RSS plans mega show in Hindutva lab to recruit cadres at village level

January 2, 2015

Ahmedabad, Jan 2: The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh will give thrust to expanding its base in rural India this year. The rural expansion drive, which was decided at a three-day meeting in Agra in the first week of November, is aimed at recruiting cadres for the Sangh and its affiliates at the village level.rss

After helping the BJP come to power, the RSS feels this is the right time for it to consolidate and build a base in the villages where it is lacking, informed sources said. A cross-section of RSS officials admitted that the Sangh had remained an urban and suburban phenomenon, though its affiliates such as Sewa Bharti had been working extensively in the villages. “Of the 6.5 villages in the country, our vichaar [ideas] reach approximately two lakh villages in some form or the other,” an RSS official said.

While RSS literature and “sewa” (social work) reach the villages, the penetration of shakhas — the primary daily unit of RSS activity — remains low.

RSS official sources in Nagpur, however, underplayed the rural thrust. “After the foundation of the RSS in 1925, our thrust was to reach every State. That was achieved by 1940. The next 25 years were spent taking the RSS to the district level,” Manmohan Vaidya, All India Prachar Pramukh for the RSS, said. Rural expansion of the RSS is part of its natural growth. “We are present in 35,000 places, but we don’t keep a separate account for cities and villages,” he said.

Though the RSS is on a rural expansion drive aimed at recruiting cadres at the village level, Manmohan Vaidya, All India Prachar Pramukh of the organisation, said in Nagpur that the organisation did not talk in terms of figures till it achieved them.

Asked about the RSS’s target for cadre expansion, Mr. Vaidya said: “We don’t talk in terms of figures till we have achieved them.” The RSS runs 43,000 shakhas at present, he added.

An Agra meeting in November led to the RSS Sarkaryavah Suresh Bhaiyyaji Joshi camp by the end of that month in western Uttar Pradesh and promotion of activities related to penetration at the village level. To begin with, the Sangh is targeting villages connected to the State highways under its Rajmarg Sampark Yojana. “We have held seven-day camps beginning December 25 in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand to focus on the villages,” a pracharak in Uttarakhand said. The Sangh aims to cover 10,000 villages by 2015-end in the hill State.

“Guruji [RSS second chief M.S. Golwalkar] said our reach will need to be one per cent in the village and three per cent in the city for the Sangh’s work to be acknowledged by society,” another RSS official said in New Delhi. “We are slowly increasing our rural reach now.”

The RSS remained an upper caste, urban phenomenon for decades. “After its success in mobilising voters in the 2014 Lok Sabha election in 2014, the RSS decided to boost its membership base with a BJP government at the Centre.

It is also using Narendra Modi’s popularity for that,” Nagpur-based RSS observer Dilip Deodhar said.

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Agencies
June 29,2020

New Delhi, Jun 29: The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Central government to find out the facts related to blacklisting and canceling of visas of foreign nationals who attended the congregation of Tablighi Jamaat in Nizamuddin area here.

A three-judge bench headed by Justice AM Khanwilkar and also comprising Justices Dinesh Maheshwari and Sanjiv Khanna asked the Centre to find out the facts related to the matter and fixed it for further hearing on July 2.

The apex court asked Solicitor General Tushar Mehta "if visas of these foreigners are canceled, then why are they still in India?"

"You (Centre) can deport them. If visas are not canceled, then, it is a different situation," the court said. The top court was hearing a number of petitions challenging blacklisting and cancellation of visas filed by few foreigners.

Mehta sought more time to file a reply on the matter, after which the court posted the matter for further hearing on July 2.

The petitions, filed by the foreign nationals from 35 countries, have sought directions to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) to remove their names from the blacklist, reinstate their visas and facilitate their return to their respective countries.

The petitions sought to declare the decision of the MHA of blacklisting the foreign nationals who attended the Tablighi Jamaat congregation as "arbitrary".

"Unilateral blacklisting of 960 foreigners by the Home Ministry vide press release dated April 2, 2020, and the subsequent blacklisting of around 2500 foreigners as reported on June 4, 2020, is in violation of Article 21. Therefore, it is void and unconstitutional as the petitioners have neither been provided any hearing nor notice or intimation in this regard," the plea said.

