VVIP Culture Versus Corona Rules, And A Grand Funeral For A Bovine

Some things can only happen in India

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Some things can only happen in India

These rules were made for flouting

Rule-breaking, whatever its pitfalls, is decidedly fun. Lawmaker D. V. Sadananda Gowda—Union minister of chemicals and fertilizers—set out to experience some of this adrenaline rush from rule-breaking for himself.

On 25 May, Gowda flouted the rule of institutional quarantine, mandated by the Karnataka government for air-passengers coming to Bengaluru from states with a high prevalence of COVID-19. The minister had travelled from Delhi, which has all its districts under the red zone. Of course, the minster offered up his reasons: He is “in charge of pharma” and is a person “holding a responsible position”.

The ruling BJP government in Karnataka rushed to validate the minister’s feelings and his rule-breaking—they quickly issued an addendum to the state guidelines stating that Union and state minister and officers on duty are exempted from the mandated quarantine. The lesson: All men are born equal, but some—those sworn to elected office—are just more equal.

Source: BrutIndia, thenewsminute.com

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In the name of cricket

All the cricketing gods that be, know we, Indians love a game of cricket. And apparently, even social distancing norms cannot play spoilsport.

Recently the gentleman’s game was, well, being played by BJP Delhi unit chief MP Manoj Tiwari. A lush, privately-owned cricketing ground in Sonepat, Haryana, was used to service our star politician’s need for play—no masks were worn, and some light selfie-taking was the order of the day. Finding himself on a sticky wicket, Tiwari was quick to point towards a government notification which states that sport complexes were allowed to open during the fourth phase of the lockdown.

Sonepat’s borders, of course, remain sealed to the r...

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