Examination (AIBE) that was to be held on 16 August has been postponed till further notice. The examination has been deferred due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Bar Council of India (BCI), regulator of legal education in the country, has also extended the date of receipt of application till 31 August.

“Keeping in view the present pandemic situation and frequent lockdown, increasing number of corona patients daily, the council has resolved to postpone the All India Bar Examination to be held on August 16,” the Bar Council said.

According to a report by Live Law, the new date of the examination and schedule will be decided by the monitoring committee for AIBE. The panel will be headed by a former judge of the Supreme Court of India.

A report by NDTV mentions that the last AIBE was conducted on 15 September and the results were declared on 22 November.

The national level exam is conducted to test a potential advocate who wants to practice law. A lawyer needs to pass this exit examination with two years of enrollment in the Bar Council. An advocate has to clear the AIBE exam to get "Certificate of Practice" by the Bar Council of India.

Candidates who have not yet completed the application process can register themselves for AIBE 2020 on the official website - allindiabarexamination.com.



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Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Conference chief Sajad Gani Lone released from year-long detention

Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Conference (JKPC) chairman Sajad Gani Lone was on Friday released from nearly a year-long detention, officials said.

Lone was released days ahead of the first anniversary of the Centre's move to revoke Article 370 of the Constitution in August last year, officials said.

Lone also confirmed his release by taking to Twitter.

"Finally five days short of a year I have been officially informed that I am a free man. So much has changed. So have I. Jail was not a new experience. Earlier ones were harsh with usual doses of physical torture. But this was psychologically draining. Much to share hopefully soon," he said in a tweet.

The JKPC chairman was moved to his residence in February and placed under house arrest, the officials said.

They said he was taken into custody on August 5 last year when the Centre revoked the special status of Jammu and Kashmir and divided the erstwhile state into two union territories.

Lone, a former cabinet minister in the PDP-BJP coalition, was kept at makeshift jail at Centaur hotel on the banks of the famous Dal Lake along with other leaders from mainstream parties before they all were moved to MLA hostel. However, in February, Lone and PDP leader Waheed Parra were moved to their residences and were kept under house arrest.



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NEP 2020: Quality of Anganwadi Centres to determine success of policy paving way for inclusive education

सर्वद्रव्येषु विद्यैव द्रव्यमाहुरनुत्तमम् ।
अहार्यत्वादनर्ध्यत्वादक्षयत्वाच्च सर्वदा ॥

The rough translation of the above Sanskrit saying goes thus: Among all the things that an individual possesses, education is supreme because education cannot be lost to anyone, no price can be put on it and it can never be destroyed.

Perhaps the adage better late than never fits the nod the Union Cabinet gave to the National Education Policy 2020 on Wednesday which seeks to transform the country's academic scenario from all the way from a toddler to the level of a research scholar.

The magnitude of the process is evident from the number of suggestions made (over 2 lakh), the involvement of 2.5 lakh Gram Panchayats, 6,600 blocks, 6,000 urban local bodies and 676 districts across the country which came to the panel chaired by former cabinet secretary TSR Subramaniam who headed the Committee for Evolution of the New Education Policy.

Following that, a nine-member Committee for the Draft National Education Policy was formed in June 2017 under the chairmanship of former ISRO chief K Kasturirangan and it submitted the Draft National Education Policy, 2019 to the government last May.

'Severe learning crisis in India'

"Studies tracking student learning outcomes clearly demonstrate that children who start out behind tend to stay behind throughout their school years. At the current time, there is a severe learning crisis in India, where children are enrolled in primary school but are failing to attain even basic skills such as foundational literacy and numeracy," the Kasturigan committee said in the NEP 2020.

Apart from the problems of access, quality-related deficiencies such as inappropriate curriculum, lack of qualified and trained educators and less-than-optimal pedagogy have only compounded the problem. The deficiency in grade school-preparedness is particularly distinct between advantaged and disadvantaged groups.

According to the IMD World Talent Ranking, India stands at a poor 62 out of 63 surveyed when it comes to the total public expenditure on education per student across the spectrum. It spends 4.4 percent of its GDP on education which the Kasturirangan committee wants to be hiked to 6 percent of GDP at the earliest.

The country also does poorly in the overall performance, securing the rank 59 among 63 countries.

Although the Constitution (86th Amendment) Act, 2002 inserted Article 21-A to make free and compulsory education for all children in the age group of six to 14 years as a fundamental right on the basis of which the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 (RTE Act) came into force in April 2010, the country's attempt to universal elementary education is nowhere near its goal despite the constitutional and legal underpinnings.

Mincing no words to drive the seriousness of the issue, the NEP 2020 said: "If action is not taken soon, over the next few years the country could lose 10 crore or more students — the size of a large country — from the learning system and to illiteracy... Attaining foundational literacy and numeracy for all children must become an immediate national mission."

What is worrisome is that far too many six-year-olds are entering Class 1 with very limited Early Childhood Care and Education due to lack of any suitable preprimary options.

"Schooling in the early years also lays too little curricular emphasis on foundational literacy and numeracy and, in general, on the reading, writing, and speaking of languages and on mathematical ideas and thinking," the NEP 2020 said.

Despite painting a grim picture of the state of affairs, the policy prepared a roadmap for the way ahead with an increased focus on foundational literacy and numeracy recommending a redesign of school and classroom curriculum and schedules for Classes 1 to 5 to build a love for reading and mathematics among students.

The policy also called for a large-scale community and volunteer involvement for the process to be a success.

