Deccan Chronicle

Toolkit : Delhi Police seeks info from Zoom

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New Delhi, Feb 16: Intensifyi­ng its probe in the toolkit case, the Delhi Police on Tuesday sought details from video conferenci­ng platform Zoom on the participan­ts of the January 11 meeting by a pro-Khalistan group, while investigat­ors were also looking into the funding aspect, sources said.

The Delhi Commission for Women sent a notice to the city police on the arrest of climate activist Disha Ravi in the case and sought a report by Friday on issues like why she was allegedly not provided a lawyer of her choice when produced before a court.

However, Police Commission­er S N Shrivastav­a denied any lapse.

“Disha Ravi’s arrest has been made in accordance with the law which doesn't differenti­ate between a 22year-old or a 50-year-old,” he told reporters at an event while dismissing criticism of the police action against Ravi.

Sources said police are also likely to approach WhatsApp seeking details of the ‘Internatio­nal Farmers’ Strike’ group created in December.

According to police, Disha Ravi, along with Mumbai lawyer Nikita Jacob and Pune engineer Shantanu, created the “toolkit” related to the farmers' agitation and shared it with others to “tarnish” India's image.

The police on Monday claimed that Disha sent the “toolkit” to teen climate activist Greta Thunberg and also “coaxed her to act on it”.

Fuel prices soared across India for the eighth consecutiv­e day on Tuesday. Since there are no elections anytime soon in the country, Indian oil companies merrily pass on every increase in global crude oil prices in the true spirit of a market-determined price regime on highly taxed petrol and diesel while the Narendra Modi government looks the other way.

Petrol price with certain additives crossed an unpreceden­ted `100-mark in many cities in Madhya Pradesh, forcing many petrol pumps to shut down as their old analogue fuel dispensing machines were not designed to show a three-digit figure. Its neighbour Maharashtr­a would soon knock at the threedigit figure. States like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Bihar, Punjab, West Bengal and Odisha, which are in the `90a-litre-petrol club, could soon follow Maharashtr­a in joining the `100-a-litrepetro­l club.

Since the retail price of petrol has crossed the `100-mark even when the Indian crude oil basket is US $54.79 a barrel, there is a possibilit­y of a considerab­le upswing in fuel price as the global crude oil price as of February 16 stands at US $63.07 a barrel.

While the global fuel prices were to be blamed for a daily increase in fuel prices, it is heavy taxation — as high as 61 per cent in some states — that brought the fuel price to this unpreceden­ted level. Ever since tax collection was effected slowing the economy, the Central government has gradually increased levies over the last six years of low global price regime — `11 of special additional excise duty, `18 of road and infrastruc­ture cess and `2.5 of agricultur­e and developmen­t

While the BJP demanded higher fuel subsidies

when it was in the Opposition to protect consumers from higher global fuel prices when the crude oil price was as high as $110 a barrel, it has turned petrol and diesel into a cash cow because of its inelastic

demand curve

cess.

The stance of the BJP on fuel price has been quite paradoxica­l. While it demanded higher fuel subsidies when it was in the Opposition to protect consumers from higher global fuel prices when the crude oil price was as high as US $110 a barrel, it has turned petrol and diesel into a cash cow because of its inelastic demand curve.

On May 16, 2014, when the NDA came to power, the price of petrol in Delhi was `71.41 per litre when global crude oil price (Indian basket) was US $106 a barrel. Compared to this, the crude oil now stands at around US $55 a barrel, which is almost half of the 2014 price, but the retail petrol price in Delhi, instead of halving, is now `89.

The treatment of petrol and diesel as sin products for taxation is patently wrong. It’s an accepted fact that a hike in diesel price is an indirect tax imposed on the poor as they will bear the brunt of the resultant price rise. In rural India, where public transport is almost non-existent, petrol-run bikes are the predominan­t mode of transport for the poor and lower-middle-class people. Heavy taxes on fuel, therefore, go against fair tax practices which discourage the government from taxing the rich and the poor equally. It is also an irony that instead of — for example — taxing profits earned by a few thousands of super-rich people in speculativ­e investment­s on the stock market, the government is bent on burning holes in already torn pockets of the common man.

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