RSS abandoned me after I exposed Vyapam: Anand Rai

July 19, 2015

Indore, Jul 19: A strange twist of fate or tactical disassociation? A man who based his work on the teachings of the RSS has been abandoned by the organisation while he is in the middle of a major corruption expose.

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Anand Rai, a doctor from Indore, considered instrumental in blowing the lid off the Vyapam scam in Madhya Pradesh, feels let down by the Hindutva organisation with which he had been affiliated since 2005. “If the Sangh can stand up for terror accused Pragya Bharti, who has brought public disgrace to the organisation, then why did it abandon me when I was exposing Vyapam?” asks Dr. Rai.

The relation between him and the Sangh took a dramatic turn in 2013 when the Vyapam scam came to light and Dr. Rai was projected as the key whistleblower. Following this, the Sangh distanced itself from him and stopped inviting him to its programmes and weekly workshops. The 2012-13 Nanaji Deshmukh award for social service, named after the RSS ideologue, for which he was recommended was also held back.

“They did not want anything to do with the controversy. Maybe to avoid making it appear as if RSS men were taking on the BJP government,” said Dr. Rai.

He feels that while the Sangh defends its “bad crop”, it does nothing for “honest karyakartas.”

The RSS “claims to fight for corruption, but till now has Mohan Bhagwat said a word on Vyapam,” Mr. Rai asks. “Is this deadly scam a lesser issue than Article 370 or the uniform civil code they claim to fight for?”

Backed by a strong footing in student politics, the doctor started his association with the Sangh in 2005, when he was designated the president of the BJP doctors’ cell in Indore. Not only did he regularly don the khaki shorts to attend shakhas and archana karyas, he held the prominent position of district vice-president of Arogya Bharti, the medical wing of the RSS. His proximity to RSS Indore vibhag pramukh Pramod Jha was an indication of his association with the outfit.

But now hounded and threatened for his efforts in exposing the culprits in the Vyapam scam, Dr. Rai faces fresh harassment as information leaked to him suggests that the State government plans to transfer him to the tribal belt of Dhar, a “punishment posting”. Senior State officials are pressuring Dr. Rai’s senior to relieve him of his post, and warned him not to allow the doctor give interviews to the media anymore.

Dr. Rai believes it is part of a sustained effort to demoralise him. His wife, Gauri, a gynaecologist, was recently suspended for seeking child-care leave. Though she was reinstated, she was transferred to Ujjain even as other doctors suspended along with her were promoted, Dr. Rai says. “We have a two-and-a half-year-old child to look after. What is the government trying to prove by transferring me? That this is the reward you get for exposing corruption?” he asks.

A meritorious student since his school days, Mr. Rai was born into the family of a schoolteacher in a small village Mahendra in Harda district. Possessing a sharp mind, he got an early sniff into the irregularities in medical education in the State in 1993 when the Geology paper he attempted in the Pre-Medical Test was leaked in Gwalior. His subsequent involvement in student politics and participation in exposing graft cases and raising incidence of partiality against students of Hindi-medium groomed his skills.

In 2005, his suspicions peaked while attempting the MD/MS exams. He was baffled to find that many of the top qualified students belonged to the same hostel block. “These were students with a poor educational record but from influential families, their fathers holding high bureaucratic posts,” said Mr. Rai, who began digging deep for evidence. Initially, his complaints yielded little. On July 5, 2009, the break came as he tipped off the Crime Branch about the presence of few impersonators lodged in an Indore hotel. Later that year, on his complaint, a committee was formed to identify the impersonators in fudged exams. But despite filing RTI queries he got no response.

In 2010, he was even fired from the Maharana Yashwant Rao Hospital in Bhopal for instigating student agitation and exposing the regulatory manner of clinical trials in the hospital. But in 2011, with the help of independent MLA Paras Saklecha, Mr. Rai managed to raise the issue in the State Assembly and it was found that 114 impersonators had been identified. The lid was off, and till 2012, 295 impersonators were found leading to some arrests. This also led to death threats by the accused.

DMAT scam worse

But undeterred, Mr. Rai is now eyeing exposing corruption in private colleges. He recently filed a petition in the Supreme Court demanding that the Vyapam CBI probe be extended to seat allotments through DMAT exam in private colleges. While hearing his petition, the apex court said the DMAT scam seems worse than Vyapam. Mr. Rai says there is a clear link between the corruption in Vyapam and DMAT. The same solvers who would impersonate for candidates in Vyapam also filled in seats in private colleges but later surrendered the seats which were then sold out.

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News Network
May 6,2020

New Delhi, May 6: Taking a cue from states, the Centre announced one of the steepest hikes in duties on petrol and diesel in the recent past, by raising it by Rs 10 and Rs 13 per litre, respectively, in a notification issued late on Tuesday.

Retail prices, however, will see no change as the price hike will be absorbed by oil marketing companies against the fall in crude prices.

Road and infrastructure cess was hiked by Rs 8 for petrol and diesel and the special additional excise duty (SAED) was hiked by Rs 2 per litre and Rs 5 per litre, respectively. While the road cess will only go into the Centre’s coffers, the hike on account of SAED will be passed on to states via devolution at 42 per cent. Hence, the states will get only Rs 0.84 per litre in case of petrol and Rs 2.1 in case of diesel.