"Qualified volunteers (such as retired teachers and army officers, excellent students from neighbouring schools, and passionate socially-conscious college graduates from across the country) will also be drawn on a large scale to join the NTP and the RIAP on an unpaid basis, during the academic year as well as in the summer, as a service to their communities and to the country," the NEP 2020 said.

The institution of National Tutors Programme (NTP) has been incorporated in the policy where the best performers in each school will be drawn for up to five hours a week as tutors during the school for fellow (generally younger) students who need help. "Being selected as a peer tutor will be considered a prestigious position, earning a certificate from the State each year that indicates the hours of service," the NEP 2020 said to encourage such participation.

The formulation of Remedial Instructional Aides Programme (RIAP) is another recommendation as a temporary 10-year project to draw instructors especially women from local communities to formally help students who have fallen behind and bring them back into the fold.

Revamping Anganwadi system

The Kasturirangan committee rightly realised unless imparting of education is methodically approached right from the toddler level it is near impossible to fix the curve as an individual advance in age.

It is here the Anganwadi, which means "courtyard shelter", a system that was started by the Central government way back in 1975 as part of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) programme to combat child hunger and malnutrition, becomes critical.

There are 13.42 lakh Anganwadi Centres (AWCs) functioning across the country today. The AWCs are the focal point for the implementation of all health, nutrition and early learning initiatives under ICDS.

The observation of the committee on the present condition of AWCs is not very enthusiastic.

"Anganwadis are currently quite deficient in supplies and infrastructure for education; as a result, they tend to contain more children in the 2-4 year age range and fewer in the educationally critical 4-6 year age range; they also have few teachers trained in or specially dedicated to early childhood education. Meanwhile, private and other pre-schools have largely functioned as downward extensions of primary school," the committee said in the National Education Policy 2020.

The high focus on strengthening the AWCs in terms of infrastructure and human resources is not unfounded as it is the first layer of foundation on which a strong education system will rest and consequently determine the quality of the future product.

"The learning process for a child commences immediately at birth. Evidence from neuroscience shows that over 85% of a child’s cumulative brain development occurs prior to the age of 6, indicating the critical importance of developmentally appropriate care and stimulation of the brain in a child’s early years to promote sustained and healthy brain development and growth," the committee said in NEP 2020.

Without proper care in the early years, deficiencies in the development of critical areas of the brain and corresponding adverse effects on cognitive and emotional processing ultimately stand as an obstacle in shaping up a quality human asset.

"Excellent care, nurture, nutrition, physical activity, psycho-social environment, and cognitive and emotional stimulation during a child’s first six years are thus considered extremely critical for ensuring proper brain development and, consequently, desired learning curves over a person’s lifetime," the NEP 2020 said.

While many AWCs have fared well with respect to healthcare for mothers and infants, helped support parents and build communities, providing critical nutrition and health awareness, immunisation, basic health check-ups, and referrals and connections to local public health systems, their success is not impressive when it comes to the educational aspects of ECCE.

The number of beneficiaries of supplementary nutrition for children (6 months - 6 years) in AWCs across India have been huge. In the year 2011-12, it was 7,90,05,328; in 2012-13 it was 7,74,04,279; in 2013-14 it was 8,49,40,601; in 2014-15 it was 8,28,99,424; in 2015-16 it was 8,28,78,916 and in 2016-17 it was 8,00,73,473. However, in 2017-18it fell sharply to 7,19,41,717.

In February 2016, the government issued guidelines to construct 4 lakh AWCs across the country in convergence with Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. Under the 14th Finance Commission period, drinking water and sanitation facilities at AWCs were provided from funds available with the Panchayti Raj Institutions.

The number of AWCs having toilets increased from 8.68 lakh to 9.46 lakh during 2016-17 to 2018-19 and those having drinking water facilities increased from 10.16 lakh to 11.76 lakh.

In no uncertain terms, the NEP 2020 made it clear that the strengthening of the Anganwadi system is non-negotiable.

"Anganwadi Centres will be heavily built up to deal with the educational needs of children up to the age of 6. In particular, Anganwadi workers trained in techniques of cognitive stimulation for infants and of play-based and multilevel education for 3-6 year olds will be stationed across the country," the policy said.

The policy stressed the colocation of AWCs and primary schools as a primary requirement during location planning for new AWCs and primary schools or to ensure high-quality stand-alone pre-schools in areas where existing AWCs and primary schools are not able to take on the educational requirements.

Talking about the administrative side, the policy said that the responsibility for planning and implementation of all ECCE curriculum and pedagogy in AWCs and all pre-schools will lie with the human resource development ministry.

Catch 'em tiny

The NEP 2020 highly emphasises on the right approach to early childhood care and education.

"During the ages prior to 3 years, quality ECCE includes the health and nutrition of both the mother and the child, but also crucially includes cognitive and emotional stimulation of the infant through talking, playing, moving, listening to music and sounds, and stimulating all the other senses particularly sight and touch," the NEP 2020 said.

There is also thrust on exposure to languages, numbers, and simple problem-solving during this period.

Going forward from the age of 3 to 6, the policy emphasised on developing "self-help skills (such as “getting ready on one’s own”), motor skills, cleanliness, the handling of separation anxiety, being comfortable around one’s peers, moral development (such as knowing the difference between “right” and “wrong”), physical development through movement and exercise."

Communication with parents and others to express thoughts and feelings, gaining patience to finish a task and acquiring good habits are also key focus during this period of an ideal ECCE. During all this, continuous healthcare and nutrition should go on unhindered.

"... it is important that children of ages 3-8 have access to a flexible, multifaceted, multilevel, play-based, activity-based, and discovery-based education. It also becomes natural then to view this period, from up to three years of pre-school (ages 3-6) to the end of Grade 2 (age 8), as a single pedagogical unit called the “Foundational Stage”," the NEP 2020 said.

