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Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi
Tirupati Enterprise is a Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh.
We founded the company in 2015 in Ahmedabad.
Tirupati Enterprise is a Manufacturer and Supplier of Mosquito Repellent Products, including Black Fire Dragon, Black Tiger, Green Comfort, King Kobra, Natural Relax, Green Dinosaur, Mosquito Killer, Rambaan, and Dengue Hunter.
Tirupati Enterprise stands as a renowned brand known for its comprehensive range of insect repellents, prominently featuring mosquito repellent sticks.
These sticks are meticulously designed for outdoor settings to effectively ward off mosquitoes and other flying insects.
We cater to diverse needs and preferences with our wide array of formulations and sizes. Whether you prefer traditional mosquito-repellent sticks or specialized variants, we offer options that ensure effective mosquito protection.
Tirupati Enterprise ensures each product meets stringent quality standards.
Our sticks are crafted to deliver reliable mosquito protection, making outdoor activities more enjoyable and comfortable.
Our commitment to quality and effectiveness ensures that you can enjoy outdoor settings without the nuisance of mosquitoes.
Specification:
Products Name: Dengue Hunter Flavour: Premium Fragrance Type: Mosquito Incense Sticks/Agarbatti Stick Colour: Orange Stick Size: 12“ Burning Time: 45 Min Net Contents: 150 Sticks (13×10=150) Pack Type: Pouch & Box
Tirupati Enterprise is a Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh which includes locations like the Ganges, Ramnagar Fort, Durga Temple, Bhadaini, Dasaswamedh, Manikarnika, Kanpur, Lucknow, Ghaziabad, Agra, Meerut, Varanasi, Prayagraj, Bareilly, Aligarh, Moradabad, Saharanpur, Gorakhpur, Noida, Firozabad, Jhansi, Muzaffarnagar, Mathura-Vrindavan, Ayodhya, Rampur, Shahjahanpur, Farrukhabad-Fatehgarh, Budaun, Maunath Bhanjan.
For more information, we welcome you to engage in a professional conversation with our team.
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Lucknow News: फैजुल्लागंज-1 वार्ड अब हुआ महाऋषि नगर, लखनऊ निगम कार्यकारणी ने बदले कई वार्डों के नाम
Lucknow News: फैजुल्लागंज-1 वार्ड अब हुआ महाऋषि नगर, लखनऊ निगम कार्यकारणी ने बदले कई वार्डों के नाम
लखनऊयूपी में बीजेपी की अगुवाई वाली योगी आदित्यनाथ की सरकार बनने के बाद नाम बदलने का सिलसिला सा चल पड़ा है। जिलों, शहरों के अलावा सड़कों का नाम बदलने के बाद अब नगर निगम के वार्डों का नाम भी बदला जा रहा है। गुरुवार को लखनऊ ��ी महापौर संयुक्ता भाटिया की अध्यक्षता में कार्यकारिणी समिति ��ी बैठक हुई। इसमें लखनऊ नगर निगम के कई वार्डों के नाम बदल गए। इसमें फैजुल्लागंज प्रथम वार्ड का नाम महा ऋषि नगर…
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#Latest Metro News#Lucknow Mayor Sanyukta Bhatia#Lucknow Municipal Corporation News#lucknow news#Metro Headlines#Metro News#Metro News in Hindi#Municipal Corporation meeting#names of Lucknow wards#नगर निगम बैठक#मेट्रो Samachar#लखनऊ नगर निगम न्यूज़#लखनऊ न्यूज#लखनऊ मेयर संयुक्ता भाटिया#लखनऊ वार्डों के नाम
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Dog License In India
The Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation passed a proposal to regulate pet ownership in its municipal area on September 13, 2019. An expert committee has been formed to devise pet registration rules and decide the fine amount for people allowing their dog to poop in public spaces. The committee had first suggested `5000 as fees for the registration of pet dogs, which was later brought down to ₹`1000 after the civic body received several complaints by pet owners requesting a reduction in the steep amount.
The committee will first study pet registration charges and laws in different states of the country before starting with the task of formation of by-laws and other modalities for this planned move. The municipal board will also levy fines on pet owners found with unregistered pets. Moreover, the board has decided to penalise pet owners ₹500 every time their dog is found defecating in open areas. Dinesh Chandra Singh, Municipal Commissioner, said that the residents of Ghaziabad will be informed about the rules soon. dog license online india
Creature Companion asked readers and followers to share their views on the issue of dog licensing and registration on our social media handles. Many pet parents came forward to share their thoughts on this vital topic.
Ketan Panchal, Founder K9 Academy shares, “Pet registration is a good idea. It would give your pet an identity and at the same time the pet parent will get more responsibility. As a dog father and a good civilian, you must keep your house and city clean. You must clean after your dog. I always carry potty bags when I take my dog out. I also train many dogs in Ahmedabad. I request everyone to clean after their pets. Society will accept you and your pet with love if you keep the area clean.”
Bhanu Maheshwari, pet parent to male Labrador Jojo, opines, “Having your dog registered with a kennel is one of the first things that should be done. Also, if you have a dog in a complex where other apartment owners consider you and your dog to be a nuisance, having your dog registered acts as an additional support. Moreover, no one likes to step in pet waste and spread it into homes. Even if there is no restriction, cleaning up after your pet is always the right thing to do. It’s the law!”
The funds from registration fees are used to support many noble causes across the globe such as animal shelters, investigations regarding cruelty to animals and emergency animal rescues during natural disasters. Not only this, pet licensing offers numerous benefits such as increasing vaccinations, reunion with lost pets and helps governments to maintain a registry of the pets in their area. Pet registration also helps to reduce the number of incidents pertaining to the defecation by pets in public areas and dog-bites in cities.
Creature Companion strongly supports the concept of responsible pet ownership and recommends that everyone owning a pet in India get their pets registered with their local civic bodies to ensure their safety and support the development of companion animal facilities across the nation.
PET REGISTRATION REGULATIONS INDIFFERENT INDIAN STATES
Today all major metropolitan cities of the country have some laws regarding lincensing of pets. Let’s take a look.
Delhi/NCR- According to Section 399 of the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, every dog owner should register his/her pet. The canine registration requirements include annual registration charges of `500 along with the dog’s vaccination proof, its picture and an identity proof stating its address and breed information.
Gurgaon- The Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG) has a provision for pet registration, however it is not mandatory. Pet owners can register their dogs and cats by paying a fixed annual charge of `500 and providing requisite medical and neutering certificates.
Noida- Noida is yet to come up with any laws regarding pet registration.
Lucknow- Pet owners have to shell out yearly charges of `500, `300 and `200 for registration of big (Doberman, Labrador, German Shepherd); small (Shih Tzu, Pomeranian, Spitz) and local indie (Indian Pariah) dog breeds respectively. Failing to get your dog registered will lead to a heavy penalty of `5000.
Mumbai- Under Section 14, rule number 22(a) sub-clause 386 of Maharashtra Municipal Provincial Act, every pet owner must obtain a dog license for his/her pet canine. The pet parent needs to submit a valid address proof; a passport size picture of the dog; latest vaccination card with owner’s full name, address, contact number, and name of the vet along with the issuing clinic; and fees of `75 for new registration and `50 as renewal charges.
Bengaluru- Bruhat Bengaluru MahanagaraPalike (BBMP) had issued pet licensing by-laws in 2018, according to which pet dogs had been capped at one per apartment and three per independent house in the metropolitan city. The municipal body had further issued a list of 64 approved breeds for apartments. To get their pets registered, pet owners needed to provide BBMP with updated vaccination records of their pets along with the pet’s details like name, age, breed; and their name and contact details. The license fee was `110 for the initial year. However, the bylaws were withdrawn by the municipal authority after several complaints were received from residents regarding their unsuitability.
Guwahati- Registration of pet dogs over three months of age is mandatory under the GMC Act, failing which erring pet parents are punishable under law. The responsibility for registration falls on the NGO/society, which is allowed to collect `100 as registration fees and `10 as application fees per dog from owners. The NGO/society is then to collect the Metal Tag from GMC Veterinary branch after payment of `60 per dog and get the signed registration certificate from the GMC Veterinary Officer after submitting photograph of pet owner with dog along with duly filled in form A and B of Levy of Tax on Dogs kept within the city of Guwahati Byelaws, 1975.
Pune- Pune Municipal Corporation accepts advanced registration charges of INR 500 for a period of ten years (`50 per year). Owners need to submit three passport size photographs of the pet along with its anti-rabies certificate and owner’s address proof. However, the pet needs to be re-registered at the municipal body’s ward office each year.
Indore – According to registration procedures laid down by the Indore Municipal Corporation, pet owners just need to visit the nearest government veterinary clinic along with their pet and its latest vaccination records and submit a nominal annual amount of `100 to procure a pet license.
Chennai– The health department of Greater Chennai Corporation issues the mandatory dog license to pet parents after collecting a registration fee of `50. The registration comes along with free immunisation for canines at corporation-run pet clinics across the city. Pet parents need to supply the pet’s details including name, colour, breed and age with their full name and contact details. GCC is also planning to take the registration procedure online and considering to revise the annual license charges.
Chandigarh– The Chandigarh Municipal Corporation (CMC) has issued Chandigarh Registration of Pet Dog Bylaws, 2010 under which it is mandatory for pet owners to register their pets exceeding the age of four months with the civic body. Not more than 2 dogs per family are allowed. Blind persons are exempted from the licensing amount and the registration will remain valid till the pet is alive.
The registration procedure involves submission of a duly filled-in application form, an undertaking by the dog owner agreeing to adhere to the bylaws, a nominal registration charge of `200 per dog, a vaccination certificate from a registered veterinary practitioner, and two passport size photographs of the pet. After the licensing procedure is complete, a metal badge is issued which the dog has to wear on its collar for verification. Defaulters are penalised with a fine of `500 per dog and/or face impounding of their dogs by the civic authority. The municipal body had proposed amendments to the bylaws in 2018 which included increasing the registration amount to `1000 for pedigree dogs, number of dogs owned per family to 4 (if 2 of them are adopted strays) and subsidised registration fee of `1 for adopted street dogs.
PET LICENSE LAWS ACROSS THE GLOBE
Toronto, Canada- Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 349 makes it mandatory for pet parents to get individual licenses for all dogs and cats owned by them. The pets can be registered online, in person, by phone or mail by filling a simple Pet Registration Application along with the owner’s credit card and the name and contact details of the pets’ vet. ID tags are included as part of the annual license fees, which is $60 for dogs and $50 for cats.
The registration fee is significantly reduced if the animal has been spayed or neutered, and in case the owner is a senior citizen. The pet parent needs to submit proof of the pet’s sterilisation and/or their age to avail these discounts. The registration amount is utilised by the Toronto Animal Services towards shelter and care for homeless animals. Getting a pet license also makes sure that the dog or cat is safely returned to the owner in case of it getting lost by identification through license tags and microchips.
