logo
Youth Congress workers stage protest before house of environmentalist

Youth Congress workers stage protest before house of environmentalist

The Hindu2 days ago
The construction curbs on the Neryamangalam-Valara stretch of the Kochi-Dhanushkodi National Highway (NH85), connecting Munnar hill station to Ernakulam, have emerged as a political issue in the district, following a recent High Court order regarding the road construction.
The High Court on Friday issued an order restricting the widening works on the 14.5 km stretch, which is at the intersection of the NH, on a petition filed by an Idukki-based environmentalist, M.N. Jayachandran.
After the court order, protests erupted in the district. Various political parties and farmers' groups alleged that Mr. Jayachandran was trying to block development activities with the support of the Forest department.
Youth Congress workers staged a protest in front of the house of Mr. Jayachandran. According to Congress leaders, the Youth Congress workers put up a blockade in front of his house at Thodupuzha on Sunday at 10 a.m. The protesters locked the gate of the house. The Youth Congress's former State secretary, M.A. Ansary, inaugurated the protest and said that if Mr. Jayachandran continues the anti-people interventions, the people will not allow him to leave the house. After the protest, the police arrived at the location and unlocked the gate.
The members of Coexistence Collective, Kerala, a collective of environmentally conscious and concerned groups across Kerala, demanded action against the Youth Congress workers.
'Mr. Jayachandran has merely exercised his constitutional duty and civic responsibility by approaching the Court to prevent illegal activities in forest areas. Targeting such a petitioner is equivalent to attacking the rule of law, judicial independence, and environmental protection itself,' they said.
Rasak Chooravelil, general convener of the Idukki Land Freedom Movement (ILFM), said that the interventions of Mr. Jayachandran resulted in blocking the development activities in the hilly district.
'An affidavit submitted by K.R. Jyothi Lal, Additional Chief Secretary to the Forest and Wildlife Department, stated that the area is a reserve forest, and it resulted in a construction curb order from the government. After the High Court in May 2024 ordered that the Forest Department should not interfere with the construction works of the road, the State government decided not to file an appeal against the order. We suspect that the Forest Department is behind the petition filed by Mr. Jayachandran,' he said.
Meanwhile, Mr. Jayachandran said that he will not oppose the construction activities of the highway. 'The construction activities and tree felling were conducted on the reserve forest area without permission from the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF), and I raised the issue before the court,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats report says US ceding global influence to China
Democrats report says US ceding global influence to China

Time of India

time24 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Democrats report says US ceding global influence to China

US- China flags China is increasing its diplomatic reach as the Trump administration pares back America's international presence, Democrats from the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee said in a report Monday. The report was released as the administration makes deep cuts to the state department, including beginning Friday to fire more than 1,350 US-based employees. The administration has also cut billions of dollars in foreign aid. The 91-page report listed ways, from broadcasting to health programmes, that researchers said China is expanding its influence. "China is pursuing a clear vision for the international order while the Trump administration seeks to diminish America's engagement globally. " WH spokeswoman Anna Kelly said: "Under President Trump, America is strong again, and his foreign policy is effective because of his willingness to look anyone in the eye to get better deals for American people." Reuters & NYT

Nvidia says it will resume sales of 'H20' AI chips to China
Nvidia says it will resume sales of 'H20' AI chips to China

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Nvidia says it will resume sales of 'H20' AI chips to China

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills US tech giant Nvidia said on Tuesday it will resume sales of its H20 artificial intelligence chips to China, after Washington pledged to remove licensing curbs that had put a stop to California-based firm produces some of the world's most advanced semiconductors but is not allowed to ship its most cutting-edge chips to China owing to concerns that Beijing could use them to boost its military developed the H20 -- a less powerful version of its AI processing units -- specifically for export to China, although that plan hit the skids when the Trump administration firmed up export licence requirements in company said in a statement on Tuesday that it was "filing applications to sell the Nvidia H20 GPU again"."The US government has assured Nvidia that licences will be granted, and Nvidia hopes to start deliveries soon," the statement CEO Jensen Huang said in a video published by Chinese state broadcaster CCTV on Tuesday "the US government has approved for us (to file) licences to start shipping H20s, and so we will start to sell H20s to the Chinese market"."I'm looking forward to shipping H20s very soon, and so I'm very happy with that very, very good news," Huang, wearing his trademark black leather jacket, told a group of said in a separate report that Huang would attend a major supply chain gathering on Taiwan-born executive "will be present at the opening ceremony of the 3rd China International Supply Chain Expo on July 16 and will participate in related activities", the broadcaster cited the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, an official body controlled by Beijing's commerce will be Huang's third trip to China this year, according to is a crucial market for Nvidia but in recent years the US export squeeze has left it battling tougher competition from local players such as homegrown champion has decried Washington's curbs as unfair and designed to hinder its an electrical engineer, told Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng on a visit to Beijing in April that he "looked favourably upon the potential of the Chinese economy", according to state news agency said he was "willing to continue to plough deeply into the Chinese market and play a positive role in promoting US-China trade cooperation ", Xinhua tightened US export curbs have come as China's economy wavers, with domestic consumers reluctant to spend and a prolonged property sector crisis weighing on Xi Jinping has called for China to become more self-reliant as uncertainty in the external environment Financial Times reported in May that Nvidia was planning to build a research and development centre in Shanghai. Neither Nvidia nor the city's authorities confirmed the project to AFP at the economy grew 5.2% in the second quarter of the year, official data showed on Tuesday, after analysts predicted strong exports despite trade war pressures.

