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‘The Simpsons’ Will No Longer Have White Actors Voice Non-White Characters

June 26, 2020 by deadline.com Leave a Comment

Fox’s venerable animated series The Simpsons has released a statement on casting for non-white characters that will affect the voices of such popular Black characters on the show as Carlton Carlson and Dr. Julius M. Hibbert.

“Moving forward, The Simpsons will no longer have white actors voice non-white characters,” the series said Friday.

The Simpsons ‘ new policy follows an announcement b y Family Guy veteran Mike Henry earlier on Friday that he will no longer voice the black Cleveland Brown character on Fox’s long-running animated hit. Earlier this week, two white actors, Jenny Slate of Netflix’s animated series Big Mouth, and Kristen Bell of Central Park on Apple TV+, said that they will stop voicing the mixed-race characters in those shows.

Additionally, several live-action comedies, including Scrubs and 30 Rock , have pulled episodes featuring blackface from their streaming platforms, and amid a nation dealing with controversial depictions of race on TV and film.

On The Simpsons , Hank Azaria has been the voice of the black cartoon character Carlton Carlson. He also was known for voicing Apu, a character which has long been criticized for portraying a racist depiction of an Indian immigrant. Azaria announced in January that he would no longer voice the character.

Harry Shearer voices the black character Dr. Julius M. Hibbert, one of several characters he voices, including Mr. Burns, Waylon Smithers, Principal Skinner, Ned Flanders, Reverend Lovejoy and Kent Brockman.

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CBIC exempts non-Indian citizens, PSUs from Aadhaar authentication for GST registration

February 24, 2021 by cfo.economictimes.indiatimes.com Leave a Comment

The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs ( CBIC ) has clarified that Aadhaar authentication for goods and service tax ( GST ) registration will not be required for a person who is not an Indian citizen.

Aadhaar authentication for GST registration will not be needed for a government establishment, local authority, public sector undertaking or any specialized agency of the United Nations Organization or for consulates or embassies of foreign countries, the Board said in a notification on Wednesday.

“The government, on the recommendations of the Council and in supersession of the notification dated the March 23, 2020, hereby notifies that the provisions of sub-section (6B) or sub-section (6C) of section 25 of the CGST Act shall not apply to a person who is not a citizen of India,” the CBIC said.

Experts said that the move will provide much needed clarity and relaxation for entities and individuals.

“This notification provides the much needed relief especially to MNCs having foreign directors, who are not required to obtain Aadhaar number and would not have been able to comply with the requirement,” said Abhishek Jain, tax partner at EY.

The exemption will be applicable on a department or establishment of the central government or state government, a local authority or a statutory body or a public sector undertaking or a person applying for registration under the provisions of sub-section (9) of section 25 of the said Act, the notification added.

“This will come as a relief to various low-risk business enterprises backed by the Indian government, foreign government and United Nations,” said Rajat Mohan, senior partner at AMRG Associates.

The government had introduced significant changes to the Central GST rules related to GST registration and availing input tax credits last year, in order to check fake invoicing and tax leakage.

It tightened provisions for GST registration, making in-person verification mandatory for all applicants and 1% GST payment for those risky dealers and fly-by-night operators that show unusually large turnovers and have no financial credibility.

CBIC had enabled biometric-based Aadhaar authentication for applicants and granting of GST registration within seven days instead of three days earlier. For those not opting for Aadhaar-based authentication, GST registration will be given after 30 days.

Authentication will be done at one of the facilitation centres that will be set up on the lines of Passport Seva Kendras or Aadhaar Seva Kendras.

As per the new rules from January 1, 2021 use of input tax credit was restricted to 99% of output tax where the value of taxable supply other than exempt supply and zero-rated supply in a month exceeds Rs 50 lakh.

The rules did not apply to government departments, a local authority or a statutory body and in cases where income tax of more than Rs 1 lakh has been paid or the registered person has received a refund amount of more than Rs 1 lakh in the preceding financial year on account of unutilised input tax credit.

Filed Under: Uncategorized MNCs, gst, foreign business enterprise, CBIC, Aadhaar authentication, exempt nil and non gst inward supplies, exempt nil-rated and non-gst inward supplies, exempt nil and non gst supplies, exempted(other than nil rated/non-gst supply), non citizen estate tax exemption 2017, non citizen estate tax exemption 2018, non citizen estate tax exemption 2016, non citizen health insurance exemption, non citizen health care exemption, non core amendment in gst registration

‘Communal riots never happen in a political vacuum’

April 22, 2015 by www.rediff.com Leave a Comment

‘Communalism and communal riots happened in India only during and due to colonialism. Pre-colonial India didn’t have this problem of communal conflicts and religious strife.’