Germany- Most European countries abolished the practice of Dog Tax in the 20th Century, however, the German authorities stubbornly refuse to scrape off this law. Pet parents in Germany are, therefore, required to pay the mandatory Dog Tax (Hundesteuer) according to the number of canines they own. Service dogs are exempt from the Hundesteuer and so are rescue dogs in their first year of adoption.
The registration amount for the first dog in Berlin is 120 EUR per year while registration of each additional dog in the same family costs 180 EUR annually. Re-registration is required every time the owner moves to a new residence. Each state has its own pet registration requirements and fees. Pet owners also need to pick up after their dog and follow the local leash laws.
There is no taxation for cat ownership in the country. However, both dogs and cats need to be licensed. The dog tax and registration fees are utilised towards creation of dog-related services such as dog waste bins. In addition, many states have a mandatory procedure for personal liability insurance which covers all kinds of unexpected damages caused by pet dog(s).
New Zealand- The country has formulated regulations for canine licensing and registration under the Dog Control Act 1996. All dogs over 3 months of age need to be registered with their city or district council. The licensed dogs are required to wear a tag indicating the council, registration number and registration expiry date. Registration charges vary according to council, neuter status, urban/rural accommodation, dangerous/menacing nature and other factors. Registration fees are lower for working dogs while disabled canines are exempted from these costs.
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Anandibai Gopal Joshi: The First Indian Woman to be A Doctor.
Modern history has its marks, majorly dominated by men. The women were expected to stay at home and take care of the family while males ruled the public world. The domain of medicine was not an exception. The researchers, experiments and developments were strictly reserved for men by men and the closest a woman could accommodate herself where she barely had any rights, was by getting appointed as a nurse. The occupation needed the skills of a caretaker and the stereotypical conditioning of women by the society convinced the male employers of accommodating women in nothing more than a position of a nurse. Slowly the fields of paediatrics, dermatology, obstetrics, gynaecology, which are often considered ‘soft' opened for women MDs (Doctor of Medicine). Fields of cardiothoracic surgery and neurosurgery, often considered ‘complex' where therefore still in hands of men. In the present context of India, where we see most woman with graduation degrees, engaged in unpaid labour, there was a woman who, in 1880s, paved her way to become the first woman to receive an MD in Western medicine.
• A Determined Face Against Social Discrimination:
Anandibai was born in a Maratha landlord household in 1865 in Kalyan, Maharashtra. She got married to Gopalrao Joshi, at the age of 9, who worked as a governmental clerk and was 20 years senior than her. Gopalrao was a fine person, progressive of his times and a supporter of women’s education. Anandibai Joshi gave birth at the age of 14 though the child could breathe only for 10 days due to the dearth of proper medical care. The death of her son made her determined of becoming a physician, so that other women don’t have to face her unfortune. However multiple attempts of enrolment in the missionary schools failed miserably as the places reeked of severe gender discrimination. The couple moved to Calcutta where Anandibai learned to read and write in Sanskrit as well as English. The next step ahead was finding a medical college in the West as she realised, mere knowledge of Ayurveda and midwifery won’t be of much help while handling complicated pregnancies and Indian medical institutes teaching western medicine had closed their doors of acceptance for women.
Thus, a letter stating her ardent desire to pursue a course of medicine and a position for a Gopalrao in US was sent to Royal Wilder, are fairly popular American Missionary. The letter got published in the Princeton’s Missionary Review, where it arrested the attention of Theodisia Carpenter, a New Jersey resident, who decided to come to her aid. Through her, Gopalrao and Anandibai met a physician couple named Thorborns who helped them suggesting Anandibai's college and ensured her arrival in the US.
• Education In The West:
Gopalrao, however couldn’t secure a position for himself in the US, hence Anandibai left India in 1883, accompanied by Thorborns. Reaching there, she wasted no time in applying for enrolment in the Medical program of the Women’s Medical College in Pennsylvania. At the age of 19, she started her medical education and graduated at 21 after receiving an MD in obstetrics. The title for MD thesis was, ‘Obstetrics Among The Aryan Hindoos' where she had incorporated the aspects of both Ayurveda and Western medicine.
Fortunately, Gopalrao could make it to her graduation ceremony. Pandita Ramabai attended the occasion too, where Anandibai was declared to be the first Woman MD from India. She also received a congratulatory message from Queen Victoria, the then empress of India.
• Return to India and Final Days:
The cold weather, lack of proper winter garments, unfamiliar environment and eating habits took a heavy toll on her health. High temperature and cough were her constant companion along with occasional fainting. It was later discovered that she had contracted tuberculosis and was immediately rushed to the Woman’s Hospital in Philadelphia. The doctor there, advised for her return to India. In 1886, the couple left for India and reached the homeland late, that year.
Her homecoming was showered with warm welcomes. The princely state of Kolhapur appointed her as the physician-in-charge of the women's ward in the Albert Edward Hospital. Her health however, still showed signs of deterioration. On February 1887, she passed away. Her demise was mourned by the whole nation and ashes were sent to Theodicia in US, who had them buried in her family cemetery in Poughkeepsie, New York.
• Recognition:
Multiple media houses had adopted her life into movies and serials. A Marathi biopic named ‘Anandi Gopal' released recently in 2019. A Lucknow based NGO named The Institute for Research and Documentation in Social Sciences(IRDS) gives out Anandibai Joshi Award for Medicine. The Government of Maharashtra also established a scholarship of her name, for women working on women's health projects. She also has a crater on Venus, named after her, called ‘Joshee.’
• Legacy:
Anandibai Joshi was one of the foremost pioneers of women’s right to education in a time when women were only supposed to get married and remain confined within societal restrictions. She broke quite a good number of norms, achieved a medical degree from a foreign country and was staunch enough to chase her dreams by not letting the grief of her son's death discourage her determination.
A torch bearer of the movement against patriarchy and backwardness, Anandibai's life encouraged millions of hearts, specially that of the women, to tear down social norms and seek education at par their colonisers. Her firm resolution to achieve something, which even the powerful men of her time didn’t dare to dream of, transformed her life into something much bigger than it would have been, had she stayed within the ‘limits' of a wife and a mother. Her victory thus inspired many generations of women to follow their dreams.
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Land available for sale
Property Available for Immediate Sale: Borrower Name: RAKESH KUMAR SINGH Property Type: Vacant Land Address/Location: PLOT NO. 5, KHASRA NO. 242, VILLAGE-SEMRA GAUDHI, WARD- FAIZULLAGANJ, PARGANA, TEHSIL & DISTT. LUCKNOW (UP) 226013 City: Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh Area: 162.639 Sq. Mtrs. Reserve Price: Rs. 12 Lakh Only For More Details: shorturl.at/TU058 Call Owner/AO: +91-8448264515/8860001910 & Whatsapp: +91-8448264515/8860001910 #propertyauction #bankauction #auctionhouse #landforsale #vacantland #lucknow #UttarPradesh
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Registering your Dog in India: How-To-Guide For Pet Parents
Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation approved a proposal to regulate pet ownership within its municipal area. It was passed on September 13, 2019. A committee of experts has been established to develop rules for pet registration and determine the fine for owners who allow their dogs to poop in public places. After receiving numerous complaints from pet owners, the committee initially suggested that pet dog registration fees be set at 5000. However, the fee was reduced to Rs1000 when the committee received more information.
Before the committee can begin to formulate by-laws or other modalities, it will first examine the laws and charges for pet registration in each state. Pet owners who have unregistered pets will be subject to fines by the municipal board. The board also decided to fine pet owners Rs500 for every dog found in open areas. Dinesh Chandra Singh (municipal commissioner) said that Ghaziabad residents will soon be made aware of the rules.
Creature Companion invited readers and followers to voice their opinions on the topic of dog registration and licensing on our social media accounts. Many pet owners came forward to share their opinions on this important topic.
Ketan Panchal, founder of K9 Academy, shares that pet registration is a good idea. This would give your pet a name and also allow the pet parent to take on more responsibility. You must clean your home and keep it tidy as a dog dad and good citizen. You must clean after your dog. When I take my dog outside, I always have a bag of potty. Many dogs are trained in Ahmedabad. Everyone is asked to take care of their pets. If you take care of your pets, society will love you.
Bhanu Maheshwari is the pet parent of male Labrador Jojo. He says, "Having your dog registered at a kennel should be one of the first things you do." If you live in an apartment complex with other owners, it is a good idea to register your dog. Pet waste is not something anyone wants to spread into their homes. It doesn't matter if there are no restrictions, it is important to clean up after your pet. It's the law!
Funds from registration fees go to many worthy causes around the world, including animal shelters, animal cruelty investigations and animal rescues in times of emergency. Pet licensing has many benefits, including the ability to increase vaccinations and reunite with pets that have been lost. It also allows governments to keep a record of pets living in their region. Pet registration helps reduce incidents related to pets urinating in public places and dogs biting in cities.
Creature Companion supports responsible pet ownership strongly and recommends that all Indian pet owners register their animals with the local civic bodies. This will ensure their safety as well as support the development and expansion of companion animal facilities in India.
PET REGISTRATION REGULATIONS INDIFFERENT INDIAN STATES
All major cities in the country now have laws regarding the licensing of pets. Let's take another look.
Delhi/NCR-Every dog owner must register their pet according to Section 399 under the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act. Annual registration fees of 500 are required for canine registration. They also require a photo, vaccination proof, and proof of identity stating the dog's address and breed information.
GurgaonAlthough pet registration is allowed by the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram, it is not required. Pet owners may register their pets by paying a fee of 500 per year and providing the required medical and neutering certificates.
NoidaNoida has yet to make any laws concerning pet registration.
LucknowFor registration of large (Dobermans, Labrador, German Shepherd) or small (Shih Tzus, Pomeranian, Spitz), dog breeds, owners will have to pay yearly fees of 500. 300. 200. Failure to register your dog will result in a severe penalty of 5000.
Mumbai-Every pet owner must apply for a dog license online india under Section 14(a) of the Maharashtra Municipal Provincial Act. A valid address proof, a passport-sized picture of the pet, the most recent vaccination card, along with the name of the veterinarian, are required. There are fees of 75 to renew registration, and 50 for renewal.
Bengaluru-Bruhat Bengaluru MahanagaraPalike had issued pet licensing laws in 2018. According to these by-laws, pet dogs were limited to one per apartment and three for each independent house within the metropolis. A list of 64 approved breeds was also issued by the municipal body. Pet owners must provide BBMP updated vaccination records and details about their pet, including their name, age, breed, and contact details. The initial year's license fee was 110. After several complaints from residents about their inadequacy, the municipal authority withdrew the bylaws.