The committee also recommended that to ensure ECCE to all children before the age of six, ECCE should be included as an integral part of the RTE Act.

Fitting into global education development agenda

The global education development agenda, which is part of the sustainable development goal 4 (SDG4) of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, seeks to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” by 2030.

However, if India fails to achieve universal foundational literacy and numeracy in primary school and beyond by 2025, any National Educational Policy, no matter how grand, will translate only into a mere vacuum that will push the nation into a permanent abyss.



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Tamil Nadu Plus One Result 2020 Declared: 96.04% students clear exams; check score at tnresults.nic.in

The Tamil Nadu Plus One result 2020 has been declared.

Students can check the result at the official website of Directorate of Government Examinations, Tamil Nadu - dge.tn.gov.in.

According to a report in The Times of India, apart from the Tamil Nadu DGE’s websites, students can also check their score on tnresults.nic.in, tnresults.in, dge1.tn.nic.in, and dge2.tn.nic.in.

Here’s a direct link to check Tamil Nadu Plus One Result 2020 - https://ift.tt/3fnJdSp.

The report said that over eight lakh students had appeared for the examination this year which were conducted from 4 to 23 March. The board had to cancel the final exam which was scheduled for 26 March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

As per the report by Indian Express, the board has also released the results for Class 12 re-sit candidates.

The pass percentage in Tamil Nadu Class 11 exam has improved by one percent this year. A total of 96.04 percent students cleared the exam. Last year's pass percentage was 95 percent.

The report said that girls have outperformed boys registering 97.49 pass percentage, while the pass percentage of boys was 94.38 percent. Last year, the pass percentage of girls was 96.5 and for boys it was 93.3.

A total of 2,716 schools have recorded 100 percent pass percentage this year. The aided schools performed better with 96.95 percent, while government schools stood at 92.71 percent, the report added.

Candidates will have to enter the registration number and date of birth in DD/MM/YYYY format and click on get marks button.

As per a report in Hindustan Times, 94.1 percent students cleared the TN Plus One Arts result, 96.28 percent passed in commerce stream, 96.33 percent in science stream and 92.8 percent in vocational result.

On 29 July, Tamil Nadu minister for school education KA Sengottaiyan has said that the state board's Plus One result 2020 will be declared on 31 July at 9.30 am.

In a tweet, the minister said that the results will be sent via SMS to the mobile number provided by the students and individual candidates in the schools where they have studied. The board will announce the date for receiving the mark sheet from their schools at a later date.

 



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S Jaishankar’s 'non-alignment' remarks reveal Galwan no inflection point, little sense in clinging to ideological purity

At a recent webinar organised by the Observer Research Foundation on the trajectory of India-US ties, scholars from both nations reiterated the consensus that the relationship has come a long way since the estrangement of Cold War days and despite some persistent irritants, the trend points towards greater military-strategic synergy and maybe even cooperation on crucial emerging global issues like climate change, underwritten by bipartisan political support in both democracies.

From terrorism to Kashmir, the Donald Trump administration has been in India’s corner and has backed New Delhi on its recent moves — be it Balakot air strikes or Article 370 — while US popularity among Indian public has seen a concomitant rise.

Nobody can dispute that India-US ties — boosted by overlapping strategic interests, deepening trade and overwhelming people-to-people synergy — have undergone a tectonic shift starting with the civil nuclear deal.

However, what’s interesting to note is the language of temperance and moderation that still defines mutual expectations. It gives an impression that the relationship, despite all the recent progress as well as the commonality, scale and urgency of Chinese threat, is still struggling with the tyranny of low expectations.

This caginess is not to be confused with the trade ties, where considerable differences exist, or deepening of military and diplomatic cooperation, where the embrace has been tightest.

India conducts more regular and increasingly complex military exercises with US than any other nation. Notable among these are the recently introduced amphibious tri-services exercise Tiger Triumph, Yudh Abhyas, the annual high-profile Malabar exercises also involving Japan; both countries have signed four of the five major defence-enabling agreements with a possibility that the remaining one, BECA (Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement) could be inked this year; in terms of maritime security, India conducted group sail with the US, Japan, and the Philippines in South China Sea last year  projecting power deep into the area that China considers as its backyard while USS Nimitz, the world’s largest nuclear-powered supercarrier, recently undertook PASSEX with the Indian Navy in Bay of Bengal signaling Indo-US solidarity amid rising tension with China.

Thanks to the defence enabling agreements, US designation of India as a Major Defence Partner and the elevation of India to Strategic Trade Authorization-1 (STA-1) status — effectively bracketing India with NATO allies — Washington has opened the door for India to access advanced defence equipment and enjoy greater interoperability and information-sharing with US military.

On the diplomatic front, the progress has been at both bilateral and multilateral planes. The 2+2 mechanism has been elevated to ministerial-level, the quadrilateral security platform (also involving Japan and Australia) has received greater commitment and is inching towards a functional cooperative framework.

Also, speculation is rife that India may finally invite Australia to join the Malabar exercise.

During a recent event organized by the US India Business Council, US secretary of state Mike Pompeo called India a “trusted” partner and announced that the ‘quad dialogue’ among the “like-minded democracies in the Indo-Pacific” has been “reinvigorated” and he is “looking forward to (his) meetings in Delhi next week.”

The US, which backs India’s aim of getting a seat at UN Security Council, and which blocked China’s move at the UN on Jammu and Kashmir in January, is a facilitator for Indian membership in nuclear export control groups and also a conduit for India’s betterment of ties with partners in Indo-Pacific.