‘So far as the destruction of Nalanda University by Bakhtiyar Khilji is concerned, there is no direct evidence of it. We don’t have even archaeological evidence testifying Khilji’s destruction,’ Mohammad Sajjad tells Syed Firdaus Ashraf/ Rediff.com .

D id Bakhtiyar Khilji destroy Nalanda University?

How many Hindus converted to Islam in Bihar? What was the Muslim thinking in Bihar during Partition?

If you need answers to all these questions — Mohammad Sajjad has published Muslim Politics in Bihar and Contesting Colonialism and Separatism: Muslims of Muzzafarpur since 1857 .

An assistant professor at the Centre of Advanced Study in History, Aligarh Muslim University, he spoke to Syed Firdaus Ashraf about issues concerning Muslims pre and post Partition.

What made you write Muslim Politics in Bihar ?

We did not have better known academic works on the Muslims of the 20th century (pre and post Independence) Bihar, particularly its political history.

Moreover, pertaining to the historiography of India’s Partition in 1947, most of the works concentrated on Punjab, Bengal, and UP. On the issue of Partition, the Muslim League’s communal territorial separatism has been explored whereas Muslim resistance to the politics of Partition remains a largely untold story.

Bihari Muslims displayed a fierce anti-colonial struggle through the Wahabbi movement during the better part of the 19th century. Subsequently, the sub-regional nationalism of Biharis emerged against the hegemony of the Bengalis on Bihar, in the forefront of which were the urban educated elites of Muslims and Kayastha Hindus.

By 1930s, they were largely replaced by the rural elites of Rajputs and Bhumihars.

Compared to UP, Bengal and other parts of India, this sub-regional nationalism of Bihar helped towards relatively lesser communal polarisation along Hindu-Muslim lines. This is how Bihar’s regional political personality emerged in the colonial era.

The Muslim clergy, asserting against colonialism as well as against the communal territorial separatism of the Muslim League, was more pronounced in Bihar.

Lesser degree of communal propensity of Bihar Muslims and their resistance to the politics of Partition provided them with greater degree of confidence in post independence political participation for empowerment.

All these, and many other such aspects, tell quite new stories about Bihar which stands distinctly apart from what we have known about the rest of India and its Muslim segment.

The Bihar story asks us to revisit many of our long held stereotypical views about Muslims in the colonial and post Independence days.

You have not mentioned the destruction of Nalanda University by Bakhtiyar Khilji and how the Muslim population came and settled down in Bihar in large numbers. Why? Also can you give some background about the origins of Bihari Muslims, where are they from or were they converts from Hinduism?

My period of study in my first book, Muslim Politics in Bihar , is ( set in the ) 20th century and early 21st century. By way of story-telling, to establish continuity, I had to go into the 19th century only in a cursory manner.

Hence it was just beyond the scope of the book to have gone into those details pertaining to the 12th, 13th century. My specialisation is only in modern Indian history.

In my second book on Muzaffarpur, Contesting Colonialism and Separatism , which deals with the later 19th to early 21st century, I have given some details of how Islam came to the region of Tirhut in north Bihar.

In this book, the relevant section clearly narrates that most Muslims were local converts, and conversions had to do mostly with the syncretic lifestyles of the sufis.

So far as the destruction of Nalanda University by Bakhtiyar Khilji ( early 13th century ) is concerned, there is no direct evidence of it.

One is not sure if Khilji really did so. We don’t have even archaeological evidence testifying Khilji’s destruction. The university had already declined by the early 11th century as testified by Al Biruni’s Kitab-ul-Hind ( 1030 AD ).

Minhaj Siraj’s Tabaqat-e-Nasiri and deriving from it Jadunath Sarkar’s History of Bengal , ( volume 2, pages 3-4 ) suggests that Bakhtiyar Khilji had attacked only the Hisar-e-Bihar ( fortress of Bihar ) which is modern day Biharsharif, many kilometres away from the specific site of the Nalanda university.

Even the 17th, 18th century Tibetan accounts emphasise more on Hindu (Tirthika)-Buddhist hostilities rather than on Muslim-Buddhist hostilities; and we know for sure that much earlier than the Turks, the Shunga dynasty had launched a significant assault against Buddhism.

It is quite possible that such myths about the Muslim rulers/invaders of medieval India came in circulation only in the 19th century when the colonial administrators periodised its history along communal lines whereas the British period was not characterised as Christian period.

Were the Shahabad riots of 1917 the first Hindu-Muslim riots of Bihar and of India? Can you tell us what was the reason that resulted in Hindu mobs getting incited over cow-slaughter during Bakri-Eid?

