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Saturday 06, February 2021 [alt_text]( The Evening Wrap Here are the biggest news stories of the day [alt_text]( Welcome to the Evening Wrap newsletter, your guide to the dayâs biggest stories with concise analysis from The Hindu. We hope you are staying safe. Farmersâ âchakka jamâ goes off peacefully The three-hour chakka jam or road blockade protest called by farm unions [went off smoothly]( today, despite some people being detained at a solidarity protest site within Delhi, as well as reports of detentions in Madhya Pradesh, Bangalore and Hyderabad. With the fears of chaos and violence looming in the background, security forces had stepped up deployment, and farm unions called off protests in U.P. and Uttarakhand. Members of different farmer outfits in parts of Punjab and Haryana on Saturday blocked several national and State highways and squatted on roads between 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. The protests, which saw the participation of the elderly, women and youth, were peaceful and no untoward incident was reported. Slogans were raised against the Centre, demanding the repeal of the laws. Sukhdev Singh, general secretary of Bharatiya Kisan Union (Ugrahan), one of the largest farmersâ outfit in Punjab, said that its members blocked roads in 13 districts. Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee (KMSC) general secretary Sarvan Singh Pandher said its members blocked roads at 57 places in Amritsar and Tarn Taran among other districts. In Rajasthan, farmers at many places including Ganganagar, Hanumangarh, Dholpur and Jhalawar in the State blocked the highways and main roads and held demonstrations, police said. The Ministry of Home Affairs ordered the suspension of Internet services at Singhu, Ghazipur and Tikri borders of Delhi till Saturday night, officials said. Apart from the three sites, Internet services will remain suspended in their adjoining areas too till 11:59 p.m. on February 6. The protests were held on a call from the Samyukt Kisan Morcha, a joint front of farmer unions, which had been agitating against the farm laws. SC judge hails PM as âpopular, vibrant and visionary leaderâ Supreme Court justice M R Shah on Saturday described Prime Minister Narendra Modi as âour most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leaderâ, PTI reported. The praise for the prime minister by Justice Shah came during a function to celebrate the diamond jubilee of the Gujarat High Court. âI am proud and privileged to participate in the function to celebrate the diamond jubilee of the Gujarat High Court and that too in the presence of our most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leader, prime minister Narendra Modi,â Shah said in his address. âOne of the essential features of the democratic republic established under the Indian Constitution is division of powers between Parliament, executive, and the judiciary,â the judge went on to say. He felt proud that the Gujarat High Court has never crossed the âLakshman Rekhaâ (boundaries of power/code of conduct) and always delivered justice, he said. Last year, Justice Arun Mishraâs fulsome praise for Prime Minister Modi at an event had raised eyebrows. Justice Mishra, now a retired SC judge, had described Modi as âinternationally acclaimed visionaryâ. In his address on Saturday, Justice Shah also said the Gujarat high court was his âkarmbhoomiâ where he practiced as a lawyer for 22 years and served as a judge for 14 years. Modi released a commemorative stamp at the function. He also hailed the countryâs judiciary, saying it has performed its duty well in safeguarding peopleâs rights and upholding personal liberty. Consensual sex between minors a âlegal grey areaâ says Bombay HC, granting bail to teen convicted of rape The Bombay High Court recently [granted bail to a 19-year-old youth and suspended his 10-year sentence]( for raping his minor cousin. In its order, the court said, âIncidents of consensual sex between minors has been a grey area under the law as minorâs consent is not valid in the eyes of law under Protection of Children from Sexual Offence Act (POCSO)â. In September 2017, the minor was living in her paternal uncleâs house. She is reported to have told a friend that her cousin had touched her inappropriately and that her stomach hurts. The friend told their class teacher who inquired about the same from the victim, and she told the teacher about being sexually harassed by the male cousin and subjected to penetrative assault. The ordeal was then described to the school principal after which a FIR was registered against the boy under section 376 (2) (n) and 354 of the Indian Penal Code, along with sections 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the POCSO. After the trial he was sentenced to suffer 10 years rigorous imprisonment. [ ] However, Justice S.S. Shinde noted that, âIn the case at hand, facts are distinctive in the sense, victim is first cousin sister of the appellant. At the relevant time, she was a 15-year-old and appellant was 19. Both were students and living in one house. A fact cannot be overlooked that the victim had resiled [retracted] from her statement under Section 164 â recording of confessions and statements of the Code of the Criminal Procedure. Even her mother was unfriendly to prosecution. Opinions of doctor that victim was subjected to sexual assault was subject to Forensic Science Laboratory report was not obtained till the conclusion of the trialâ. The court suspended his sentence and recorded, âVictim said, her statement to the police and narrative in statement under Section 164 was at the instance of the class teacher. Therefore, in the proceedings, wherein suspension of sentence is sought, this Court cannot ignore the âevidence of victimâ and âher motherâ.