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తలాక్ చట్టం చెల్లుబాటుపై విచారణకు సుప్రీం ఓకే
ముమ్మారు తలాక్ చట్టానికి వ్యతిరేకంగా దాఖలైన పిటిషన్లను పరిగణనలోకి తీసుకుంది సుప్రీం కోర్టు. తలాక్ చెప్పి విడాకులు ఇవ్వడాన్ని శిక్షార్హమైన నేరంగా పరిగణించే నిబంధన చెల్లుతుందో లేదో పరిశీలించేందుకు అంగీకరించింది. కేంద్రాన్ని వివరణ కోరుతూ నోటీసులు జారీ చేసింది.
తలాక్ చట్టం చెల్లుబాటుపై విచారణకు సుప్రీం ఓకే
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Published : Aug 23, 2019, 11:52 AM IST
| Updated : Sep 27, 2019, 11:32 PM IST
తలాక్ చట్టం చెల్లుబాటుపై విచారణకు సుప్రీం ఓకే మహిళల రక్షణ కోసం.. కేంద్రం తీసుకొచ్చిన ముమ్మారు తలాక్ చట్టానికి వ్యతిరేకంగా దాఖలైన పిటిషన్లను సుప్రీంకోర్టు విచారణకు స్వీకరించింది. ముస్లిం మహిళలకు మూడుసార్లు తలాక్ చెబితే.. గరిష్ఠంగా మూడేళ్ల జైలు శిక్షను విధించే నిబంధన చెల్లుబాటుపై పరిశీలించేందుకు కోర్టు అంగీకరించింది.
తలాక్ చట్టంలో శిక్షార్హమైన నేరం, జైలు శిక్ష వంటి నిబంధనలను పరిశీలించాల్సిందిగా అభ్యర్థించారు పిటిషనర్ తరఫు సీనియర్ న్యాయవాది సల్మాన్ ఖుర్షీద్. ఈ వ్యాజ్యంపై కేంద్రం వివరణ కోరుతూ నోటీసులు జారీ చేసింది జస్టిస్ ఎన్వీ రమణ, జస్టిస్ అజయ్ రస్తోగీ నేతృత్వంలోని ధర్మాసనం.
కేంద్రం రాజ్యాంగ నిబంధనల్ని ఉల్లంఘించి ముస్లిం మహిళల( వివాహ హక్కుల పరిరక్షణ) చట్టాన్ని రూపొందించిందని సుప్రీం కోర్టులో ఇప్పటికే పలు పిటిషన్లు దాఖలయ్యాయి.
ఇదీ చూడండి: ప్రధాని పర్యటన : యూఏఈలో రూపే కార్డు సేవలు
తలాక్ చట్టం చెల్లుబాటుపై విచారణకు సుప్రీం ఓకే మహిళల రక్షణ కోసం.. కేంద్రం తీసుకొచ్చిన ముమ్మారు తలాక్ చట్టానికి వ్యతిరేకంగా దాఖలైన పిటిషన్లను సుప్రీంకోర్టు విచారణకు స్వీకరించింది. ముస్లిం మహిళలకు మూడుసార్లు తలాక్ చెబితే.. గరిష్ఠంగా మూడేళ్ల జైలు శిక్షను విధించే నిబంధన చెల్లుబాటుపై పరిశీలించేందుకు కోర్టు అంగీకరించింది.
తలాక్ చట్టంలో శిక్షార్హమైన నేరం, జైలు శిక్ష వంటి నిబంధనలను పరిశీలించాల్సిందిగా అభ్యర్థించారు పిటిషనర్ తరఫు సీనియర్ న్యాయవాది సల్మాన్ ఖుర్షీద్. ఈ వ్యాజ్యంపై కేంద్రం వివరణ కోరుతూ నోటీసులు జారీ చేసింది జస్టిస్ ఎన్వీ రమణ, జస్టిస్ అజయ్ రస్తోగీ నేతృత్వంలోని ధర్మాసనం.
కేంద్రం రాజ్యాంగ నిబంధనల్ని ఉల్లంఘించి ముస్లిం మహిళల( వివాహ హక్కుల పరిరక్షణ) చట్టాన్ని రూపొందించిందని సుప్రీం కోర్టులో ఇప్పటికే పలు పిటిషన్లు దాఖలయ్యాయి.