Guwahati-The GMC Act makes it mandatory to register pet dogs older than three months. Erring pet parents can be punished under the law. The NGO/society is responsible for registration. It can collect registration fees of 100 and application fees per dog from the owners. After payment of 60 per pet, the NGO/society will collect the metal tag from GMC Veterinary Branch. The signed registration certificate will be issued by the GMC Veterinary Officer.
Pune-Pune Municipal Corporation charges advanced registration fees of INR 500 per year for a period of ten (50) years. Three passport-sized photographs of the pet must be submitted by owners along with an anti-rabies certificate, proof of address and three passport-size photos. The pet must be re-registered each year at the municipal ward office.
Indore -The Indore Municipal Corporation has established registration procedures for pet owners. Pet owners need to bring their pet to the nearest government clinic with the latest vaccination records. They also need to pay a nominal annual fee of 100 to obtain a license.
ChennaiAfter paying a fee of 50, the health department of Greater Chennai Corporation issues the compulsory dog license to pet owners. You will receive free vaccinations at the corporation-run pet clinics in the city with your registration. Pet parents will need to provide the following information: name, color, age, full name, and contact details. GCC plans to make registration online and revise annual license fees.
ChandigarhChandigarh Municipal Corporation has issued Chandigarh Registration of Pet Dog Bylaws 2010, under which pet owners must register pets over the age of 4 months. There are no more than two dogs allowed per family. Blind people are exempted form the licensing fee and the registration will continue to be valid until the pet becomes a living.
The registration process involves submitting a completed application form. An undertaking from the dog owner is required to agree to follow the bylaws. There is a nominal registration fee of 200 for each dog. A vaccination certificate from a registered veterinarian practitioner and two passport-sized photographs of the pet. A metal badge will be issued to the dog after the licensing process is completed. This badge must be worn on the collar of the dog for verification. Failure to comply with the licensing procedure can result in a fine up to 500 per dog, and/or impoundment of the dogs by the municipal authority. In 2018, the municipal body proposed amending the bylaws. These amendments included an increase in the registration amount to 1000 for pedigree dog owners, increased the number of dogs per family to 4, and subsidised registration fees of 1 to adopt street dogs.
PET LICENSE LAWS ACROSS THE GLOBE
Toronto, CanadaThe Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 349 requires pet parents to obtain individual licenses for each of their pets. You can register your pet online, in person or by mail. All you need is a Pet Registration Application and your credit card number. The annual license fee for dogs is $60 and cats $50, respectively.
If the pet has been spayed/neutered and if the owner is over 65, the registration fee will be significantly reduced. To receive these discounts, the pet parent must provide proof of their pet's sterilization and/or age. Toronto Animal Services uses the registration amount to provide shelter and care for homeless pets. A pet license ensures that your dog or cat can be safely returned to its owner in the event of it being lost.
Germany-While most European countries have abolished dog tax in the 20th century, Germany refuses to repeal this law. German pet parents are required to pay the Dog Tax (Hundesteuer), according to how many canines they have. The Hundesteuer is exempt for service dogs and rescue dogs, but not for their first year.
Registering a dog in Berlin costs 120 EUR each year. Each additional dog in the family is required to be registered at 180 EUR annually. Every owner must re-register their dog every year when they move to a new home. Each state has its own requirements and fees for pet registration. Pet owners must also ensure that their pet is well-behaved and follows all local laws.
Cat ownership is not subject to tax in the United States. Both dogs and cats must be licensed. Dog tax and registration fees can be used to create dog-related services like dog waste bins. Many states also have mandatory procedures for personal liability insurance that covers any unexpected damage caused by pets.
New Zealand-The Dog Control Act 1996 has established regulations that govern canine licensing and registration. Every dog over three months old must be registered with the city or district council. Licensee dogs must have a tag that identifies the city, registration number and expiry date. The fees for registration vary depending on the council, neuter status and urban/rural accommodations, dangerous/menacing nature, and other factors. Working dogs pay less, while those with disabilities are exempt from the registration fees. Stay tuned at Creature Companion.
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Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi
Tirupati Enterprise is a Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh We founded the company in 2015 in Ahmedabad. Tirupati Enterprise is a Manufacturer and Supplier of Mosquito Repellent Products, including Black Fire Dragon, Black Tiger, Green Comfort, King Kobra, Natural Relax, Green Dinosaur, Mosquito Killer, Rambaan, and Dengue Hunter. Tirupati Enterprise stands as a renowned brand known for its comprehensive range of insect repellents, prominently featuring mosquito repellent sticks. These sticks are meticulously designed for outdoor settings to effectively ward off mosquitoes and other flying insects. We cater to diverse needs and preferences with our wide array of formulations and sizes. Whether you prefer traditional mosquito-repellent sticks or specialized variants, we offer options that ensure effective mosquito protection. Tirupati Enterprise ensures each product meets stringent quality standards. Our sticks are crafted to deliver reliable mosquito protection, making outdoor activities more enjoyable and comfortable. Our commitment to quality and effectiveness ensures that you can enjoy outdoor settings without the nuisance of mosquitoes. Specification: Products Name: Dengue Hunter Flavour: Premium Fragrance Type: Mosquito Incense Sticks/Agarbatti Stick Colour: Orange Stick Size: 12“ Burning Time: 45 Min Net Contents: 150 Sticks (13×10=150) Pack Type: Pouch & Box Tirupati Enterprise is a Mosquito Repellent Agarbatti in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh which includes locations like the Ganges, Ramnagar Fort, Durga Temple, Bhadaini, Dasaswamedh, Manikarnika, Kanpur, Lucknow, Ghaziabad, Agra, Meerut, Varanasi, Prayagraj, Bareilly, Aligarh, Moradabad, Saharanpur, Gorakhpur, Noida, Firozabad, Jhansi, Muzaffarnagar, Mathura-Vrindavan, Ayodhya, Rampur, Shahjahanpur, Farrukhabad-Fatehgarh, Budaun, Maunath Bhanjan. For more information, we welcome you to engage in a professional conversation with our team. View Product: Click Here Read the full article
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New Post has been published on https://www.liveindiatimes.com/lucknow-doctor-who-recovered-from-covid-19-wants-to-rejoin-fight-against-virus/
Lucknow Doctor, Who Recovered From COVID-19, Wants To Rejoin Fight Against Virus
“I will spend the 14-day isolation period at home,” the King George’s Medical University doctor said.
Lucknow:
Discharged from hospital on Tuesday after being treated for coronavirus, Dr Tauseef Khan is raring to get back into the fight against COVID-19.
“I am the best person to work with coronavirus positive patients and make them understand things, because I have myself gone through it,” the resident doctor at King George’s Medical University told news agency PTI.
When asked if he would like to work at KGMU’s isolation ward again, he said, “I will spend the 14-day isolation period at home and will be ready for duty once again.”
Dr Khan got the infection while treating a doctor from Canada at the hospital.
When asked if he was okay with being named in the media, he said, “Why not?”
“I have defeated coronavirus and am coming out of the hospital, not from jail.”
“It was on March 11 when the first foreigner, a lady doctor from Canada, was admitted to the isolation ward, and I was part of the team of doctors looking after her,” he recalled.
On March 16, he had some nose and throat problems.
“When I told my seniors about it, they got a test conducted and I was found coronavirus positive and admitted in the isolation ward on March 17,” he said.
Earlier, his relatives and friends had brought food for him at the hospital. When he was found to have been infected, he got them tested as well. Three of them tested positive.
“They are undergoing treatment at KGMU. They all will also come out fully recovered soon,” Dr Khan said.
While in the hospital’s isolation ward for 21 days, he kept in touch with other patients on phone.
“My friends outside, including doctors, kept me updated on WhatsApp with the research going on for finding a treatment for the virus, as well as on the history of patients who have successfully overcome it,” he said.
“Besides keeping me in a positive frame of mind, this information, when shared with other patients, kept them in good spirits.”
“This free time also gave me an opportunity to prepare for the postgraduate entrance examination,” he said. The doctors is going for the higher medical degree.
“Though we are a developing country, the medical facilities have so progressed that today we can defeat any disease. The government has made very good facilities available at KGMU,” he said.
“There is a separate room for every infected patient with TV, and everything, like food, is taken proper care of,” he said.
He advised those in quarantine to maintain social distancing and good sanitation, asking them to follow the doctor’s” advice for a quick recovery.
“I thank the almighty, along with the KGMU administration, for regaining my health so quickly,” he said.
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India election 2019: The killer air no one's talking about
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Pollution killed at least 1.2 million Indians in 2017, but as the country votes in a general election, is fixing the bad air any party or politician’s priority? The BBC’s Geeta Pandey reports from Kanpur which topped a global list of most polluted cities in the world last year.
Just before the elections were called in March, Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Kanpur to address a rally for his Bharatiya Janata Party. In April, the state chief minister, Yogi Adityanath, leader of the opposition Congress party Rahul Gandhi and two former state chief ministers – Akhilesh Yadav and Ms Mayawati – addressed their own rallies in the city.
Not one of them mentioned pollution – a topic that dominates news and conversations every winter when a thick grey blanket of smog descends on large parts of northern India, rendering the mere act of breathing hazardous.
Indian cities routinely dominate global pollution rankings so it came as no surprise when last May the World Health Organization named Kanpur as the most polluted city in the world.
The rankings were based on 2016 data from the Central Pollution Control Board on the presence in the air of PM2.5 – particles so tiny that they can enter deep into the lungs and make people susceptible to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.
The safe limit, according to WHO is 25 micrograms per cubic metre although Indian officials put it at 60 – Kanpur’s was 173.
Image caption Air pollution is seriously impacting the health of Kanpur residents
Prof Sachchida Nand Tripathi, environmental engineer at the government-run Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Kanpur, says it’s really “hair-splitting” who takes the top place as the city is not the only one on the list.
“In the top 50, there were 20 plus cities from the Gangetic plains, including Varanasi, Lucknow and Allahabad. Data after data shows pollution is a major problem, the air is very poor.”
The major contributing factors to air pollution, he says, are roadside and construction dust, industrial and vehicular emissions, and smoke from burning of crop residue, garbage and solid fuel like wood and coal.
“Together, they are turning the air in our cities toxic, laden with deadly PM2.5 and the larger PM10 particles,” he adds.
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Media captionIndia’s elections: Why you should care
And these are seriously impacting the health of the citizens, says Dr Anand Kumar, head of the pulmonary department at GSVM Medical College, Kanpur’s biggest hospital.
“In 2015, we saw 40,000 patients a year. Last year that number rose to 60,000. All the cases coming here can be co-related to pollution in some way.”
