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View: Arbitration in India not only needs to be institutionalised, but also should be assuring and affordable

View: Arbitration in India not only needs to be institutionalised, but also should be assuring and affordable SECTIONS View: Arbitration in India not only needs to be institutionalised, but also should be assuring and affordableET CONTRIBUTORS Last Updated: May 10, 2021, 10:51 AM IST Share Synopsis The Supreme Court took note of this malaise in the 2009 ‘Union of India vs Singh Builders Syndicate’ case by observing that ‘…the cost of arbitration becomes very high in many cases where retired judge/s are arbitrators…’ The ‘fourth schedule’ of ACA was introduced to prescribe model fee structure and capping the maximum fee slab for varying claim amounts.

Covid: High Court Seeks Response Of Centre, Rajasthan Government On Vaccine Prices

The petition in court alleges mismanagement of the COVID-19 situation in Rajasthan. (File) Jodhpur: The Rajasthan High Court on Friday sought the response of the Centre and the state government on a petition challenging the different prices of anti-coronavirus vaccines and alleging mismanagement of the COVID-19 situation. The petition also stated that the different prices announced for procurement of vaccines for the central government, states and private hospitals violated the fundamental and constitutional rights of citizens. Covishield, which is being manufactured by the Pune-based Serum Institute of India, is priced at Rs 150 a dose for the Centre, Rs 400 a dose for state governments and Rs 600 a dose for private hospitals.

A tragedy of errors: 10 reasons behind India s catastrophic Covid crisis

ISSUE DATE: May 17, 2021 UPDATED: May 7, 2021 23:36 IST Staff at the Ghazipur crematorium in Delhi cart in fresh logs as funeral pyres burn all around them (Rajk Raj/ Getty Images) The second wave of Covid-19 is still cresting but by now we have all been touched by its terrors, and all too many of us by its sorrows and the dismal realisation that we are in the midst of a recurring nightmare, a tragedy foretold. Here, we expose the sorry tale of neglect, apathy and failure of our political leadership. The institutional collapse and bureaucratic cowardice that facilitated super-spreader religious festivals and the political carnival of an eight-phase election campaign even as the second wave of a pandemic was breaking. The narcissism that enabled our leadership to ignore the warnings of expert groups. Their inability to form bipartisan alliances between the Centre and the states in the middle of a national calamity. Now that some of the loudest voices in the land have gone quiet, t

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