As author and Brookings Institution scholar Tanvi Madan wrote in India Today, “Multiple Indian prime ministers have, over the years, strengthened the country’s partnership with the US… The fruits of this cooperation are evident in the current China-India crisis, in American rhetorical support, diplomatic cooperation, the use of military equipment acquired from the US, and, reportedly, intelligence-sharing… And yet, despite the logic, there remains a reticence in India that has slowed the pace of the partnership.”

While China’s strategic opportunism and post-pandemic aggression has hastened the tempo of Indo-US strategic partnership, New Delhi still retains a fair bit of hesitancy in joining a US-led coalition against China.

India has been at pains to point out that its Indo-Pacific construct is not aimed at containing China, and New Delhi remains pointedly averse to publicising such a pro-US tilt even though an informal rationalisation of the security and geostrategic bond is evident.

This duality in India’s approach resists logical explanation. India would like the US to act as its bulwark against Chinese belligerence, just as Washington cultivates India to be the democratic counterweight to China, and yet New Delhi seems too constricted within the ideological straitjacket of ‘strategic autonomy’, the baggage of ‘Cold War’ and a fear of provoking China to talk openly about such an alignment.

It is one of those rare cases in bilateral relationship where rhetoric not only fails to match up to actions, even seeks to downplay the growing closeness. This raises questions about India’s intent, and emits confusing signals about its motives and aspirations.

Worth noting that while ‘quad’ nations have shown no inclination towards developing the platform into an ‘Asian NATO’, the US has been talking up an alliance of “free world” against China.

Washington has been quite forthcoming and vocal about its support to India on the ongoing Sino-Indian military standoff in Ladakh while pushing back against Beijing’s maximalist efforts to turn South China Sea into a Chinese lake. 

It is evident that US policy towards China is turning decidedly hawkish and the Trump administration may even be laying the roadmap for an era of economic, strategic and ideological confrontation but this repositioning also carries consequences for India.

As the stand-off in Ladakh continues with China showing no signs of vacating the Line of Actual Control spots it had occupied, high-ranking US officials in the Trump administration from Pompeo to secretary of defence Mark Esper have offered a steady stream of support — a departure from US stance during the 2017 Doka La stand-off when backing for India was muted and subtler, possibly in line with Indian requirements.

Moreover, US support for India on this issue has been bipartisan, wide-ranging — also covering India’s economic countermeasures against China such as banning Chinese apps — and sustained.

On Wednesday, a top Trump administration official said the US is “willing to accept more risk” and build alliances in Asia to check Chinese aggression in a keynote address where India was mentioned several times.

At a webinar organized by Brookings Institution, Lisa Curtis, US national security council’s senior director for South and Central Asia, said “India demonstrated that it has the will and the capabilities to stand up to China… it played the economic card by banning the Chinese apps and putting a hold on Chinese investment contracts. And I think the rest of the Indo-Pacific region is watching this very carefully” and the region would be “encouraged by India’s resolve.” 

Additionally, the US-Australia joint statement following their 2+2 dialogue in Washington on Tuesday mentioned India as a key partner alongside the ‘Five Eyes Partners’ “to strengthen” the “networked structure of alliances and partnerships to maintain a region that is secure, prosperous, inclusive, and rules-based.”

These signals indicate that the US wants to create an atmosphere of trust so that New Delhi can shed some of that reticence. India’s coyness and graduated approach, however, arises at least partially from its status as a middle power that seeks to manage the relationship with a revanchist neighbour that also happens to be the world’s presumptive superpower.

Along with internal and external balancing strategies, India also spends considerable effort in engaging, competing and cooperating with China to de-incentivise Beijing’s coercive behavior.

However, as should be evident by now, this policy needs a revision. It has been evident for long, most certainly since Doka La, that India-China ties are in need of a complete reset to reflect China’s growing might and the changing power dynamic in Asia.

Yet India had carried on with the old modus vivendi, hoping to manage China’s territorial revanchism with ‘quiet diplomacy’ unless we reach a point of no return.

Galwan was expected to be that inflection point.

When the PLA ambushed Indian soldiers and killed 20 of our jawans, a rare congruence was evident in the reaction of public and policymakers that a return to “normalcy” after this watershed moment is impossible.

In a telephone call with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, external affairs minister S Jaishankar warned that “this unprecedented development will have a serious impact on the bilateral relationship.” 

While economic nationalism was on the rise with a call for boycott of Chinese goods, the foreign policy establishment called it a “a very hostile and violently assertive face of China” and Beijing “has effectively destroyed the edifice of bilateral relations so painstakingly built post the Chinese aggression of 1962.” Gautam Bambawale, former ambassador to China, wrote that it is time to give a military angle to quad.

Among strategic commentators, a hardening of views was equally palpable. Nitin Pai, director of Takshashila Institution, called for deploying naval power to acquire leverage over China, JNU professor Rajesh Rajagopalan argued that India cannot afford to be defensive and risk-averse this time, ORF distinguished fellow Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan saw it as a game-changer for New Delhi while Yusuf Unjhawala, editor of Defence Forum India, called for an open alignment with the US in “India’s economic and strategic interests.”

The US is one among India’s many partners for external balancing of China, but the most consequential. The call for a formal deepening of the relationship, if not within an alliance structure, has gathered pace.

The latest to air such a view has been Lt Generael (Retired) DS Hooda, the former Northern Commander of Indian Army who has argued strongly in his News18 column in favour of “an open alliance with the US aimed at checking China’s hegemonic ambitions.”