The “commonest complaint” he hears is of breathlessness. The other symptoms are “sore throat, tracheal infection, heaviness in the chest and unexplained cough that does not respond to regular treatment”. And the most at risk are those who work outdoors such as traffic constables, drivers, cleaners, roadside vendors and the poor living by the roadside.
Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Industrial pollution is a major contributor to foul air in Kanpur
In his office, he looks at the X-ray of Seva Ram Parihar, a 50-year-old auto-rickshaw driver, who’s asthmatic and has been under treatment for “eight-nine years for breathlessness”. His condition has worsened in the past month.
“He’s been diagnosed with chronic persistent bronchial asthma. It’s an occupational disease, he’s exposed to diesel fumes and other pollutants in the course of his work,” Dr Kumar explains.
I ask him what he can do to help Mr Parihar? Not much, he says: “We can only give him the best care, prevent further exacerbation. He has no other options.”
Dr Kumar takes me on a guided tour of the outpatient department, where his team of 19 doctors sees 200 to 250 patients daily, and the respiratory ward where seriously ill patients are curled up on beds, many connected to oxygen pipes.
The room is bleak, its walls disfigured with peeling paint, tubelights shine harsh light on the beds, and noisy fans provide some respite from the sweltering heat.
Image caption Dr Anand Kumar says the “commonest complaint” he hears is of breathlessness
It’s crowded in here – all the beds are taken, there are extra patients on stretchers and on mattresses thrown on the floor.
Almost all the patients here are poor, unable to afford expensive private medical care and the air is heavy with their pain and despair. Most of the patients here are dependent on oxygen to continue breathing.
Like Nasreen Begum, who has been in and out of the hospital since 2015. “She was discharged just last month, and now she’s back again,” says Dr Kumar.
Along with the number of patients, he says the “severity” of the symptoms too has grown in the past four to five years and children are most susceptible to falling ill.
“Even very small children are nowadays being diagnosed with bronchial asthma. And earlier we’d see children recover in five to seven days, now it’s two weeks.”
The incidence of lung cancer too is growing – earlier it was found only in those above 55 years, now people in their 40s are getting it, he says, adding that the situation is worsening quite rapidly.
Kanpur’s chief pollution officer Ghanshyam (who uses only one name) admits that air pollution remains high and a cause of worry.
But, he says, ever since Kanpur topped the WHO list, a lot of measures have been taken to tackle pollution.
“We are trying to stop farmers from burning crop residue, sanitation workers are being asked to stop burning garbage, guidelines to control dust are being implemented, and vehicular emission is being checked.”
He says a committee has been set up under the district magistrate with representatives from 17 government departments. They meet regularly to discuss problems and monitor progress. “It’s not a problem we can solve alone,” Ghanshyam says.
Image caption Nasreen Begum has been in and out of the hospital since 2015
His colleague, assistant environmental engineer Dr Anil Mathur, says what they need the most is “better diagnosis” – to understand the source of air pollution.
The city has only one centre to monitor PM2.5 and a case has been made to set up five more such centres at different locations to generate better data.
The request is yet to be granted, but better data is something that Prof Tripathi could help with in the near future.
The Indian Institute of Technology has installed lots of low-cost monitors in Kanpur, Delhi and elsewhere in India. They also have programmes to monitor aerosols, real-time dust reading and radiation levels and by the end of 2019, he says, “we should have some answers”.
For instance, they would be able to tell how much pollution is being contributed by local sources and how much is coming from outside the city and how much is generated by biomass fuel or traffic. Then new policies can be formulated or existing ones tweaked accordingly, Prof Tripathi explains.
Image caption At the lone pollution monitoring system in the city, operator Rajesh Gupta checks the machine that measures PM2.5
In January, the government launched the National Clean Air Programme which aims to have breathable air in 100 cities in five years. Prof Tripathi, who is advising the government on the programme, says earlier the mindset was that environmental issues can impede sustainable development, but slowly that notion is changing and there is the realisation that the two can – and must – co-exist.
“There’s realisation that bad air is impacting human health so the government is forced to make it their agenda. But everyone – the federal government, the states and the cities – will have to work together and consistently to make a real difference.”
Read more from Geeta Pandey
When I visit the lone pollution monitoring system in a crowded market in the city centre, the machine shows a reading of PM2.5 of 67. Operator Rajesh Gupta says a day earlier it was 78.
In the winters, he says, the air quality is “very bad”, sometimes “critical – with PM2.5 averaging 400 to 500, on occasion even hitting 600”.
Image caption A huge breach in the sewage pipeline means untreated effluents are flowing into the river
It’s not just the air. Pollution has also blighted a stretch of Ganges, India’s holiest river, in Kanpur, says environmental activist Rakesh Jaiswal.
The city of four million plus people is an industrial hub. It is home to more than 400 tanneries and generates large amounts of sewage and industrial effluent and a lot of that goes untreated into the river.
“The city produces 430mld (million litres per day) waste water. Only 250mld is treated before being released into the river,” he says.
The run-up to the start of the Hindu festival of Kumbh Mela in January saw some relief.
Millions of Hindu pilgrims bathe in the river in the city of Prayagraj (formerly Allahabad) during the festival, 200km downstream from Kanpur.
The authorities ordered tanneries shut; effluent from the city drains was sent to treatment plants; and more water was released into the river from upstream.
Image caption Prof Sachchida Nand Tripathi says the air is very poor in a number of Indian cities
The festival ended in early March and the river water is polluted again.
Mr Jaiswal takes me to Dapka Ghat to show a huge breach in the pipeline that carries sewage from Sisamau, Kanpur’s dirtiest drain, to a treatment plant in Wajidpur.
Untreated effluents from the drain used to flow directly into the Ganges before the festival. The pipeline breach means it’s flowing again into the river untreated.
In the past 30 years, 310bn rupees ($4.4bn; £3.4bn) have been spent on cleaning the Ganges, but as we stand there watching the murky greyish liquid gushing into it, the river looks more like a stinking stream.
At one of the poll rallies in Kanpur, I ask several of the attendees if they think pollution should be an election issue?
Durga Prasad, a day-wage labourer, says he worries about the impact of pollution.
“It affects everyone, rich, poor, man, woman and child. But no-one has made it an issue,” he says, “and let me tell you, no one will.”
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Allahabad High Court – A Walk Through History
This article is written by Sadhvi Bhardwaj, of Indore Institute of Law, Indore. This article deals with the origin of Allahabad High Court and its present working culture.
Introduction
Allahabad High Court – Structural Organisation
The Allahabad High Court consists of the officers and officials of Registry with the apex two posts Registrar General and Senior Registrar reserving for HJS (Higher Judicial Service) officers and both the posts are filled up from amongst one of the senior most HJS officers. Registrar General is the head of all the Officers and Officials working in the High Court. The Office staff at High Court of Judicature at Allahabad is broadly divided into four Cadres:
General office Cadre – General Office cadre is the nodal cadre for handling all the administrative and judicial work in the Hon’ble court and ensuring judicial work is carried out in a streamlined and time-bound manner.
BS Cadre and PS Cadre – BS (Bench Secretary) and PS (Private Secretary) cadres are specialized cadres and are attached to Hon’ble judges to assist them in judicial proceedings and other miscellaneous work. These posts are filled through departmental examination.
Computer Cadre- It consists of officers and officials in following hierarchy:
System Manager
Senior System Analyst
System Analyst
Programmer Gr. 1
Programmer Gr. 2
Computer Operator A, B & C
The origin of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad.
The High Court in Allahabad was conceived on 18.06.1866 under the Royal Charter of Her Majesty Queen Victoria i.e. The Letters Patent of 17.3.1866. It procured its present status under the United Provinces High Courts (Amalgamation Order) 1948 upheld w.e.f 19.07.1948. The High Courts Act, 1861, ordered by British Parliament, accommodated the substitution of Supreme Courts of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay and for the foundation of High Courts in their places. It likewise accommodated the foundation of High Courts in some other piece of Her Majesty’s regions, excluded in the purview of another High Court by Letters Patent.
The High Court in Allahabad was set up by the Letters Patent of 17.03.1866 for the North Western Province supplanting the old “Sudder Diwani Adalat” of Agra, which arrived at an end on 13.06.1866. The principal Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court of North-Western Provinces at Allahabad were named in the above Letters Patent itself. For a long time, amid 1866 to 1869 the High Court in this manner framed, kept on working at Agra and it was not before the pre-winter of 1869 when the Chief Justice first sat at Allahabad.
Establishment of the new province – Oudh
In 1834, the Upper Provinces were isolated from the Presidency of Bengal and another administration of Agra was constituted which was superseded by the North-Western Provinces in 1836. The zone of North-Western Provinces and the territory of Oudh were named as United Provinces of Agra and Oudh in the year 1902. The entire territory was set under the ward of the Governor in 1921 on the execution of India Constitutional Reforms. After the decisions of 1920, a Legislative Council was framed at Lucknow in1921 and Lucknow was made the Capital. The territory was named “Joined Provinces” in 1937.
Prior, the domains of twelve areas of Oudh, to be specific, Lucknow, Faizabad, Sultanpur, Rai Bareilly, Pratapgarh, Barabanki, Gonda, Behraich, Sitapur, Kheri, Hardoi and Unnao, which were under the British Crown were brought under the locale of the Judicial Commissioner of Oudh at Lucknow vide the Government of India Order dated 04.02.1865. In 1925 vide U.P. Act No.IV of 1925, the Chief Court of Oudh was constituted with one Chief Justice and four puisne Judges swapping the Judicial Commissioner’s Court for the above Districts. In the above foundation, two courts i.e. the High Court in Allahabad for North-Western Provinces and the Chief Court of Oudh at Lucknow, were at the same time working and were practicing the forces of the High Courts over the separate domains. The current two courts additionally alluded to in Section 219 of the Government of India Act, 1935 were amalgamated and the new High Court of Judicature at Allahabad was set up w.e.f. 26.07.1948 under the United Provinces High Courts (Amalgamation Order) 1948 which was issued in activities of forces under Section 229 of the Government of India Act, 1935.