Non-veg milk a red line in India-US trade talks. Here's why
Non-veg milk a red line in India-US trade talks. Here's why

India Today

time2 hours ago

  • India Today

Non-veg milk a red line in India-US trade talks. Here's why

As top negotiators hold intensive talks on the India-US trade deal, agriculture and dairy are emerging as the sectors where the two sides are looking for a common ground. Apart from securing farmers' interests, cultural sensibilities over "non-veg milk" is a big issue even as Washington DC pushes New Delhi to open its dairy market. However, India is insisting on strict certification that ensures imported milk comes from cows not fed animal-based products like meat or blood. Rooted in religious and cultural sensitivities, India sees this as the "non-negotiable red line" to protect its India-US trade talks, aimed at securing an agreement and boosting bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030, have hit a roadblock. New Delhi's dairy sector, along with agriculture, remains the big red the heart of the impasse is India's insistence on strict certification, ensuring that imported dairy products come from cows that are not fed animal-based products like meat or blood. "Imagine eating butter made from the milk of a cow that was fed meat and blood from another cow. India may never allow that," Ajay Srivastava of Global Trade Research Institute (GTRI), a New Delhi-based think tank, told news agency just for consumption, diary products also form an essential part of everyday religious rituals in Washington DC has termed India's insistence on not budging on dairy and agriculture as an "unnecessary trade barrier". India, the world's top milk producer, stands firm to shield its millions of small dairy DRAWS RED LINE ON DAIRY IN TRADE TALKS WITH USAccording to top government sources, India has firmly refused to concede on dairy. The sector feeds more than 1.4 billion people, and employs over 80 million, primarily smallholder farmers."There is no question of conceding on dairy. That's a red line," the senior government source told India Today TV, earlier in position is a result of the cultural and dietary preferences of Indians, particularly among its large vegetarian population, who view the consumption of dairy from cows fed animal by-products as incompatible with religious of now, India imposes high tariffs: 30% on cheese, 40% on butter, and 60% on milk powder, rendering imports from even low-cost producers like New Zealand and Australia unviable, reported The Indian India's Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying mandates veterinary certification for food imports. This ensures that the products, including the ones of dairy, are from animals that are not fed bovine-derived feed, a requirement the US has criticised at the WTO. That makes dairy not just an economic sector but a lifeline, India's largest agricultural commodity, contributing 2.5–3% to its GDP. OPENING DAIRY TO US MAY COST INDIA RS 1.03 LAKH CRORE ANNUALLY: SBIThe US, a major dairy exporter with $8.22 billion in global exports last year, is pushing for greater market access to India, which is the world's largest milk producer and dairy sector, now valued at $16.8 billion, accounts for nearly a quarter of global milk production (239 million metric tons) and supports the livelihoods of millions, says a report in The Business the market to US dairy imports could flood it with cheaper products, potentially driving down domestic prices and threatening the economic stability of small-scale farmers."The government needs to make sure we're not hit by cheap imports from other countries. If that happens, the whole industry will suffer, and so will farmers like us," Mahesh Sakunde, a farmer from Maharashtra told news agency analysis by the SBI has estimated an annual loss of Rs 1.03 lakh crore if India opens its dairy sector to US imports, reported news agency dairy industry, integral to its rural economy, contributes approximately 2.5-3% to the national Gross Value Added (GVA), amounting to Rs 7.5-9 lakh crore. The GVA is the total value of goods and services produced in an economy after subtracting the cost of inputs and raw SAYS NO TO MILK FROM MEAT-FED COWSWhile the economy and employment may take a major hit for milk and dairy producers in India, concerns for consumers of dairy products are equally crucial if import curbs are to be are dietary, cultural and religious sensitivities that complicate the issue of dairy imports from the US, especially when it comes to items derived from animals not raised according to the norms of several Indian products, including milk and ghee (clarified butter), are used in everyday religious rituals in India. Tied deeply to India's palate and tradition, milk yields several derivatives widely used across households, like, curd, ghee, butter, paneer, buttermilk, khoya, cream, and condensed milk.(AFP Image) These concerns are deeply rooted and can't be dismissed as mere trade hurdles, as they touch upon dietary restrictions, traditional practices, and are still allowed to eat feed that can include parts of pigs, fish, chicken, horses, even cats or dogs... And cattle can continue to consume pig and horse blood for protein, as well as tallow, a hard fat from rendered cattle parts, as a fattening source," noted a report in American daily, The Seattle Times, headlined, 'Cattle feed is often a sum of animal parts'.In some cases, even poultry litter, a mixture of bedding material, spilled feed, feathers, and chicken droppings, is used as a low-cost feed firmly maintains its ban on importing dairy products from cows fed animal-derived feed, according to the USRT's National Trade Estimate (NTE) Report, reported cow-to-cow feeding, pertaining to some body parts, is banned to prevent mad cow disease, according to the US' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).India's resistance to opening its dairy sector to US imports, amid trade talks, is not just economic. Opening up the sector to cheap dairy imports from the US also defies the cultural, religious, and dietary convictions of a majority of Indians. As both nations push for a broader deal, this divide over "non-veg milk" is proving to be one of the toughest to bridge.- EndsMust Watch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store