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Punjab appoints nodal officers for tax exemption on imported COVID relief items

Punjab appoints nodal officers for tax exemption on imported COVID relief items Updated: Updated: May 07, 2021 00:15 IST State allocates ₹10 cr. to departments of health, education, social security, women, among others, for helping the needy through involvement of NGOs Share Article AAA State allocates ₹10 cr. to departments of health, education, social security, women, among others, for helping the needy through involvement of NGOs Punjab government has appointed nodal officers to facilitate individuals and organisations in getting tax exemption on any COVID relief to be imported into the State from abroad. “In the ongoing fight against COVID, the Punjab government has appointed two nodal officers to facilitate the individuals-organisations in getting tax exemption on any COVID relief to be imported into the State from abroad,” said an official statement.

Custom Duty And Tax Will Not Be Imposed On Covid Relief Coming From Abroad In Punjab - पंजाब: अब कोरोना के खिलाफ विदेशी मदद पर कस्टम ड्यूटी व टैक्स नहीं, नोडल अधिकारी भी नियुक्त

Custom Duty And Tax Will Not Be Imposed On Covid Relief Coming From Abroad In Punjab - पंजाब: अब कोरोना के खिलाफ विदेशी मदद पर कस्टम ड्यूटी व टैक्स नहीं, नोडल अधिकारी भी नियुक्त
amarujala.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from amarujala.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Where is the Covid aid that came to Delhi from the US and the UK? — Quartz India

May 5, 2021 In the past five days, 25 flights loaded with 300 tonnes of emergency Covid-19 relief supplies have landed in India’s capital from around the world. The supplies include 5,500 oxygen concentrators, 3,200 oxygen cylinders and 1,36,000 remdesivir injections, said a spokesperson of the Delhi International Airport Limited. The emergency aid could save lives. But it seems not to have reached even those who are gasping for oxygen a few kilometers away. “As far as I know, we have not received anything so far,” said Dr Nutan Mundeja, director general of health services, Delhi government. Delhi, which has nearly 100,000 active Covid-19 cases and 20,000 patients in hospital, is facing a crippling shortage of oxygen. On May 1, 12 patients, including a doctor, died in Batra Hospital after it ran out of the life saving gas.

COVID: Why is India facing oxygen shortage? | Asia| An in-depth look at news from across the continent | DW

India s hospitals plead for oxygen supplies Another 12 people died on Saturday in the capital, New Delhi, after a hospital ran out of oxygen, reports said. Several hospitals sent out desperate appeals for oxygen on social media on Sunday night, with deliveries arriving only in the nick of time. One children s clinic in Delhi raised the alarm on Twitter over a shortage of oxygen that has reportedly left around 25 to 30 newborns and children at risk. There s no centralized coordination Oxygen therapy is crucial for severe COVID patients with hypoxemia when oxygen levels in the blood are too low. Experts say India is producing enough oxygen, at just over 7,000 tons a day. Most is for industrial use but can be diverted for medical purposes. The Indian government has now directed most of the country s supply of industrially produced oxygen toward the health care system.

Emergency Covid-19 relief is flooding Delhi airport – but where is it going next?

A consignment of 1.25 lakh vials remdesivir arrives from the US. | @MEAIndia In the past five days, 25 flights loaded with 300 tonnes of emergency Covid-19 relief supplies have landed in India’s capital from around the world. The supplies include 5,500 oxygen concentrators, 3,200 oxygen cylinders and 1,36,000 remdesivir injections, said a spokesperson of the Delhi International Airport Limited. The emergency aid could save lives. But it seems not to have reached even those who are gasping for oxygen a few km away. “As far as I know, we have not received anything so far,” said Dr Nutan Mundeja, Director General of Health Services, Delhi government.

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