The Amalgamation Order of 1948
The High Court of Allahabad practices supervisory justice and control over the subordinate legal by uprightness of Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887. The Amalgamation Order 1948 in Article 3 gives that the High Court in Allahabad and the Chief Court in Oudh might constitute one High Court by the name of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. Article 3 of the Amalgamation Order – 1948 is quoted below: –
“As from the appointed day, the High Court in Allahabad and the Chief Court in Oudh shall be amalgamated and shall constitute one High Court by the name of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad (hereinafter referred to as “the new High Court”)”
A plain reading of Article 14 of the Amalgamation Order, 1948, makes it clear that the Judges of the High Court might sit at Allahabad or at such different places as the Chief Justice may name with the approval of the Governor. It additionally gives that at the very least two judges as the Chief Justice every once in a while, choose, should sit at Lucknow all together exercise jurisdiction and power in regard of cases emerging in the region of Oudh region. At the end of the day, a bench of the new High Court of Judicature was named at Allahabad with another bench or bench or at the very least two judges at Lucknow just for the twelve districts of Oudh territory. Article 14 of the Amalgamation Order 1948 is reproduced herein below: –
“The new High Court, and the Judges and division Courts thereof, shall sit at Allahabad or at such other places in the United Provinces as the Chief Justice may, with the approval of the Governor of the United Provinces, appoint: Provided that unless the Governor of the United Provinces with the concurrence of the Chief Justice otherwise directs, such judges of the new High Court, not less than two in number, as the Chief Justice may from time to time nominate, shall sit at Lucknow in order to exercise in respect of cases arising in such area in Oudh as the Chief Justice may direct, the Jurisdiction and power for the time being vested in the new High Court: Provided further that the Chief Justice may in His discretion order that any case or class of cases arising in the said areas shall be heard at Allahabad.”
Late enforcement of the Indian Constitution
The Constitution of India was authorized considerably later on after the development of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. In this manner, the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad isn’t a making of the Constitution of India. It owes its birthplace to the High Courts Act of 1861, Letters Patent of 1866 and the Amalgamation Order of 1948. The Constitution of India, not the slightest bit condenses, adjusts or influences the expert, ward, status and the presence of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. It, in any case, asserts and endorses of the High Court for each State including one for the State of U.P. Article 214 of the Constitution of India in unequivocal terms gives that there might be a High Court for each State. Article 214 of the Constitution of India is reproduced below: –
Art. 214: “There shall be a High Court for each State. “The place of sitting of the High Court at Allahabad, Lucknow and such other places as the Chief Justice may appoint, may not be misconstrued to mean creating a new High Court within the same State.
The absence of permanent bench in the court.
In a reported five judges choice of the Supreme Court of India on account of Nasirudin Vs. State Transport Appellate Tribunal, AIR 1976 SC 331, the Hon’ble Supreme Court following out the historical backdrop of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad inferred that there is no perpetual bench of the High Court at Allahabad. The benches at Allahabad and Lucknow might be changed as per arrangements of the Amalgamation Order 1948 i.e. at the attentiveness of the Chief Justice with the endorsement of the Governor. The Chief Justice of the High Court has no energy to increment or diminishing the zones of the Oudh every now and then.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court in yet another case, Federation of Bar Association in Karnataka Vs. Association of India announced in JT 2000 SC 303 completely decided that there is no principal appropriate to have a bench of the High Court at somewhere else on the ground of separation nor the foundation of the bench can be chosen the enthusiastic and wistful contemplations. The High Court itself is the most appropriate apparatus to choose whether it is fundamental and attainable to have a bench outside the essential bench. At the point when the board of trustees of judges constituted by the Chief Justice has disfavoured the foundation of a bench, the Chief Justice can’t be pressurized to take an alternate remain through strikes and disturbance.
Formation of another bench in western Uttar Pradesh
It is from the newspapers that the present Union Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs had kept in touch with the Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court looking for his supposition on the development of a bench of the High Court in western Uttar Pradesh. The Chief Justice on discussion with ten senior-most Judges of the Court had rejected agree to build up another bench of the High Court, as had been done progressively by the past Chief Justices before. In this specific situation, one can’t bear to dismiss report of Justice Jaswant Singh Commission which was set up to think about the modalities, attractive quality and the achievability of constituting or making a bench of the Allahabad High Court somewhere else in the State of U.P in perspective of the long-standing interest of a bench in western piece of the State. The Commission prescribed for a circuit bench at Agra from the separation perspective of the general population of the slope area of the State who was neither one of the wells associated by street or generally with Allahabad nor were had of adequate intends to movement such long separation for prosecution. In any case, the said proposals of the Commission lost all its importance once a different State of Uttaranchal was set up by the U.P State Reorganization Act, 2000 w.e.f. 9.11.2000 for the thirteen slope regions of the State of Uttar Pradesh, to be specific, Pauri Garhwal, Tehri Garhwal, Uttarkashi, Chamoli, Dehradun, Nainital, Almora, Pithoragarh, Udham Singh Nagar, Bageshwar, Champawat, Rudraprayag, and Haridwar.
A different High Court for the State of Uttaranchal was constituted around the same time under Section 26 of the Act which enabled the President to advise the place of Principal bench of the High Court and the Chief Justice of the said High Court to tell, if important, extra place or places of sitting of the said High Court with the endorsement of the Governor. Indeed, generally, the said proposals of the Commission are of no outcome as there is nothing on record openly to demonstrate that the Government at any point acknowledged the said report.
Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court.
The retiring age of Chief Justice is 62 years and Justice Dilip Babasaheb Bhosale is the present Chief Justice of the Court and following is the list of Chief Justices till date: –
Sl. No. Chief Justices Tenure 1. Walter Morgan (judge) 1866-1871 2. Robert Stuart 1871-1884 3. William Comer Petheram 1884-1886 4. John Edge 1886-1898 5. Louis Addin Kershaw 1898 6. Arthur Strachey 1898-1901 7. John Stanley 1901-1911 8. Henry Richards 1911-1919 9. Edward Grimwood Mears 1919-1932 10. Shah Muhammad Sulaiman 1932-1937 11. John Gibb Thom 1937-1941 12. Iqbal Ahmad 1941-1946 13. Kamala Kanta Verma 1946-1947 14. Bidhu Bhushan Malik 1947-1955 15. O.H. Mootham 1955-1961 16. Manulal Chunilal Desai 1961-1966 17. Vashishtha Bhargava 25/2/1966-7/8/1966 18. Nasirullah Beg 1966-1967 19. Vidyadhar Govind Oak 1967-1971 20. Shashi Kanta Verma 1971-1973 21. Dhatri Saran Mathur 1973-1974 22. Kunwar Bahadur Asthana 1974-1977 23. D. M. Chandrashekhar 1977-1978 24. Satish Chandra 1978-1983 25. Mahesh Narain Shukla 1983-1985 26. Hriday Nath Seth 1986 27. Kalmanje Jagannatha Shetty 1986-1987 28. Dwarka Nath Jha 1987 29. Amitav Banerji 1987-1988 30. Brahma Nath Katju 1988-1989 31. B. P. Jeevan Reddy 1990-1991 32. Manoj Kumar Mukherjee 1991-1993 33. S. S. Sodhi 1994-1995 34. A. Lakshman Rao 1995-1996 35. D. P. Mohapatra 1996-1998 36. N. K. Mitra 1999-2000 37. Shyamal Kumar Sen 8/5/2000-24/11/2002 38. Tarun Chatterjee 31/1/2003-26/8/2004 39. Ajoy Nath Ray 11/1/2005-26/1/2007 40. Hemant Laxman Gokhale 7/3/2007-8/3/2009 41. Chandramauli Kumar Prasad 20/3/2009-7/2/2010 42. Ferdino Rebello 26/6/2010-30/7/2011 43. Syed Rafat Alam 4/8/2011-8/8/2012 44. Shiva Kirti Singh 17/10/2012-18/9/2013 45. Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud 31/10/2013-12/5/2016
Reporting and citation
The Allahabad High Court Judicature provides with private journals that report Allahabad High Court Judgements such as: –
Allahabad Criminal Cases
Allahabad Law Journal
Allahabad Daily Judgements
Allahabad Civil Journal
Allahabad Weekly Cases
Allahabad Rent Cases
Revenue Decisions
U.P. Local Bodies and Education Cases
Lucknow Civil Decisions (LCD)
Judicial Interpretation on Crimes (JIC)
Landmark decisions of the Allahabad High Court
There are plenty of cases lying under the Allahabad High Court, that are resolved or are waiting to get resolved but what had earned the court a great fame is its judicial participation in those cases which has resulted in shaping the Indian Legal System and obviously their unforgettable judgments made by the eminent jury. The court till date has delivered a number of judgments that kept the powerful ruling class in check and has played an important role in establishing the rule of law in India post-independence. Some of those are pen-down below:-
The Indira Verdict– Under this, the former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was convicted by a single-judge bench of Justice Jagmohan Lal Sinha of the Allahabad High Court on 12 June 1975. Facts state that Indira Gandhi won the 1971 parliamentary election from Raebareli defeating Rajnarayan, a socialist leader. She was challenged by him on the grounds of violation of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and electoral malpractices and was even found guilty. The court in her judgment prohibited her from contesting elections for six years and also excluded her of all electoral posts.
The Babri Judgement– Under the following, the Allahabad High Court ruled that Ram Lalla, the Nirmohi Akhara, and the Waqf Board will be the joint-title holder of the Ayodhya disputed land over ‘Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi’ suit and thus, the land will be divided into three settlements. This judgment was given after six years of filing suit by a special full bench of the court. The decision made was to distribute two-thirds of the disputed land to Hindu claimants, one-third to the Sunni Muslim Waqf Board. Also by the majority of 2-1, the court claimed that birthplace of Lord Ram was right beneath the central dome of the destroyed mosque.
The ban on ‘Caste Rallies’- The Allahabad High Court judgment over banning of caste rallies with immediate effect issuing notices to the Centre, Uttar Pradesh Government, in July 2013 was a prominent decision taken for refining politics. A bench of Justices Uma Nath Singh and Mahendra Dayal put brakes on such rallies in the most populated state of the nation via the pronouncement on a PIL lodged for the ban on rallies that target the caste of the common folk for gaining maximum votes during elections.
Kids to study only in ‘Government Schools’– Though the Indian Government Schools provide ninety percent (90%) children’s’ populace with the necessities required, still face the neglected situations. Looking at such, the Allahabad High Court in August 2015, gave a tremendous decision over the education of the children of all Government officials. The judgment was to send the children of all the Government authorities only to Government schools for getting educated. This was to ensure that these schools run in a good condition and the responsibility to keep a record and check of this was awarded to the Chief Secretary of Uttar Pradesh.
Judgment on the Triple Talaq– Of all the judgments till date, ‘Triple Talaq’ is the most controversial. At present, this atrocity has disturbed the judicial conscience and is lying pending in the apex court. However, the decision given by a single-judge bench of Justice Suneet Kumar in December 2017, is the most remarkable one. The Allahabad High Court considered the act of Triple Talaq to be cruel and unconstitutional. It impedes and drags India from being a nation and ruins the rights of Muslim wives. The court stated that no personal law can be above the Constitution and thus, has banned it.