According to Lt Gen Hooda, “In countering China’s ambitions, the US faces the difficulties of traversing the Pacific Ocean and therefore needs Asian partners like India. For India, US support could be crucial to prevent us from reaching a position where we are forced to deal with events on China’s terms. Thus, there is mutual benefit for both India and the US to align more closely.”

This clear-eyed assessment challenges India’s axiomatic notions about alliance and partnerships and seeks to allay its post-colonial historical experience.

If India’s internal balancing options are limited and engagement with China hasn’t brought deterrence, a multilateral external balancing through an amorphous coalition of democracies is an idea worth exploring.

If nothing else, the old rhetoric of strategic autonomy, that has failed to achieve strategic gains or autonomy in decision-making, must go. Independence cannot be an end in itself. It is only the means to an end.

If India’s aim is to secure national interest — as it should be — then India must ask itself whether national interest is best secured in accepting restrictions imposed by so-called “strategic autonomy”, or will it be best served by aligning in letter and spirit with a major power where interests overlap.

Recent comments by India’s external affairs minister, however, signal a return to the tired old strategy of risk-averse, careful hedging. Speaking at a recent virtual conference, Jaishankar said non-alignment was a term of a “particular era and geopolitical landscape” that no longer exists, and in an increasingly multipolar world India must take “risks” and more proactive stance on the “big issues” of the day such as connectivity, maritime security, terrorism, climate change and terrorism.

But he was equally clear that one element of ‘non-alignment’, independence, is a “factor of continuity for India” and India “was never part of an alliance system and we will never be.” 

The EAM expanded on this at another forum where he observed that the US “really has to learn to work ...with a more multipolar world, with more plurilateral arrangements, go beyond alliances with which really it has grown up over the last two generations.”

It is easy to see where Jaishankar is coming from. In a speech at Council on Foreign Relations last year, India’s external affairs minister — a career diplomat — explained India’s objective of “multi-alignment, which is you keep your relationships well-oiled with all the major power centers, and the country which does that best actually has political positioning in the world which may be superior to its actual structural strengths.”

Jaishankar’s recent comments can be interpreted in two ways. First, Russia remains a crucial factor in India’s diversification strategy, an important cog in India’s wheel in balancing China and a provider of advanced defence equipment as well as a facilitator of India’s defense capabilities.

Jaishankar’s call for ‘independence’ is at one level a careful attempt not to alienate Russia even more in a relationship that is clearly drifting.

As Tanvi Madan observed in The Asan Forum, “Strategically, Delhi has seen Moscow as a key part of its strategy to balance China, both as a supplier of military equipment and potentially as a counterweight. A Russia that perceives and treats China as a rival helps shape the regional balance of power in a way that benefits India—it means one more power that could prevent a unipolar Beijing-dominated Asia.”

Russia’s importance in the India-China dynamic was evident in defence minister Rajnath Singh’s recent visit to Moscow where he finalised an emergency purchase of 33 fighter aircraft at a cost of Rs 38,990 crore and urged Moscow to quicken up the delivery of S-400 air defence missile system at the risk of triggering US sanctions.

Worth noting also that India has reportedly invited Russia to join the Indo-Pacific framework to allay notions that it is a US-centric grouping aimed at containing China.

Second, India retains the Cold War era-distrust of alliance systems fearing that such an alignment will happen at the cost of restricting policy options. Here, India and the US, despite their security and defence cooperation, are essentially pulling in different directions.

While the US works best within the normative framework of an alliance structure, India wants to avoid the trappings of commitment at all costs.

We can see this in Pompeo’s recent speech at the Nixon Library in California — an address that generated much debate — where he admitted that the US cannot face the challenge of China alone and called for “a new grouping of like-minded nations, a new alliance of democracies” because “if the free world doesn’t change, communist China will surely change us…”

As Singapore-based academic C Raja Mohan has noted in Indian Express, “Delhi will certainly demur at Pompeo calling the group an “alliance.” It would rather have it described as a “coalition of democracies.” 

And yet India’s touchiness over joining an alliance system or a coalition is illogical. Japan, an American ally, has been far more cautious about antagonising China than the US, initially even failing to join the US, Australia, Canada and UK in criticising Beijing’s draconian national security law.

Australia, the ‘five eyes’ partner of the US, released a joint statement after the AUSMIN consultations criticising Chinese aggression over South China Sea, announced a scaling up of their joint military efforts and vowed to carry out more regular joint exercises in the South China Sea to counter Beijing’s increasing militarisation.

However, Australian foreign minister Marise Payne also clarified that “Australia would seek to promote its own national interests” and declined to echo Pompeo’s strident rhetoric against the Chinese Communist Party.

She added that though Australia and the US were close allies, they “don’t agree on everything.” 

This punctures the contention that greater alignment with a major power restricts strategic independence. As Lt General Hooda pointed out in his column “international politics is also not a zero-sum game, and an alliance with the US does not mean abandoning all ties with China or a reset in relations with countries like Russia.”

India would have noted that despite its elaborate efforts to distance itself from an alliance system — as much a post-colonial insecurity as a signaling mechanism aimed at Russia and China, Beijing already believes that India is little more than a US lackey.

As its State-controlled media noted, “India says one thing, but does another. Even though India claims not to part of any alliance, its practice shows that it is inclined to the US.”

When the net result of a carefully calibrated policy is negative, it makes little sense to show dogmatic adherence to it to pass an ideological purity test. The task is not difficult. If a closer alignment with the US in a multilateral framework achieves deterrence, India should be open to the possibility instead of peremptorily closing its mind.