The decision comes after several states increased the value added tax (VAT) on petrol and diesel making use of the lower price regime. The Delhi government on Tuesday increased VAT on petrol and diesel to 30 per cent each, from 27 and 16.75, respectively. As a result, the price of petrol in Delhi increased by Rs 1.67 to Rs 71.26 a litre and diesel by Rs 7.10 to Rs 69.29 in Delhi on Tuesday.

Amid falling international crude oil prices, the Centre introduced an enabling provision in March to raise excise duty on petrol and diesel by Rs 8 per litre in the Finance Act. The government had on March 14 raised excise duty on petrol and diesel by? 3 per litre each, which was to help raise an additional ?39,000 crore in revenue annually.

This duty hike included Rs 2 a litre increase in SAED and Rs 1 in road and infrastructure cess. It raised SAED to Rs 10 for petrol and Rs 4 for diesel. The limit has now been increased to Rs 18 a litre in case of petrol and Rs 12 in case of diesel by way of amendment of the Eighth Schedule of the Finance Act.

Economists said the move would impact retail inflation by over half a percentage point at least. “With lower consumption, there was loss of revenue for Centre and states, who earn Rs 6 trillion annually or Rs 50,000 crore monthly from fuel. Amid lockdown in April, the collection must have come down to just Rs 5,000 crore, and this will hold for May.

This means that Centre and states have lost 20 per cent of annual revenue from fuel. Hence, they have hiked duties to recover losses,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist, CARE Ratings. He added that the hike will impact inflation by at least 0.6-0.7 percentage points.

According to industry experts, an estimate of the additional government revenue cannot be made as the consumption of petrol and diesel has dropped to 40 per cent of what it was before the lockdown. The duty hike comes following a drop in international crude oil prices in April, owing to lower consumption figures globally. At 11.50 pm on Tuesday, Brent was priced at $30.67 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was seen at $24.36 a barrel. On Monday, the Indian basket of crude oil was priced at $23.38 a barrel, after touching a 15-year low last month.

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News Network
April 2,2020

New Delhi, April 2: The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has developed a bio suit to keep the medical, paramedical and other personnel engaged in combating COVID-19 safe from the deadly virus.

"Scientists at various DRDO laboratories have applied their technical know-how and expertise in textile, coating and nanotechnology to develop the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) having specific type of fabric with coating," read a statement.

The suit has been prepared with the help of the industry and subjected to rigorous testing for textile parameters as well as protection against synthetic blood. The protection against synthetic blood exceeds the criteria defined for body suits by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

"DRDO is making all efforts to ensure that these suits are produced in large numbers and serve as robust line of defence for the medics, paramedics and other personnel in the front line combating COVID-19," the statement said.

The industry is geared up for production of the suit in large quantities. Kusumgarh Industries is producing the raw material and coating material, with the complete suit being manufactured with the help of another vendor. The current production capacity is 7,000 suits per day.

Another vendor is being brought in with the experience in garment technology and efforts are on to ramp up the capacity to 15,000 suits per day.

The bio suit production in the country by DRDO industry partners and other industries are being hampered due to non-availability of seam sealing tapes, the statement said.

"The DRDO has prepared a special sealant as an alternative to seam sealing tape based on the sealant used in submarine applications.

Presently, bio suits prepared using this glue for seam sealing by an industry partner has cleared test at Southern India Textile Research Association (SITRA) Coimbatore," it said.

"This can be a game changer for the textile industry. The DRDO can mass produce this glue through industry to support the seam sealing activity by suit manufacturers," the statement added.

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News Network
August 7,2020

Idukki, Aug 7: Several people lost their lives and dozens of tea estate workers are feared trapped under soil in Kerala’s Munnar after torrential rains triggered a massive landslide on today. 

As many as five bodies have been recovered and rescue workers are fighting inclement weather to remove the debris.

According to rescue workers, four lanes of quarters and a church are buried under mud and around 80 people are feared trapped.

Seven people have been rescued so far and shifted to the hospital.

Sources said a portion of Pettimudi came crashing down on the workers colony with a deafening roar in the wee hours of Friday.

As people were sleeping in the quarters, there was little time to escape.

Further, with the Periyavara bridge being washed away, it became all the more difficult for rescue workers to reach the spot.

The construction of a new temporary Periyavara bridge however, is underway.

The bridge was previously destructed during the deluge of August 2018. Later during the north west monsoons and the south west monsoon of 2019, it suffered damage again.

The present bridge, which got damaged on Thursday after Kannimala river levels rose, was constructed under the leadership of Coir fed.

Although a new concrete bridge has been constructed near the temporary bridge in Periyavara, vehicle  movement has not been possible because the authorities are yet to build its approach via road.

The new bridge is to be constructed at a cost of Rs 4.75 crore from Devikulam MLA S Rajendran's fund.

The entire area has been cut off from outside world and communication networks have also crashed.

Teams of Fire and Rescue personnel, NDRF, revenue officials, estate workers and police are struggling to conduct rescue operations.

Meanwhile, District collector H Dhineshan said a team of rescue personnel was sent to Pettymudy after he was briefed about the mishap and search operations to locate and rescue people are underway.

Facilities have been arranged at the hospitals nearby to provide necessary treatment facilities to the people being rescued.

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