Controversies
Being the nation’s largest high court, the Allahabad High Court has always been in the limelight due to various controversies regarding its judicature and the working of its law counselors. Some of the most recent controversial matters are discussed below:-
A list of 33 senior lawyers prescribed by the Allahabad high court collegium for the judgeship in the nation’s biggest high court has stirred a discussion with no less than 33% of them purportedly identified with sitting and resigned judges of the Supreme Court and the Allahabad HC. A portion of the recommended names incorporates the brother-in-law of a sitting SC judge, a first cousin of another SC judge other than children and nephews of a few previous judges of the apex court and the Allahabad HC. Altogether, no less than 10 advocates in the list of 33 are said to be identified with previous or sitting judges, other than a senior supporter who is allegedly the law partner of the wife of a senior politician in Delhi. The law ministry received several complaints from the Allahabad and Lucknow bar against the proposals and has asked the Intelligence Bureau (IB) for a record verification on every one of these legal advisors. It is likewise checking if the HC collegium has given sufficient opportunity to candidates from the SC/ST, OBC and minority networks, other than ladies. In the three arrangements of in excess of 83 recommendations made by the Allahabad HC since 2015, not very many had a place with OBC/SC/ST, ladies or the minority community.
The Supreme Court had issued a notice on 4 May’18 in an appeal filed by the Allahabad High Court against its own judgment dealing with the question of superintendence of the High Court over family courts. The High Court was represented by Advocates Jagjit Singh Chhabra and Yashvardhan while the matter was heard acknowledged by a Bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice R Banumathi, which issued a notice to the respondent, Uttar Pradesh Judicial Services Association.
Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra on 31 January’18 recommended the impeachment of Justice Shri Narayan Shukla, the eighth senior-most judge of the Allahabad High Court, following an adverse report about him by an in-house panel set up by the CJI. The Supreme Court noted how Justice Shukla, on September 4, even made some corrections to the September 1 order. When the impeachment motion is moved in Parliament, an investigation is conducted. If the findings of guilt are confirmed, the impeachment motion changes to removing of the judge through votes of the majority. However, the CJI has set the process in motion with a letter to the Prime Minister for the impeachment of the judge. The trigger was a scathing report of a misconduct by an internal probe into a medical college admission scam by the committee led by Madras High Court Chief Justice Indira Banerjee.
The Supreme Court on 22 October’18 upheld its controversial remarks that something was “rotten” in the Allahabad High Court where the “uncle judges syndrome” was rampant and needed cleansing. On 26 November’18, the remarks were made in a 12-page order while making the insinuation that several judges of the high court suffer from ‘uncle judge’ syndrome, which refers to judges passing favorable orders for parties represented by lawyers known to them. This remark was made because of the rejection of the arguments of senior counsel P.P Rao that even a clarification that some are excellent and good judges would still cause suspicion on the integrity of the judges. All this was done under the bench of justices Markandey Katju and Gyan Sudha Mishra while dismissing the Allahabad High Court’s application for expunging of the remarks.
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Allahabad High Court – A Walk Through History
This article is written by Sadhvi Bhardwaj, of Indore Institute of Law, Indore. This article deals with the origin of Allahabad High Court and its present working culture.
Introduction
Allahabad High Court – Structural Organisation
The Allahabad High Court consists of the officers and officials of Registry with the apex two posts Registrar General and Senior Registrar reserving for HJS (Higher Judicial Service) officers and both the posts are filled up from amongst one of the senior most HJS officers. Registrar General is the head of all the Officers and Officials working in the High Court. The Office staff at High Court of Judicature at Allahabad is broadly divided into four Cadres:
General office Cadre – General Office cadre is the nodal cadre for handling all the administrative and judicial work in the Hon’ble court and ensuring judicial work is carried out in a streamlined and time-bound manner.
BS Cadre and PS Cadre – BS (Bench Secretary) and PS (Private Secretary) cadres are specialized cadres and are attached to Hon’ble judges to assist them in judicial proceedings and other miscellaneous work. These posts are filled through departmental examination.
Computer Cadre- It consists of officers and officials in following hierarchy:
System Manager
Senior System Analyst
System Analyst
Programmer Gr. 1
Programmer Gr. 2
Computer Operator A, B & C
The origin of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad.
The High Court in Allahabad was conceived on 18.06.1866 under the Royal Charter of Her Majesty Queen Victoria i.e. The Letters Patent of 17.3.1866. It procured its present status under the United Provinces High Courts (Amalgamation Order) 1948 upheld w.e.f 19.07.1948. The High Courts Act, 1861, ordered by British Parliament, accommodated the substitution of Supreme Courts of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay and for the foundation of High Courts in their places. It likewise accommodated the foundation of High Courts in some other piece of Her Majesty’s regions, excluded in the purview of another High Court by Letters Patent.
The High Court in Allahabad was set up by the Letters Patent of 17.03.1866 for the North Western Province supplanting the old “Sudder Diwani Adalat” of Agra, which arrived at an end on 13.06.1866. The principal Chief Justice and the Judges of the High Court of North-Western Provinces at Allahabad were named in the above Letters Patent itself. For a long time, amid 1866 to 1869 the High Court in this manner framed, kept on working at Agra and it was not before the pre-winter of 1869 when the Chief Justice first sat at Allahabad.
Establishment of the new province – Oudh
In 1834, the Upper Provinces were isolated from the Presidency of Bengal and another administration of Agra was constituted which was superseded by the North-Western Provinces in 1836. The zone of North-Western Provinces and the territory of Oudh were named as United Provinces of Agra and Oudh in the year 1902. The entire territory was set under the ward of the Governor in 1921 on the execution of India Constitutional Reforms. After the decisions of 1920, a Legislative Council was framed at Lucknow in1921 and Lucknow was made the Capital. The territory was named “Joined Provinces” in 1937.
Prior, the domains of twelve areas of Oudh, to be specific, Lucknow, Faizabad, Sultanpur, Rai Bareilly, Pratapgarh, Barabanki, Gonda, Behraich, Sitapur, Kheri, Hardoi and Unnao, which were under the British Crown were brought under the locale of the Judicial Commissioner of Oudh at Lucknow vide the Government of India Order dated 04.02.1865. In 1925 vide U.P. Act No.IV of 1925, the Chief Court of Oudh was constituted with one Chief Justice and four puisne Judges swapping the Judicial Commissioner’s Court for the above Districts. In the above foundation, two courts i.e. the High Court in Allahabad for North-Western Provinces and the Chief Court of Oudh at Lucknow, were at the same time working and were practicing the forces of the High Courts over the separate domains. The current two courts additionally alluded to in Section 219 of the Government of India Act, 1935 were amalgamated and the new High Court of Judicature at Allahabad was set up w.e.f. 26.07.1948 under the United Provinces High Courts (Amalgamation Order) 1948 which was issued in activities of forces under Section 229 of the Government of India Act, 1935.
The Amalgamation Order of 1948
The High Court of Allahabad practices supervisory justice and control over the subordinate legal by uprightness of Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887. The Amalgamation Order 1948 in Article 3 gives that the High Court in Allahabad and the Chief Court in Oudh might constitute one High Court by the name of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. Article 3 of the Amalgamation Order – 1948 is quoted below: –
“As from the appointed day, the High Court in Allahabad and the Chief Court in Oudh shall be amalgamated and shall constitute one High Court by the name of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad (hereinafter referred to as “the new High Court”)”
A plain reading of Article 14 of the Amalgamation Order, 1948, makes it clear that the Judges of the High Court might sit at Allahabad or at such different places as the Chief Justice may name with the approval of the Governor. It additionally gives that at the very least two judges as the Chief Justice every once in a while, choose, should sit at Lucknow all together exercise jurisdiction and power in regard of cases emerging in the region of Oudh region. At the end of the day, a bench of the new High Court of Judicature was named at Allahabad with another bench or bench or at the very least two judges at Lucknow just for the twelve districts of Oudh territory. Article 14 of the Amalgamation Order 1948 is reproduced herein below: –
“The new High Court, and the Judges and division Courts thereof, shall sit at Allahabad or at such other places in the United Provinces as the Chief Justice may, with the approval of the Governor of the United Provinces, appoint: Provided that unless the Governor of the United Provinces with the concurrence of the Chief Justice otherwise directs, such judges of the new High Court, not less than two in number, as the Chief Justice may from time to time nominate, shall sit at Lucknow in order to exercise in respect of cases arising in such area in Oudh as the Chief Justice may direct, the Jurisdiction and power for the time being vested in the new High Court: Provided further that the Chief Justice may in His discretion order that any case or class of cases arising in the said areas shall be heard at Allahabad.”
Late enforcement of the Indian Constitution
The Constitution of India was authorized considerably later on after the development of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. In this manner, the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad isn’t a making of the Constitution of India. It owes its birthplace to the High Courts Act of 1861, Letters Patent of 1866 and the Amalgamation Order of 1948. The Constitution of India, not the slightest bit condenses, adjusts or influences the expert, ward, status and the presence of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. It, in any case, asserts and endorses of the High Court for each State including one for the State of U.P. Article 214 of the Constitution of India in unequivocal terms gives that there might be a High Court for each State. Article 214 of the Constitution of India is reproduced below: –
Art. 214: “There shall be a High Court for each State. “The place of sitting of the High Court at Allahabad, Lucknow and such other places as the Chief Justice may appoint, may not be misconstrued to mean creating a new High Court within the same State.
The absence of permanent bench in the court.
In a reported five judges choice of the Supreme Court of India on account of Nasirudin Vs. State Transport Appellate Tribunal, AIR 1976 SC 331, the Hon’ble Supreme Court following out the historical backdrop of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad inferred that there is no perpetual bench of the High Court at Allahabad. The benches at Allahabad and Lucknow might be changed as per arrangements of the Amalgamation Order 1948 i.e. at the attentiveness of the Chief Justice with the endorsement of the Governor. The Chief Justice of the High Court has no energy to increment or diminishing the zones of the Oudh every now and then.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court in yet another case, Federation of Bar Association in Karnataka Vs. Association of India announced in JT 2000 SC 303 completely decided that there is no principal appropriate to have a bench of the High Court at somewhere else on the ground of separation nor the foundation of the bench can be chosen the enthusiastic and wistful contemplations. The High Court itself is the most appropriate apparatus to choose whether it is fundamental and attainable to have a bench outside the essential bench. At the point when the board of trustees of judges constituted by the Chief Justice has disfavoured the foundation of a bench, the Chief Justice can’t be pressurized to take an alternate remain through strikes and disturbance.