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Thursday 30 July 2020

India records 55,079 COVID-19 cases in a day, taking total over 16 lakh; 10,57,806 patients recover

New Delhi: With the highest single-day spike of 55,079 COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, India's overall count  breached the 16 lakh mark on Friday, informed the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

With this latest spike, the total cases in the country stand at 16,38,871. Of the total, there are 5,45,318 active cases. So far 10,57,806 patients have been cured/discharged/migrated.

At least 779 deaths due to COVID-19 have been reported in the country in the past 24 hours, taking the toll to 35,747.

As per the Union Health Ministry, Maharashtra has a total of 1,48,454 active cases and recorded 14,729 deaths due to COVID-19.

Tamil Nadu has a total of 57,962 active cases and 3,838 deaths in the state. While, Delhi has a total of 10,743 active cases and 3,936 deaths.

The Indian Council of Medical Research informed that a total number of COVID-19 samples tested up to 30 July is 1,88,32,970 including 6,42,588 samples tested on Friday.



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Vikas Dubey encounter: Plea in SC seeking removal of Justice BS Chauhan-led inquiry commission members

New Delhi: A fresh plea was Thursday filed in the Supreme Court seeking re-constitution of the inquiry commission set up to probe into the killing of gangster Vikas Dubey in police encounter by removing former apex court judge Justice BS Chauhan as the Chairman along with two other members.

A bench headed by Chief Justice SA Bobde had on 28 July dismissed an earlier application seeking removal of two other members of the inquiry commission and had said that it would not allow the petitioner to cast aspersions.

In the fresh application, advocate Ghanshyam Upadhyay has sought re-constitution of the inquiry commission and substituting its members - Justice (retd) Chauhan, former high court judge Justice (retd) Shashi Kant Agarwal and retired Uttar Pradesh Director General of Police KL Gupta with other former judges of the apex court and retired DGPs.

Besides this, the plea has also sought re-constitution of the special investigating team (SIT), set up by the Uttar Pradesh government to look into the crimes committed by the gangster and alleged collusion between Dubey, police and politicians.

The inquiry commission will also probe the killing of eight policemen allegedly by the Dubey gang and the subsequent encounter of the gangster and five of his purported associates.

The apex court had on 22 July approved the Uttar Pradesh government's draft notification for appointing Justice (retd) Chauhan as the chairman of the three-member inquiry commission.

Eight policemen, including DSP Devendra Mishra, who were ambushed in Bikru village in Chaubeypur area of Kanpur when they were going to arrest Dubey and fell to bullets fired from rooftops shortly after midnight on 3 July.

Dubey was killed in an encounter in the morning of 10 July when a police vehicle carrying him from Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh to Kanpur met with an accident and he tried to escape from the spot in Bhauti area, the police had said.

Prior to Dubey's encounter, five of his alleged associates were killed in separate encounters.

On 22 July, the apex court had directed that the inquiry commission should start functioning within a week and the probe be concluded within two months.

The apex court had passed the order last week while hearing a batch of petitions which have sought court-monitored probe into encounters of Dubey and five of his alleged associates.

Some of the pleas have also sought probe into the killing of eight policemen on 3 July 3.

The Uttar Pradesh government, in an affidavit filed earlier in the apex court in the matter, had said that the police party escorting Dubey from Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh to Kanpur had to "fire back in self-defence" as he had tried to escape and was killed.



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Imperial's COVID-19 vaccine candidate begins early human testing on hundreds, including the elderly

Scientists at Imperial College London say they are immunizing hundreds of people with an experimental coronavirus vaccine in an early trial after seeing no worrying safety problems in a small number vaccinated so far.

Dr. Robin Shattock, a professor at the college, told The Associated Press that he and colleagues had just finished a very slow and arduous process of testing the vaccine at a low dose in the initial participants and would now expand the trial to about 300 people, including some over age 75.

“It’s well tolerated. There aren’t any side effects,” he said, adding it was still very early in the study. Shattock, who is leading the vaccine research at Imperial, said he hopes to have enough safety data to start inoculating several thousand people in October.

Since COVID-19 infections have dropped dramatically in Britain, making it difficult to determine whether the vaccine works, Shattock said he and his colleagues are also looking to test their vaccine elsewhere.

“We’re looking very carefully at the pandemic, at the numbers where the hot spots are and talking to collaborators that have the facilities to do these kinds of studies,” he said.

The Imperial vaccine uses synthetic strands of genetic code based on the virus. Once injected into a muscle, the body’s own cells are instructed to make copies of a spiky protein on the coronavirus. That should in turn trigger an immune response so the body can fight off any future COVID-19 infection.

The first human trials for a COVID-19 vaccine began in April with the Oxford candidate. Image: NHS

The first human trials for a COVID-19 vaccine began in April with the Oxford candidate. Image: NHS

Earlier this week, the world’s biggest coronavirus vaccine study started in the United States, with the first of 30,000 planned volunteers getting immunized with shots created by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc.

Several other vaccines made by China and by Britain’s Oxford University, based on different vaccine technologies, began smaller final-stage tests in Brazil and other hard-hit countries earlier this month.

The World Health Organization has said multiple vaccine approaches are necessary for COVID-19, noting that the usual success rate for vaccine development is about 10%.

Shattock said there were numerous coronavirus vaccines now in clinical trials, and he predicted that at least some of them would prove to be effective.

“We have 20 vaccines in clinical trials, (so) we can be pretty confident that at least two of those will work,” he said. “It really depends on how strong the immune response needs to be to provide protection.”

Shattock said he was optimistic the Imperial vaccine would work, but must await the scientific data from the trial.

“I’m just going to hold my breath and wait to see,” he said.



