Tag: COVID relief

  • Covid relief packages failed to revive economy: Yashwant Sinha

    By Express News Service

    KOCHI: Though Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitaraman announced two Covid relief packages valued at Rs 44 lakh crore to revive the economy, the kind of investment that is required in the current Covid situation is not coming, former Union finance minister and Trinamool Congress leader Yashwant Sinha has said.

    While interacting with mediapersons on Saturday ahead of the programme ‘India Forward’ — a virtual talk series organised by Cochin Chamber of Commerce and Industry Sinha, a former BJP leader, said the Indian economy has been devastated due to the wrong policies of demonetisation and faulty implementation of GST.  

    The repeal of the three farm laws is a very calculated political move by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Sinha said. “Elections to five states are round the corner and UP is very important to BJP, and so is Punjab. The farmers in these states, in particular in UP and Punjab, were up in arms against the laws. 

    The government has learned that the protests were going to impact their prospects in the upcoming elections. BJP is today a party of ‘election jivis’,” he said. The situation would change with the repeal of the farm laws and it is premature to predict the outcome of the forthcoming elections in the five states, Sinha added.

  • EIMPA urges West Bengal CM for a relief package for cinema halls

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: With single screens and local multiplex chains reeling under the blow of COVID-19 for past one year, the Eastern India Motion Picture Association on Saturday urged West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to come out with a relief package for the “gasping” cinema halls.

    EIMPA while sending a letter to the CM also sought an audience with her to apprise of the situation faced by the exhibitors while pledging its support to the fight against the pandemic by the state government.

    It is becoming increasingly difficult for cinema hall owners to pay salary to its employees with the suspension of shows for several months since March 17 in 2020 and again since May 1 in 2021, EIMPA office-bearer Ratan Saha said, adding that “we have urged the government three year soft loan for working capital.”

    In the letter the EIMPA sought three year “soft loans amounting from Rs 2 lakh to 5 lakh per cinema per screen multiplied by the number of months of inactivity.”

    “Yearly operation cost per screen being Rs 15 lakh with one year moratorium for the same,” the letter claimed.

    The monetary compensation was required for electricity charges, rent, dues accrued during period of closure and repair and maintenance to get cinemas back in running condition after shutdown, the apex body of distributors said.

    “We also urge exemption of tax and duties for the theatres and providing financial help to the employees of the closed single screens as the owners are hard pressed in the present situation,” one of the owners of a cinema hall in Behala and head of a film distribution company Satadeep Saha said.

    “Last year it was really bad as after seven months we could open the halls in Durga puja-Diwali period. However the old scenes never came back as audience turnout was very poor and there were no big banner releases. Finally it is back to square one as we closed shop from May 1 again. We are only staying afloat hoping for better days,” Saha said.

    EIMPA sources said around 120 of the 250 single screen theatres were operational before May 1 restrictions were imposed.

    The rest have closed shop, and some permanently.

  • Centre’s welfare measures for children-orphaned by Covid ‘defective’, says Rajasthan CM Gehlot

    By PTI
    JAIPUR: Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Thursday termed the Centre’s welfare measures for children who lost their parents to COVID-19 “defective” and demanded that they be revised as they did not provide immediate relief.

    He also claimed the Centre did not announce any scheme to help women whose husbands succumbed to the disease.

    Gehlot was speaking during a video conference on Covid vaccination.

    On May 29, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had announced a number of welfare measures, including providing financial assistance, for children who lost their parents to COVID-19.

    According to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), fixed deposits will be opened in the names of such children, and the PM-CARES fund will contribute through a specially designed scheme to create a corpus of Rs 10 lakh for each of them.

    This corpus will be used to give the beneficiaries a monthly stipend from 18 years of age for the next five years.

    On reaching the age of 23, they will get the corpus amount as one lump-sum for personal and professional use.

    Gehlot said the Centre’s package did not provide immediate relief, which was of utmost importance, to the children who lost their parents to COVID-19.

    “The package of the government of India is defective and there is confusion about it. The government will provide financial help after a child reaches the age of 18. Who knows who will be where after 18 years? Package means instant help,” he said.

    He added that he would speak to PM Modi about the scheme.

    The chief minister also alleged that the Centre did not announce any measures to help women who lost their husbands to COVID-19.

    On the other hand, the Rajasthan government provided immediate relief of Rs 1 lakh to children orphaned and women widowed by the pandemic apart from monthly financial assistance.

    The Rajasthan government’s scheme provides immediate financial assistance of Rs 1 lakh to such children and widows.

    In addition to this, children would get Rs 2,500 per month till the age of 18 and Rs 5 lakh once they attain the age of 18 while widows would get a monthly social security pension of Rs 1,500.

    Besides the scheme for children, the Centre had announced a string of measures on May 29 to help the families who lost their earning members to the pandemic.

    These include a pension for dependents of Covid victims and enhanced and liberalised insurance benefits under the Employees’ Deposit-Linked Insurance (EDLI) scheme.

    During the conference, Gehlot said a section of media published misleading news about the wastage of Covid vaccines in Rajasthan.

    Recently, a media report claimed that 500 vials of Covid vaccines were found in a dustbin at 35 inoculation centres in the state.

    Citing the report, the Centre wrote to the Rajasthan government on May 31 saying this was “not acceptable” and must be investigated.

    Replying to the Centre’s letter, state Health Minister Raghu Sharma had said the news report was “false and not based on facts”.

    Gehlot said vaccine wastage in Rajasthan at that time was around 2 per cent as against the national average of 6 per cent.

    The wastage has further reduced to 0.8 per cent in the state.

    “Our health workers were targeted and misleading news was published as part of a campaign, which was unfortunate. How can health workers dump vaccines in the dustbin? The procedure which was followed by them was in accordance with the central government guidelines,” he said.

    “Such an unfortunate campaign was run at a time when the public was suffering. It is wrong that vaccines were wasted. Our target is to ensure zero wastage of vaccines,” he said.

    Health Minister Raghu Sharma, Urban Development and Housing Minister Shanti Dhariwal and Assembly Speaker C P Joshi also addressed the conference that was attended by district collectors, sarpanches and other public representatives.