Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Covid-19 relief work at gurdwara

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motion in Rash Behari constituen­cy after BJP candidate Lt Gen (retd) Subrata Saha’s agent was accused of molesting women voters inside a polling booth, police said.

Mohan Rao was detained after several women voters claimed he tried to drag them holding their hands inside Bidya Bharati School, a police officer said.

Rao, however, rubbished the allegation­s and said no such incident had taken place.

“We have received a complaint in this regard and a probe is underway,” the officer said.

In the Jamuria constituen­cy, Left Front candidate Aishe Ghosh alleged that her party agents were stopped from entering the booth by TMC workers, a charge denied by the ruling party.

vaccines to those who are 18 and above,” Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said. The free vaccines will be meant only for the residents of Delhi, even as the detailed plan of the drive was yet to be finalised by the government, according to people aware of the matter.

In a digital news briefing, the CM said a purchase of 13.4 million doses has been approved and that his government will make efforts to speed up the process. “We are working on a plan to start large-scale vaccinatio­n as soon as possible,” he said. He also urged vaccine manufactur­ers in the country to reduce their prices and asked the Centre to consider a “one nation, one rate” policy for Covid-19 vaccines.

The chief minister’s office said the free vaccines will be available in all government-run Covid-19 vaccinatio­n centres in Delhi while those who opt for private centres will have to pay for the jabs.

The central government has announced that it will expand the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive to everyone over the age of 18 from May 1, a move many said was prompted by the worsening second wave of infections in the country. Registrati­ons for vaccinatio­n in the next phase will open on the COWIN app from Wednesday.

In Karnataka, chief minister chief minister BS Yediyurapp­a announced stricter regulation­s across the state for two weeks, beginning on Tuesday, in an attempt to contain the spread of Covid-19.

Calling it a two-week curfew instead of a lockdown, Yediyurapp­a went on to announce lockdown-like rules -- that include curtailing free movement of people except from 6am to 10pm.

“Strict measures to control the pandemic will be taken. From tomorrow (Tuesday) night, for the next 14 day, only essential services will be open from 6am-10am. Shops will be closed after that,” he said after an over two-hour Cabinet meeting.

The state government had earlier said that it would not announce a lockdown under any condition.

Yediyurapp­a said that all sectors, such as manufactur­ing, agricultur­e, constructi­on, medical and essential goods, will continue to function except the garment factories where hundreds of thousands of people work side-by-side. “Agricultur­e sector, manufactur­ing sector except garments, constructi­on, medical and essential sector will continue to operate. All DCS (district collectors) and tahsildars [have been instructed] to take strict measures,” Yediyurapp­a said.

Interstate transporta­tion of goods will also be allowed while public transport services will be shut.

The decision comes a day after Karnataka and its capital, Bengaluru, registered record single-day spikes with 34,804 and 20,733 new infections respective­ly. The positivity rate in Karnataka reached almost 20% in 24 hours on Saturday, raising concerns about the health crisis.

The active cases in Karnataka stood at 262,162 of which Bengaluru accounts for 180,542, according to the daily bulletin of the state health department.

The curbs could be extended if the situation does not come under control within these 14 days, said the CM, adding that free vaccinatio­n will be provided at government hospitals for all adults from May 1.

with the last phase scheduled on April 29.

Earlier, the Calcutta high court had expressed dissatisfa­ction with the ECI over the enforcemen­t of Covid-19 health safety norms during the ongoing West Bengal assembly election process, including campaignin­g.

On April 22, hearing three public interest litigation­s (PILS) seeking enforcemen­t of Covid protocol during the polls, a division bench presided by Chief Justice TBN Radhakrish­nan had said issuance of circulars and holding meetings on Covid safety were not enough.

It later directed the competent authoritie­s to make the people of West Bengal abide by the restrictio­ns imposed by the commission on public behaviour regarding protective protocol for Covid-19 in the state, which also has witnessed an alarming rise in infections.

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