One of the petitioners named Fareedah Cheema, a Thai national in the seventh month of her pregnancy, said she was quarantined in March, like other foreign nationals but was released from quarantine only in late May and is still at a facility under restricted movements, without the avenue to go back to her home nation and experience the birth of her child with security and dignity, with her loved ones.

These foreign nationals presently in India were blacklisted for a period of 10 years from traveling to India for their alleged involvement in Tablighi Jamaat activities.

The Home Ministry had said that foreign Tablighi Jamaat members, who were staying in India in violation of visa rules during the nationwide lockdown implemented to combat the COVID-19 spread, have been blacklisted.
A large congregation organised by Tablighi Jamaat in the national capital in March had emerged as a major COVID-19 hotspot in the country.

The government had said the decision of banning the foreign Tablighi Jamaat members was taken after details of foreigners found illegally living in mosques and religious places emerged from various states across the country.

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Agencies
March 6,2020

New Delhi, Mar 6: After Yes Bank was placed under moratorium, digital payments were impacted as PhonePe, which depends on the cash-strapped lender for its transactions, could not operate.

It can be noted that the bank's own net banking facilities have not been operational since last evening. Other fintech operators who rely on Yes Bank to settle their transactions are also down.  “We sincerely regret the long outage. Our partner bank (Yes Bank) was placed under moratorium by RBI. Entire team's been working all night to get services back up asap (as soon as possible),” the app's chief executive Sameer Nigam tweeted early in the morning.

PhonePe, one of the country's largest digital payment platforms, is dependent on Yes Bank to process its transactions.

He added that the app hopes to be live in a “few hours”.

Yes Bank placed under a moratorium Thursday evening, with the RBI capping deposit withdrawals at Rs 50,000 per account for a month and superseding its board.

Yes Bank will not be able to grant or renew any loan or advance, make any investment, incur any liability or agree to disburse any payment.

For the next month, Yes Bank will led by the RBI-appointed administrator Prashant Kumar, an ex-chief financial officer of SBI.

He added that the app - one of the most popular interfaces for UPI transactions - hopes to be live in a “few hours”.

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Agencies
June 4,2020

New Delhi, Jun 4: CSIR Director-General Shekhar Mande said on Thursday that the World Health Organisation's (WHO) decision to halt hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) drug trial was taken in haste and the global body should have actually analysed the data before making the decision.

"I firmly believe that WHO decision was taken in haste it was a kind of knee jerk reaction they should have actually analyse the data on their own before temporarily suspend the trials that is my personal opinion," Mande said.

India's nodal government agency ICMR (Indian Council of Medical Research) overseeing the country's response to the coronavirus pandemic last month wrote to the WHO citing differences in dosage standards between Indian and international trials that could explain the efficacy issues of HCQ in treating COVID-19 patients.

In addition, Dr Sheela Godbole, National Coordinator of the WHO-India Solidarity Trial and Head of the Division of Epidemiology, ICMR-National AIDS Research Institute also wrote a letter via an email to Dr Soumya Swaminathan, Chief Scientist at World Health Organisation.

In a letter, Dr Godbole stated: "There was no reason to suspend the trial for safety concern," attributing it to the current RECOVERY data which differs significantly from the non-randomised assessment by Mehra et al, a scientific paper.

Referring to the letter, the CSIR head said, "We don't know what actually happened behind the scenes but the hypothesis is that because of the paper published in Lancet. It is a very well known journal and if Lancet has done due vigilance in publishing the paper. 

Therefore, the WHO thought the paper's findings are right that's why WHO hold based on what is published on Lancet. The WHO shouldn't have accepted it immediately this should have taken their own due vigilance to find out that study is right or not."

DG CSIR said because there is a global outcry it must have put pressure on both Lancet as well as WHO and both of them now retracted from their original position. "WHO has started a trial again and Lancet has put an expression of concern on their website both of these are very welcome development for science," he said.

"So I am pretty sure that Lancet would have published the reports only after seeing somewhere the drug failed to work," Mande said.

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