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TBSE 12th HS Result 2020 DECLARED: Bipasha Chakraborty of humanities stream tops with 96.4%, Ruchika Sarkar from science second at 94.6%

TBSE Class 12 results 2020 DECLARED | Bipasha Chakraborty, a humanities student from Vivekananda Vidyapith H.S School in Agartala has topped the  Tripura Board of Secondary Education (TBSE) Class 12 exams with 482 marks or 96.4 percent.

Ruchika Sarkar from Arya Colony HS School, from the science stream, with 473 marks or 94.6 percent came second in the board.

Deepjoy Rudra Sarma from Umakanta Academy in Agartala, also from the science stream, got 472 marks or 94.4 percent, placed third in the board.

The Class 12 results of the Tripura Board of Secondary Education (TBSE) were released on the official websites tripuraresults.nic.in and  tripurainfo.com at 9 am today (Friday, 31 July).

Of the 26,400 students who appeared for the Class 12 exams this year, 80.80 percent have cleared their papers.

The science stream saw a pass percentage of 89.85, the commerce stream 78.56% and the arts stream 79.52%.

Last year, TBSE had conducted the HS +2 Stage board examinations for arts, commerce and science streams from 1 March to 3 April which saw the attendance of around 27,000 students.

In 2019, the overall pass percentage for the TBSE Class 12 exams was 80.51 with humanities registering a pass percentage of 79.05 and commerce 78.13%.

Here is how you can check your Class 12 results:

Step 1: Go to official website – tripuraresults.nic.in

Step 2: Click on either 'link 1' or 'link 2' under the subhead Higher Secondary Examination (H.S. +2 Stage), choosing the appropriate stream — Year 2020 on the homepage

Step 3: Input the details like hall ticket number, date of birth as mentioned on your admit card

Step 4: After submitting the details, your result will be displayed on the screen

Steps to check Class 12 results via SMS:

The results will also be available via SMS, the candidates have to type, TBSE12 Roll Number and send it to number 54242. The candidates can also dial Tripurainfo call centre to get their results. The numbers are, 0381-241 3946, 241 0048, 241 0049, 241 0053.

About the Tripura board:

Established in the 1973, the Tripura Board of Secondary Education conducts two major Public Examinations — Madhyamik Pariksha (Secondary Examination) and Higher Secondary (+2 stage) (both General and Vocational courses) Examination since 1981.



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Sushant Singh Rajput death: Petition seeking transfer of case to CBI filed in Patna HC

A letter petition has been filed in the Patna High Court seeking the transfer of investigation of the death case of Bollywood actor Sushant Singh Rajput from Bihar Police to the Central Bureau of Investigation.

"We would like to bring to your kind attention that the sudden and mysterious demise of Late Mr Sushant Singh Rajput on 14 June 2020 has created a wave of shock and grief across the nation and which is being investigated by Bihar and Maharashtra Police and it has prima facie raised a number of serious questions on the investigation being conducted by both the State Police and also it has raised a number of unanswered question in the mind of the public at large as it was a suicide or a murder," read a letter petition filed by Pawan Prakash Pathak and Gauraw Kumar.

Sushant Singh Rajput

The letter petition further read that with the Bihar Police and Maharashtra Police both — investigating the case of the late actor — are "not collaborating with each other."

"Now there are two states investigating the same sad matter of mysterious death of Late Sushant Singh Rajput, and in the interest of justice there should be a single investigation agency which is not possible as the Bihar Police and the Maharashtra Police not collaborating with each other," it read further.

"Therefore, in the interest of justice, equity and good conscience, it is humbly prayed that this Letter Petition be treated as a Public Interest Litigation seeking transfer of investigation from State agency to CBI Or SIT Inquiry," the petition added.

Earlier, Maharashtra Home Minister Anil Deshmukh said Mumbai Police are investigating the case and it will not be transferred to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

A team of Bihar Police that arrived in Mumbai on Tuesday, recorded statements of two persons, including actor Sushant Singh Rajput's sister, on Wednesday in connection with the case.

An FIR was filed by Sushant Singh Rajput's father against actor Rhea Chakraborty in Bihar on Tuesday.

Rajput was found dead in his Mumbai residence on 14 June.

*

A collection of Suicide prevention helpline numbers are available here. Please reach out if you or anyone you know is in need of support. The All-India helpline number is: 022 2754 6669

 



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TBSE 12th HS Result 2020 DECLARED: 80.80% clear Class 12 exams; Science students record 89.85%, 79.52% from Arts

TBSE Class 12 results 2020 DECLARED | The Class 12 results of the Tripura Board of Secondary Education (TBSE) were released on the official websites tripuraresults.nic.in and  tripurainfo.com today (Friday, 31 July).

Of the 26,400 students who appeared for the Class 12 exams this year, 80.80 percent have cleared their papers.

The science stream saw a pass percentage of 89.85, the commerce stream 78.56% and the arts stream 79.52%.

Last year, TBSE had conducted the HS +2 Stage board examinations for arts, commerce and science streams from 1 March to 3 April which saw the attendance of around 27,000 students

In 2019, the overall pass percentage for the TBSE Class 12 exams was 80.51 with humanities registering a pass percentage of 79.05 and commerce 78.13%.

Here is how you can check your Class 12 results:

Step 1: Go to official website – tripuraresults.nic.in

Step 2: Click on either 'link 1' or 'link 2' under the subhead Higher Secondary Examination (H.S. +2 Stage), choosing the appropriate stream — Year 2020 on the homepage

Step 3: Input the details like hall ticket number, date of birth as mentioned on your admit card

Step 4: After submitting the details, your result will be displayed on the screen

The results will also be available via SMS, the candidates have to type, TBSE12<space>Roll Number and send it to number 54242. The candidates can also dial Tripurainfo call centre to get their results. The numbers are, 0381-241 3946, 241 0048, 241 0049, 241 0053.