â While granting bail to the youth, the Bench held, âI am conscious of the fact that the passing of POCSO has been significant and a progressive step in securing childrenâs rights and furthering the cause of protecting children against sexual abuse. The letter and spirit of the law, which defines a child as anyone less than 18 years of age, is to protect children from sexual abuse. I am also conscious of the fact that consensual sex between minors has been in a legal grey area because the consent given by minor is not considered to be a valid consent in eyes of law.â Todayâs times canât be exaggerated as Emergency: N. Ram The present times [should not be compared to the Emergency]( as there were still spaces where one could air strong opinions and fight repression, N. Ram, Director, The Hindu Publishing Group, said on Saturday. He was speaking in a webinar organised by Live Law on âCriminalising Journalism and Cinemaâ. Ram said uneven implementation of law, and the higher judiciary, on more than one occasion, has failed to protect press freedom. âThe recent arrests and filing of criminal cases against several journalists and also other creative persons, has exposed and widened the fault lines in our Constitution. We used to think we have pretty good protection, but actually we donât. There are many escape clauses in law which is aggravated by executive overreach and failure of the judiciary to adequately protect.â [N. Ram, Director, The Hindu Publishing Group. File]N. Ram, Director, The Hindu Publishing Group. File India, he stated, had regressed in terms of freedom of press. âThere was a time when, in terms of freedom of press, India was in an enviable position among the developing nations. But that was 40 years ago, we had just come out of the dark chapter of Emergency. Political scientist Robin Jeffrey, in a book dealing with the Indian language press, called it Indiaâs newspaper revolution. Today if I were to claim that we are in an enviable position, then I will be accused of spreading fake news,â he observed. âI wouldnât say that this is like an emergency,â he said. âThat would be a mistake. I have lived under Emergency, when there was total censorship, detention of journalists. Letâs not rush out to conclusions. There are still spaces where you can express vigorous opinion, strong condemnation of the acts of the executive, criticise the judiciary and so on,â he noted. After oils, FSSAI caps transfats in foods The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has amended its rules to put a cap on trans fatty acids (TFAs) in food products, just weeks after it tightened the norms for oils and fats. âFood products in which edible oils and fats are used as an ingredient shall not contain industrial trans fatty acids more than 2% by mass of the total oils/fats present in the product, on and from 01st January, 2022,â as per the revised regulations notified recently and made public on Friday. In December, it capped TFAs in oils and fats to 3% by 2021, and 2% by 2022 from the current levels of 5%. âThe two percent cap is considered to be elimination of trans fatty acids, which we will achieve by 2022. We are happy to say that we will be reaching this goal a year sooner than the WHO deadline. We have held eight meetings with industry stakeholders and they are onboard to implement the rules,â FSSAI CEO Arun Singhal told The Hindu. Trans fatty acids are present in baked, fried and processed foods as well as adulterated ghee, which becomes solid at room temperature. They are the most harmful form of fats as they clog arteries and cause hypertension, heart attacks, and other cardiovascular diseases. Covid Watch: Numbers and Developments The [number of reported coronavirus cases from India]( stood at 1,08,25,715 at the time of publishing this newsletter, with the death toll at 1,55,025. [
Artist Luke Jerram with his glass sculpture of the Oxford-AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine in Bristol, England on Friday, February 5, 2021. The sculpture, which is one million times larger than the actual vaccine nanoparticle, marks the ten millionth vaccination to be administered in the United Kingdom.
] Artist Luke Jerram with his glass sculpture of the Oxford-AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine in Bristol, England on Friday, February 5, 2021. The sculpture, which is one million times larger than the actual vaccine nanoparticle, marks the ten millionth vaccination to be administered in the United Kingdom. In Brief: More than 24 hours after the Supreme Court granted ad-interim bail to stand-up comic Munawar Faruqui and stayed the production warrant issued to him by a Uttar Pradesh court, it looks like he could spend another night in jail. Faruqui is in an Indore jail after being arrested on charges of hurting religious sentiments. Congress leader [P Chidambaram tweeted](, âWhy has Munawar Faruqui not been released from jail despite an order of interim bail granted by the Supreme Court yesterday morning? It is nearly 30 hours since the order was passed. Yet, the order is being undermined by the MP police and jail authorities. Is all this happening with or without the knowledge of the MP Chief Minister?â Evening Wrap will return tomorrow. Today's Top Picks [alt_text]( [âDrishyam 2â trailer: Mohanlal enters Georgekuttyâs emotional saga again]( [alt_text]( [Twitter, the IT Act, and the blocking saga explained | In Focus Podcast]( [alt_text]( [In Pictures | Aero India 2021, a spectacle of military might]( [alt_text]( [App for the elderly to connect for emotional support]( You are receiving this email because you are a user of [thehindu.com]( If you do not wish to receive any such emails, [unsubscribe here.](mailto:rm-0bfe51vvbf2f90kauhrxfebysa8hku2@newsalert.thehindu.com?subject=Unsubscribe&body=You will be unsubscribed from our mailing list.) To ensure you continue to receive emails from The Hindu in your inbox, please add newsletters.th@newsalert.thehindu.com to your contact. If you can't see the mailer, please [click here.]( Group Sites [The Hindu]( | [à®à®¨à¯à®¤à¯ தமிழ௠திà®à¯]( | [Business Line]( | [BL on Campus]( | [Sportstar]( | [Frontline](
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