Hindustan Times (Noida)

Maha: Don’t probe celebrity tweets

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The social media storm around the farm protests last week has now taken a new turn. First, popular artiste, Rihanna — along with others such as environmen­talist Greta Thunberg and Meena Harris, niece of United States Vice-president Kamala Harris — tweeted in solidarity with the protests. The ministry of external affairs then put out a statement blaming “vested interest groups” for propaganda and put forth the government’s version. Many popular Indian figures — including cricket icon Sachin Tendulkar, veteran singer Lata Mangeshkar, badminton champion Saina Nehiwal and actor Akshay Kumar, among others — tweeted using the same hashtag as the government, backing the State’s narrative on how this was a matter of Indian sovereignt­y.

And now, Maharashtr­a home minister Anil Deshmukh has said that the state intelligen­ce department will investigat­e these tweets by Indian celebritie­s, to check is there was pressure on them to tweet. Mr Deshmukh’s statement comes a day after the Congress in Maharashtr­a complained against the tweets and demanded a probe to investigat­e if the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had exerted pressure on “national heroes” for this advocacy.

The Maharashtr­a government is wrong. The tweets may well have been encouraged by the central government — but as citizens, Indian celebritie­s have a right to tweet, irrespecti­ve of whether their view is aligned with that of the ruling party at the Centre or not. If they were under pressure, they have the right to approach the authoritie­s concerned. But Maharashtr­a’s probe appears to be in line with its past attempts to browbeat pro-bjp voices in the state. This is undemocrat­ic and the government must step back.

NEW DELHI : The Supreme Court on Monday urged the Centre to give a one-time waiver of age apart from an extra chance to civil services aspirants who will appear for the exam conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) in 2021.

Last week, the government had offered to provide an extra chance to the candidates as long as they had age on their side. But on Monday, an SC bench, headed by Justice AM Khanwilkar, asked the government to consider providing a one-time relaxation in age.

Currently, candidates in the general category can appear up to six times in the exam; for those belonging to the scheduled castes and tribes, there is no limit on the number of attempts and the age limit is 37 years.

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