About the Tripura board:

Established in the 1973, the Tripura Board of Secondary Education conducts two major Public Examinations — Madhyamik Pariksha (Secondary Examination) and Higher Secondary (+2 stage) (both General and Vocational courses) Examination since 1981.

 



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From doubling enrolment rates to increasing Budget allocation, NEP 2020 could prove transformational

The National Education Policy 2020 has finally arrived.

It has taken 34 years for the country to bring into play an education policy since the introduction of the previous one. In its 2014 election manifesto, the NDA had promised a 'new education policy' and after coming to power, then-newly-appointed education minister Smriti Irani promptly announced that the policy would be drafted. Little did anyone realise that it would be in the making for five long years as it went through a rigorous process of consultations.

Over these five years, the development of India's new education policy involved thousands of consultations across 21 states at the village-, block-, and district-level: The process was led by the state education departments in partnership with the panchayats; this was followed by six regional consultations that were organised by the nodal officers from National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) and Regional Institutes of Education (RIE). It all began with the launch of a portal in January 2015, seeking public opinion on 33 different themes of education.

By November 2015, a committee was established under the chairmanship of the late TSR Subramanian; this committee did its round of grounds up consultations and it also visited educational institutions before finally submitting a draft report in May 2016 which ran 217 pages with a 120-page-long annexure, for good measure. The report had a list of more than 300 educationists, vice-chancellors, experts from various related domains, civil society and non-governmental organisation representatives, and representatives of education providers in the private sector whom they had consulted.

Meanwhile, there were changes in the Ministry of Human Resource Development (HRD), including a change of guard at the helm with Prakash Javadekar taking charge of the portfolio. Although the ministry released a report for public comment calling it "Some inputs for the Draft NEP 2016", another committee was set up in June 2017 under the chairmanship of Dr K Kasturirangan. This committee had the massive task of reviewing all the earlier material, including the consultations under the previous committee, and the critiques the ministry had received, as well as fresh inputs from the public.

Additionally, this committee undertook another round of consultations seeking clarifications on important aspects of education, on which various people from different walks of life had given their opinions, during the discussions held across the length and breadth of the country. After consulting nearly 74 institutions and more than 200 individuals, in December 2018, the Kasturirangan Committee submitted the Draft National Education Policy (DNEP) to the Government of India. Those who read all 477 pages of this magnum opus would have no doubt in their minds that it was indeed a seminal work. The government made it public and sought comments and hopes were raised that the country would have a new education policy. However, the General Election of 2019 was soon announced and discussions regarding the National Education Policy slipped into the background.

Once the NDA came back to power at the Centre in May 2019, work on the NEP picked up — this time with a new HRD minister at the helm. The ministry had received lakhs of comments on the Draft NEP that was submitted by the Kasturirangan Committee. All the comments were reviewed and many were even responded to by the ministry and finally almost a year-and-a-half later, the Draft NEP has been accepted as the National Education Policy 2020.

I have described the entire process in some detail because it is crucial to understand and appreciate that at no other time has the country witnessed such wide and robust consultations for developing an education policy.

At the end of this process, for educationists who have followed the making of this policy, it is also highly satisfying to note that genuine efforts were made to make the process as democratic as possible. Furthermore, independent committees under highly respected personalities were established to perform the task of evolving a new education policy for the nation. Therefore, when a policy as comprehensive and transformational as the NEP 2020 is dedicated to the nation, it is a rare and a momentous occasion that ought to be celebrated. It is time to bury the minor disagreements that may have existed in order to implement what is envisioned in the NEP 2020.

The NEP 2020 visualises an education system that contributes directly to transforming our country into an 'equitable and vibrant knowledge society', by making sure that every child in this country has access to 15 years of high-quality school education and by doubling the enrolment in higher education in the next 15 years from the current 25 percent gross enrolment ratio to 50 percent. It is in order to fulfil these goals that the policy makes an explicit commitment to public education including an increase in expenditure on education to six percent of GDP at the earliest.

To enable the transformation envisaged by NEP 2020, in both school and higher education domains, a series of actions are to be undertaken from evolving integrated curricular frameworks to bringing about large scale structural changes across all the domains of education including teacher education. Many challenges lie ahead.

There are many changes that are required, which are fundamental in nature to implement NEP 2020; such as the re-imagining of the current 12 years of schooling into a 15-year period — from ages three to 18 years and split the 15 years into four specific blocks corresponding to different levels of child development, establishing special education zones (educational SEZs) to provide access to high quality education to all young adults desiring to pursue higher education, comprehensive changes to curricular approaches, completely transforming teacher education and the set of measures to ensure 'light but tight' regulation in order to balance autonomy and accountability of institutions.

This illustrative list clearly indicates that the reforms embedded into NEP 2020 are not only transformational in nature, but represent a comprehensive overhaul of the current education system. Most importantly, these reforms come as an integral part of NEP 2020 and are critical in order to realise the vision of this policy.

It is crucial that all stakeholders of education in the country come together to work towards this NEP 2020's goal of creating a better tomorrow for our children; and a better Indian society for the future.

The author is a faculty member, Azim Premji University. Views expressed are personal



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Kerala Lottery 2022: Akshaya AK-548 lottery result to be declared at 3 pm, first prize Rs 70 lakh

The Kerala Lottery Department will release the results of the Akshaya AK-548 lottery draw at 3 pm today, 11 May. The AK-548 lottery results...