Formation of another bench in western Uttar Pradesh
It is from the newspapers that the present Union Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs had kept in touch with the Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court looking for his supposition on the development of a bench of the High Court in western Uttar Pradesh. The Chief Justice on discussion with ten senior-most Judges of the Court had rejected agree to build up another bench of the High Court, as had been done progressively by the past Chief Justices before. In this specific situation, one can’t bear to dismiss report of Justice Jaswant Singh Commission which was set up to think about the modalities, attractive quality and the achievability of constituting or making a bench of the Allahabad High Court somewhere else in the State of U.P in perspective of the long-standing interest of a bench in western piece of the State. The Commission prescribed for a circuit bench at Agra from the separation perspective of the general population of the slope area of the State who was neither one of the wells associated by street or generally with Allahabad nor were had of adequate intends to movement such long separation for prosecution. In any case, the said proposals of the Commission lost all its importance once a different State of Uttaranchal was set up by the U.P State Reorganization Act, 2000 w.e.f. 9.11.2000 for the thirteen slope regions of the State of Uttar Pradesh, to be specific, Pauri Garhwal, Tehri Garhwal, Uttarkashi, Chamoli, Dehradun, Nainital, Almora, Pithoragarh, Udham Singh Nagar, Bageshwar, Champawat, Rudraprayag, and Haridwar.
A different High Court for the State of Uttaranchal was constituted around the same time under Section 26 of the Act which enabled the President to advise the place of Principal bench of the High Court and the Chief Justice of the said High Court to tell, if important, extra place or places of sitting of the said High Court with the endorsement of the Governor. Indeed, generally, the said proposals of the Commission are of no outcome as there is nothing on record openly to demonstrate that the Government at any point acknowledged the said report.
Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court.
The retiring age of Chief Justice is 62 years and Justice Dilip Babasaheb Bhosale is the present Chief Justice of the Court and following is the list of Chief Justices till date: –
Sl. No. Chief Justices Tenure 1. Walter Morgan (judge) 1866-1871 2. Robert Stuart 1871-1884 3. William Comer Petheram 1884-1886 4. John Edge 1886-1898 5. Louis Addin Kershaw 1898 6. Arthur Strachey 1898-1901 7. John Stanley 1901-1911 8. Henry Richards 1911-1919 9. Edward Grimwood Mears 1919-1932 10. Shah Muhammad Sulaiman 1932-1937 11. John Gibb Thom 1937-1941 12. Iqbal Ahmad 1941-1946 13. Kamala Kanta Verma 1946-1947 14. Bidhu Bhushan Malik 1947-1955 15. O.H. Mootham 1955-1961 16. Manulal Chunilal Desai 1961-1966 17. Vashishtha Bhargava 25/2/1966-7/8/1966 18. Nasirullah Beg 1966-1967 19. Vidyadhar Govind Oak 1967-1971 20. Shashi Kanta Verma 1971-1973 21. Dhatri Saran Mathur 1973-1974 22. Kunwar Bahadur Asthana 1974-1977 23. D. M. Chandrashekhar 1977-1978 24. Satish Chandra 1978-1983 25. Mahesh Narain Shukla 1983-1985 26. Hriday Nath Seth 1986 27. Kalmanje Jagannatha Shetty 1986-1987 28. Dwarka Nath Jha 1987 29. Amitav Banerji 1987-1988 30. Brahma Nath Katju 1988-1989 31. B. P. Jeevan Reddy 1990-1991 32. Manoj Kumar Mukherjee 1991-1993 33. S. S. Sodhi 1994-1995 34. A. Lakshman Rao 1995-1996 35. D. P. Mohapatra 1996-1998 36. N. K. Mitra 1999-2000 37. Shyamal Kumar Sen 8/5/2000-24/11/2002 38. Tarun Chatterjee 31/1/2003-26/8/2004 39. Ajoy Nath Ray 11/1/2005-26/1/2007 40. Hemant Laxman Gokhale 7/3/2007-8/3/2009 41. Chandramauli Kumar Prasad 20/3/2009-7/2/2010 42. Ferdino Rebello 26/6/2010-30/7/2011 43. Syed Rafat Alam 4/8/2011-8/8/2012 44. Shiva Kirti Singh 17/10/2012-18/9/2013 45. Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud 31/10/2013-12/5/2016
Reporting and citation
The Allahabad High Court Judicature provides with private journals that report Allahabad High Court Judgements such as: –
Allahabad Criminal Cases
Allahabad Law Journal
Allahabad Daily Judgements
Allahabad Civil Journal
Allahabad Weekly Cases
Allahabad Rent Cases
Revenue Decisions
U.P. Local Bodies and Education Cases
Lucknow Civil Decisions (LCD)
Judicial Interpretation on Crimes (JIC)
Landmark decisions of the Allahabad High Court
There are plenty of cases lying under the Allahabad High Court, that are resolved or are waiting to get resolved but what had earned the court a great fame is its judicial participation in those cases which has resulted in shaping the Indian Legal System and obviously their unforgettable judgments made by the eminent jury. The court till date has delivered a number of judgments that kept the powerful ruling class in check and has played an important role in establishing the rule of law in India post-independence. Some of those are pen-down below:-
The Indira Verdict– Under this, the former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was convicted by a single-judge bench of Justice Jagmohan Lal Sinha of the Allahabad High Court on 12 June 1975. Facts state that Indira Gandhi won the 1971 parliamentary election from Raebareli defeating Rajnarayan, a socialist leader. She was challenged by him on the grounds of violation of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and electoral malpractices and was even found guilty. The court in her judgment prohibited her from contesting elections for six years and also excluded her of all electoral posts.
The Babri Judgement– Under the following, the Allahabad High Court ruled that Ram Lalla, the Nirmohi Akhara, and the Waqf Board will be the joint-title holder of the Ayodhya disputed land over ‘Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi’ suit and thus, the land will be divided into three settlements. This judgment was given after six years of filing suit by a special full bench of the court. The decision made was to distribute two-thirds of the disputed land to Hindu claimants, one-third to the Sunni Muslim Waqf Board. Also by the majority of 2-1, the court claimed that birthplace of Lord Ram was right beneath the central dome of the destroyed mosque.
The ban on ‘Caste Rallies’- The Allahabad High Court judgment over banning of caste rallies with immediate effect issuing notices to the Centre, Uttar Pradesh Government, in July 2013 was a prominent decision taken for refining politics. A bench of Justices Uma Nath Singh and Mahendra Dayal put brakes on such rallies in the most populated state of the nation via the pronouncement on a PIL lodged for the ban on rallies that target the caste of the common folk for gaining maximum votes during elections.
Kids to study only in ‘Government Schools’– Though the Indian Government Schools provide ninety percent (90%) children’s’ populace with the necessities required, still face the neglected situations. Looking at such, the Allahabad High Court in August 2015, gave a tremendous decision over the education of the children of all Government officials. The judgment was to send the children of all the Government authorities only to Government schools for getting educated. This was to ensure that these schools run in a good condition and the responsibility to keep a record and check of this was awarded to the Chief Secretary of Uttar Pradesh.
Judgment on the Triple Talaq– Of all the judgments till date, ‘Triple Talaq’ is the most controversial. At present, this atrocity has disturbed the judicial conscience and is lying pending in the apex court. However, the decision given by a single-judge bench of Justice Suneet Kumar in December 2017, is the most remarkable one. The Allahabad High Court considered the act of Triple Talaq to be cruel and unconstitutional. It impedes and drags India from being a nation and ruins the rights of Muslim wives. The court stated that no personal law can be above the Constitution and thus, has banned it.
Controversies
Being the nation’s largest high court, the Allahabad High Court has always been in the limelight due to various controversies regarding its judicature and the working of its law counselors. Some of the most recent controversial matters are discussed below:-
A list of 33 senior lawyers prescribed by the Allahabad high court collegium for the judgeship in the nation’s biggest high court has stirred a discussion with no less than 33% of them purportedly identified with sitting and resigned judges of the Supreme Court and the Allahabad HC. A portion of the recommended names incorporates the brother-in-law of a sitting SC judge, a first cousin of another SC judge other than children and nephews of a few previous judges of the apex court and the Allahabad HC. Altogether, no less than 10 advocates in the list of 33 are said to be identified with previous or sitting judges, other than a senior supporter who is allegedly the law partner of the wife of a senior politician in Delhi. The law ministry received several complaints from the Allahabad and Lucknow bar against the proposals and has asked the Intelligence Bureau (IB) for a record verification on every one of these legal advisors. It is likewise checking if the HC collegium has given sufficient opportunity to candidates from the SC/ST, OBC and minority networks, other than ladies. In the three arrangements of in excess of 83 recommendations made by the Allahabad HC since 2015, not very many had a place with OBC/SC/ST, ladies or the minority community.
The Supreme Court had issued a notice on 4 May’18 in an appeal filed by the Allahabad High Court against its own judgment dealing with the question of superintendence of the High Court over family courts. The High Court was represented by Advocates Jagjit Singh Chhabra and Yashvardhan while the matter was heard acknowledged by a Bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice R Banumathi, which issued a notice to the respondent, Uttar Pradesh Judicial Services Association.
Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra on 31 January’18 recommended the impeachment of Justice Shri Narayan Shukla, the eighth senior-most judge of the Allahabad High Court, following an adverse report about him by an in-house panel set up by the CJI. The Supreme Court noted how Justice Shukla, on September 4, even made some corrections to the September 1 order. When the impeachment motion is moved in Parliament, an investigation is conducted. If the findings of guilt are confirmed, the impeachment motion changes to removing of the judge through votes of the majority. However, the CJI has set the process in motion with a letter to the Prime Minister for the impeachment of the judge. The trigger was a scathing report of a misconduct by an internal probe into a medical college admission scam by the committee led by Madras High Court Chief Justice Indira Banerjee.
The Supreme Court on 22 October’18 upheld its controversial remarks that something was “rotten” in the Allahabad High Court where the “uncle judges syndrome” was rampant and needed cleansing. On 26 November’18, the remarks were made in a 12-page order while making the insinuation that several judges of the high court suffer from ‘uncle judge’ syndrome, which refers to judges passing favorable orders for parties represented by lawyers known to them. This remark was made because of the rejection of the arguments of senior counsel P.P Rao that even a clarification that some are excellent and good judges would still cause suspicion on the integrity of the judges. All this was done under the bench of justices Markandey Katju and Gyan Sudha Mishra while dismissing the Allahabad High Court’s application for expunging of the remarks.
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‘Mowgli girl’ may not have been raised by monkeys: Experts.
They call her “girl Mowgli” of UP (Uttar Pradesh), and it is now believed that monkeys may not have brought her up. In January, eight years old abandoned girl was found in a wildlife sanctuary in Katarniyaghat. She appeared in underwear with a wounded body and matted hairs while being spotted by patrols.
However, her behavior was not humanly, and she communicated like monkeys, ate food like animals, and used her hands for walking (just like animals). She instantly got the name of girl Mowgli” due to her unnatural behavior.
On Friday, Gyan Prakash Singh, the divisional forest officer, said that it is highly unlikely that a girl managed to escape hundreds of security cameras, and even no staff member noticed her for years. It was evident that she was just dropped here as the patrol team got to her.