ఇదీ చూడండి: ప్రధాని పర్యటన : యూఏఈలో రూపే కార్డు సేవలు
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:-AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Malawi (Exact location unknown) - April 2019 (Exact date unknown)
1. Various of a girl receiving medical treatment
++NO CUTAWAYS AVAILABLE++
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Geneva- 22 August 2019
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Pedro Alonso, the U.N health agency's global malaria director:
"Malaria eradication is hard, a highly ambitious, but highly desirable public health goal. It will not be achieved unless we can secure three key elements. The first one, is that we need to have real political leadership and commitment that translates into the financing that is required to ensure universal health coverage for all the population at risk. Without UHC,(universal health care) without adequate health care, people centred properly financed systems we will not achieve eradication. The second thing we need to have in place is a more strategic better use of data. Surveillance systems that allow us to respond in a timely and efficient way to where the problem is. And the third thing we need is new tools. With the tools we have today, the tools meaning the vector control mechanisms or tools to fight the vector, of the mosquito that transmits malaria, with the type of drugs that we have today, with the type of vaccines that we have today we can go very far. We can achieve major health gains, but we will always fall short of eradicating this disease."
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Malawi (Exact location unknown) - April 2019 (Exact date unknown)
3. Various of nurse with vaccination
4. Close of vaccine vials
5. Close of child receiving vaccine
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Geneva- 22 August 2019
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Pedro Alonso, the U.N health agency's global malaria director:
"We cannot set a date at this point. Therefore, we cannot establish a price tag to that effort. We cannot develop a formal plan, but it is squarely and central to our WTO vision of we want a malaria free world and what we need to do is walk that path, and at this point walking that path means achieving the goals and the targets that the World Health Assembly has adopted of reducing malaria by at least 90 percent by the year 2030. That's what we need to do. While we put together the three other key elements and develop the new tools. And that would potentially place us in a point where eradication could be efficient."
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Malawi (Exact location unknown) - April 2019 (Exact date unknown)
7. Close of vaccination record book being filed in
8. Women and child waiting for vaccinations
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Geneva- 22 August 2019
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Pedro Alonso, the U.N health agency's global malaria director:
"Specifically in sub-Saharan Africa we have witnessed the stalling in our progress in the fight against malaria over the last couple of years or three year. In some cases we are witnessing a resurgence of malaria. We're therefore not on track to achieve our agreed upon goals. And this has led the World Health Organization together with Rollback Malaria Partnership and other major stakeholders, putting countries, the endemic countries at the centre in accelerating our response, what we call the high burden high impact approach. In many ways, a way of actually starting to establish that political leadership, that financial leadership, the health systems in place, and the use of data that would hopefully allow us to accelerate and reach our our morbidity and mortality reduction goals."
World Health Organization - AP Clients Only
Honduras(Exact location unknown) - August 2012 (Exact date unknown)
10. People looking at mosquitoes
11. Close of mosquito in container
12. People capturing mosquitoes
13. Various women putting up mosquitoes nets
14. Child on bed on bed under mosquitoes nets
STORYLINE:
The World Health Organization says it's theoretically possible to wipe out malaria, but probably not with the flawed vaccine and other control methods being used at the moment.
Dr. Pedro Alonso, the U.N. health agency's global malaria director, said WHO is "unequivocably in favor" of eradication, but that major questions about its feasibility remain. In a press briefing on Thursday, Alonso acknowledged that "with the tools we have today, it is most unlikely eradication will be achieved."
Alonso was presenting the results of a WHO-commissioned report evaluating if eradicating malaria should be pursued. He said the experts concluded lingering uncertainties meant they were unable to formulate a clear strategy and thus, couldn't propose a definitive timeline or cost estimate for eradication.
WHO has long grappled with the idea of erasing malaria from the planet. An eradication campaign was first attempted in 1955 before being abandoned more than a dozen years later. For decades, health officials were chastened from even discussing eradication - until the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation threw its considerable resources behind the idea.
Smallpox is the only human disease to ever have been eradicated. In 1988, WHO and partners began a global campaign that aimed to wipe out polio by 2000. Despite numerous effective vaccines and billions of invested dollars, efforts have stalled in recent years and officials have repeatedly missed eradication targets.
Although several African countries began immunizing children against malaria in national programs this year, the shot only protects about one third of children who get it. The parasitic disease kills about 435,000 people every year, mostly children in Africa.
"An effective vaccine is something we desperately need if we're ever going to get malaria under control and we just don't have it," said Alister Lister, dean of biological sciences at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.
Lister also raised concerns about whether malaria programs would be able to raise the billions needed given other competing eradication campaigns, like those for polio, guinea worm and lymphatic filariasis.
"Should we really be pushing for malaria or should we concentrate on getting some of those other diseases out of the way first?" he asked.
Other experts agreed that eradicating malaria in the coming years seems aspirational.
"It's a long game and there will be many bumps on the road," said Sian Clarke, co-director of the malaria center at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Still, Clarke said that eradication might only be achieved if there is a sense of urgency, given how malaria spreads; the parasitic disease is transmitted to people by mosquitoes.
"The longer it takes, the more opportunity there is for the parasite to evolve," she said. "There will be a lot of pressure on the parasite to evolve a mechanism of survival, so this is something that if it's to be done, should be done relatively quickly."
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Last Updated : Sep 27, 2019, 11:32 PM IST