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On January 25, she was taken to District hospital Bahraich by the rescuers, where she is having medical treatment in an isolation ward. KK Verma, the Paediatrician, is highly doubtful that monkeys raised this feral girl.
He stated that her parents might have left her in the forest because of her psychological conditions, and shortly after that, she was spotted by the police team. Also, it is an absurd proposition that monkeys raised her. According to doctors, the girl needs psychiatric assessment and treatment.
The rescue team's head constable Sarbajeet Singh narrated that girl was found near an outpost in the Khapada forest. There were no signs of monkeys around her, and initially, she refused to come with us, but the hunger and cold changed her mind.
She has been named as Van Durga, and she has become a center of attention for people as they are curious to see her. However, she is afraid of human company and avoids them at any cost.
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Since the first day, it has been very difficult for Renu Devi (sanitation worker) and M Bhalla (matron) to make her follow the instructions. Her diet mostly consists of chapattis and fruits, and any offer of biscuits by visitors is not rejected by the girl.
Renu stated that she is not taking any medicine now as her wounds have been healed. She mumbles to show signs of hunger, and when she is thirsty, she often throws the glass on the floor. She has now started adopting human ways as she could not differentiate between human waste and food in the early days. Also, she uses gestures while asking for food. She can also use the toilet now, said Renu.
DK Singh, the Chief medical superintendent, believes that Durga followed or copied monkeys during her stay in the jungle. She noticed how they eat or scream, and she adapted accordingly.
Experts believe that the girl needs intelligence, communication, and behavioral tests to properly assess her mental condition and any kind of torture or trauma she may have experienced.
King George’s Medical University's assistant professor, Pooja Mahour, said that engaging the girl with her female age fellows will be very helpful for her. If there is a case of torture, she must be evaluated for any psychological trauma.
For further psychiatric assessment and treatment as per the order of the juvenile court, the girl is scheduled to travel to Lucknow on Saturday.
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Amitabh Bachchan, who is currently undergoing COVID-19 treatment at Nanavati Hospital lashed out at the trolls spreading negativity.
Father Amitabh Bachchan and son Abhishek Bachchan are currently admitted to Nanavati Hospital after being tested COVID-positive have been updating their social media feed, either with their health updates or sometimes just thanking everyone for praying for their speedy recovery. But the duo are also forced to face trolls on social media who are not backing down from spreading negativity surrounding the entire crisis the family is currently facing. Amitabh lashed out at the trolls spreading negativity. Taking to his Twitter account, the actor wrote, "Jeebh par lagi chot jaldi theek ho jaati hain, par jeeb se lagi chot jaldi theek nahi hoti (A hurt tongue can be cured but not the hurt caused by a bitter tongue). This was followed by another tweet, in which the veteran actor wrote, "The pride of gentlemen is not diminished by the word of the wicked. The preciousness of a gem covered with dust is never destroyed."
T 3612 - वचनैरसतां महीयसो न खलु व्येति गुरुत्वमुद्धतैः । किमपैति रजोभिरौर्वरैरवकीर्णस्य मणेर्महार्घता ।। (शिशुपालवधम्,१६.२७) दुर्जनों के वचन से सज्जनों का गौरव कम नहीं होता। पृथ्वी की धूलि से ढके हुए रत्न की बहुमूल्यता कभी नष्ट नहीं होती ।
— Amitabh Bachchan (@SrBachchan) August 1, 2020
Before this, father Amitabh too had reacted sharply to trolls in an open letter he wrote from the COVID-19 ward in a Mumbai hospital. He penned the note to anonymous trolls who have been wishing his death due to the novel coronavirus. "they write to tell me... 'I hope you die with this Covid". "Hey Mr Anonymous... you do not even write your Father's name,... because you do not know who Fathered you... there are only two things that can happen... either I shall die or either I shall live. If I die you won't get to write your diatribe anymore, by weathering your remark on a celebrity name... pity." He added: "The reason for your writing to be noticed was, because you took a swipe at Amitabh Bachchan... that shall no longer exist... !! If by God's grace I live and survive you shall have to be 'weathering' the 'swipe' storm, not just from me, but on a very conservative level, from 90+ million followers." "I have yet to tell them to... but if I survive I shall... and let me tell you they are a force incensed... they traverse the entire World... from the West to the East from the North to the South ... and they are not just the Ef of this page... that extended family shall in the flash of an eye become 'extermination family'!! All I shall say to them is... 'thok do saalon ko'." A few days, Abhishek had also responded to a troll tried to throw nasty jibes at the actor. "Your father admitted in hospital... Ab kiske bharose baith ke khaoge? (who will feed you now)," the troll asked. The actor gave a befitting reply to the social media user. Abhishek, with his typically subtle wit, tweeted back, "Philhaal toh let let ke kha rahe hai dono ek saath hospital mein (For now, we are both lying down and eating together in hospital)."
T 3612 - "जीभ पर लगी चोट जल्दी ठीक हो जाती है लेकिन जीभ से लगी चोट कभी ठीक नहीं होती..!!" ~ Ef am
— Amitabh Bachchan (@SrBachchan) August 1, 2020
Soon after, the user responded to the actor and said, "Get well soon sir... Har kisi ki kismat me let ke khana kaha..." The actor also replied to the tweet and wished for their healthy life. Abhishek wrote, "I pray that you are never in a situation like ours and that you remain safe and healthy. Thank you for your wishes, ma'am." Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and daughter Aaradhya too had tested positive. The mother-daughter duo was under home quarantine for a while before being admitted to the same hospital. On Monday, both of them were discharged after testing negative. Bachchan's well-wishers have organised prayers in various parts of the country including Madhya Pradesh's Ujjain, and Uttar Pradesh's Varanasi and Lucknow for the fast recovery of the 'Shahenshah' of Bollywood. Fans even performed 'yagya' in Asansol for his recovery.
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Private lab in UP wrongly diagnoses 6 as COVID-19 patients
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Private lab in UP wrongly diagnoses 6 as COVID-19 patients
Lucknow, May 27 A private testing laboratory that gave a false report of six people testing corona positive in Meerut district of Uttar Pradesh, is likely to lose its licence.
Meerut, District Magistrate Anil Dhingra has already recommended cancellation of the licence of the lab, which has its head office in Gurugram and has sample collection centres in Meerut by the name of Modern Lab and Diagnostic Centre.
Dhingra said, “There was a discrepancy in the laboratory reports of the Modern Lab for COVID-19 cases. The matter is being investigated and whosoever will be found guilty will not be granted, strict action will be taken against the responsible. A recommendation has been sent to the government for cancellation of the license of this lab. A detailed report has been asked from CMO as well.”
On May 21, eight samples were sent to this lab from Meerut and all were found positive for COVID-19.
However, during re-testing the samples of the same persons at the microbiology department of the Meerut Medical College on May 24, six out of the eight were found to be negative. Following this, those who tested negative were shifted to a different ward. Health officials have sought strict action against the private lab for wrongly indicating that six people from the city had tested positive.
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Kanika Kapoor: I pestered the authorities for three days to get myself tested. Now I am being treated like a criminal! - Times of India
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Kanika Kapoor: I pestered the authorities for three days to get myself tested. Now I am being treated like a criminal! - Times of India
Singer Kanika Kapoor, who has been getting a lot of flak ever since she tested positive for the novel coronavirus for not disclosing her illness to people and attending social gatherings, spoke exclusively to us to clear the air. “I want to tell people that I’m not the irresponsible person I’m being made to look like,” says Kanika, who, as of now, is at the Isolation Corona Ward at the Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences (SGPGIMS), Lucknow.
The singer says that she reached India late night on March 9 on an Air India flight, and was duly screened at the Mumbai airport for the virus’ symptoms. “There are these silly rumours that I hid in the washroom to skip screening. Tell me, how is it possible for a person to skip screening at immigration while coming on an international flight? I was properly screened at the Mumbai airport and I stayed in the city for a day. But since everything was closed and no work was happening (because of the industry lockdown due to the coronavirus spread), my parents suggested I come home. So I reached Lucknow on March 11 by the morning flight. And one can check, that at that time there was no advisory issued by the government on anyone travelling from abroad to be under self-quarantine. So how can one expect me to do it, especially when I had been screened and had no health issues till I left Mumbai? In fact, I developed the symptoms only four days ago,” Kanika explains. She agrees that she did attend social gatherings and meet people, but until then, she wasn’t aware she may be infected with the virus. “I came to Lucknow and I met people. In fact, I’ve told the health department I’ll give them a list of people I’ve been in contact with. Apart from those I met in the last few days, I’m concerned about my nani, who’s 98, and lives in Kanpur. She really wanted to meet me, so I went to Kanpur for a day to be with her.”
Kanika refutes rumours of her having hosted a party in Lucknow, calling them false news. She tells us, “I never hosted a party. I attended a small birthday bash, which Vasundhara Raje ji has also tweeted about. There were several politicians there, including Dushyant Singh, but it wasn’t as big a gathering as it is being made out. It was a small one where I was a guest, not the hostess. For this, too, I’ve given the health officials names of all those who were at the party.”
Kanika further adds that she was the one who insisted the health officials in Lucknow to take her samples for checking. “I called my friend, who heads a local hospital to, get my blood samples checked for the virus. He suggested that I approach the state health authorities for it. When I called the helpline numbers, after hearing out my symptoms, they said it doesn’t seem like the coronavirus, and it might just be the seasonal flu. But I kept insisting, and it was only after I pestered them that the CMO sent people to take my samples. I was the one who pestered the authorities, who I felt were taking things lightly. It took them three days to send someone to collect my sample and test it. From Monday till then, I had confined myself to my room. The moment I felt sick, I called up the authorities. So tell me, who’s been lax?”
Having been admitted to SGPGIMS, Kanika says the treatment meted out to her is appalling. “I’ve been here since 11 am and all I’ve been given is a small bottle of water to drink. I’ve been asking these people to give me something to eat but I’ve only been given two small bananas and an orange that had flies on it. I am so hungry, I haven’t even taken the medicine that I was supposed to till now. I have fever, I’ve informed them, but no one has attended to me. The food I brought with me has been taken away. I can’t even eat anything that’s given to me as I am allergic to some foods. I am hungry, thirsty and I feel miserable here.”
Adding to the way she’s being treated at the hospital, Kanika rues, “When I asked the doctor attending to me to have the room cleaned, he said to me that this was not a five star hotel where I should expect that kind of treatment. He said that the authorities are going to file an FIR against me for withholding information and not disclosing my illness. These are the kind of threats being given to me.”
Kanika alleges that she has been given a paper blanket to keep warm and the room she’s staying in is quite dirty. “It has mosquitoes and is full of dust. I am being ill-treated here and it feels like I’m in jail. They are behaving as if I am a criminal for no fault of mine.”
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