Communal riots never happen in a political vacuum. That way, the Shahabad Riots (1917) were no exception. Communalism and communal riots happened in India only during and due to colonialism.

Contrary to what C A Bayly would say in one of his essays, pre-colonial India didn’t have this problem of communal conflicts and religious strife.

The anti-cow slaughter riots became recurrent in the 1880s, and it was in this decade when the Congress was founded as an organised body to contest colonialism.

There is ample evidence of landed elites and mercantile classes, the collaborators of colonialism, funding such hate-mongering agencies. Their nexus/connivance with the colonial administrators is also evident.

British Christians also consumed beef, but there was hardly any pronounced Hindu agitation against them. This in itself tells much more about the colonial politics on the issue.

Post 1857, this is significant to note that, it was only after the Champaran Satyagraha ( 1917 ) that united Hindu-Muslim assertion against the colonial State was made in Bihar linked with the ongoing national scale anti-colonial struggle, and such divisive politics of religious strife also became stronger and entrenched only around that very time.

During 1888-1917 there were many riots across north India, and in the 1920s, the Shudhi-Sangathan and Tabligh-Tanzim created unprecedented communal polarisation, and precisely, this coincides with the popular phase of the Indian national movement.

Post the 1857 rebellion, when did the first Hindu-Muslim riot occur in India? What was the reason and what were the lasting consequences?

If you are referring to my second book ( Muzaffarpur, Contesting Colonialism and Separatism ), then my exploration says that it was in 1895. In the village of Mathurapur near Sheohar, that first recorded Hindu-Muslim violence took place around the issue of cow slaughter.

Earlier in 1892-1893, as explored by Anand Yang, a major riot broke out in Basantpur (Siwan), where the social and economic network of weekly haats (market) were used as an agency of communication to plan and execute the riots.

You mention that Gandhi insisted on preventing cow slaughter, but also advised the Hindus to pay the Muslims twice the value of their losses, with the help of Hindus from all over India if necessary. What is the source of the information?

The source of information is the biographical account of Mazharul Haque ( 1866-1930 ) written by Qeyamuddin Ahmad and Jata Shankar Jha which was published by the publication division of the Government of India in 1970.

The authors have cited primary evidences. The multi volume Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi have also got such evidences, the reference to which somehow stand omitted in the footnote. It may have happened at the final stage of publication.

How far is it true that before the Partition of India, the Muslims of Bihar feared that if cow slaughter was banned then in the future a Hindu majority Mohammad Sajjad government would also ban the calling of Azan in mosques?

This kind of fear-mongering could have been generated by forces like the Muslim League, but such issues would have got credence only after 1938 when the Congress ministry was not adequately forthcoming in re-assuring and taking necessary administrative steps against the hate-mongers.

Image: Mohammad Sajjad teaches at the Aligarh Muslim University.

Moreover, there are ample evidences of provincial and district units of the Congress having majoritarian communal orientations and it often overlapped with the Hindu Mahasabha kind of organisations.

The colonial State played its own roles. However this should also be underlined that at the top level of the Congress no resolution could ever be passed which could create any such misgivings among the minorities.

What was the reason that the Muslim League in December 1919 gave a call to give up cow sacrifice on Baqri-Eid?

This needs to be understood and emphasised that the Bihar Muslim League clearly had a distinct character from that of the All India Muslim League because of the fact that the early leadership of the League, who were also with the Congress, had pluralistic convictions, and as said earlier, the political evolution of Muslims in Bihar had traversed a trajectory whereby inter-community cooperation and harmony was the hallmark.

They were very clear about the fact that without Hindu-Muslim unity, driving out the colonial masters was a difficult proposition. This is also testified by the fact that Bihar could hardly throw a leader of big stature for the Muslim League.

The few leaders of the Muslim League in Bihar, having hardly any significance beyond Bihar, like Syed Abdul Aziz ( 1885-1948 ), Syed Jafar Imam ( 1901-1979 ), Syed Badruddin Ahmad ( 1901-1983 ), were those who did not support the idea of migration in 1947.

In fact, by March-May 1947, the Bihar Muslim League, in its various meetings in Gaya, Patna, and Kishanganj adopted resolutions to provincial partitioning along religious lines, rather than endorsing the idea of the creation of a separate sovereign State.

And even that idea of provincial partitioning was in the face of rioting and bloodshed.

Why did the Moplah riots of Kerala affect Hindu-Muslim relations in Bihar? Bihar, after all, is hundreds of miles away from Kerala, but still the Moplah riots affected Bihar badly in 1921. Why?

After the Non-Cooperation-Khilafat Movement ( 1920-1922 ), communal polarisation increased in an unprecedented manner. It is difficult to ascertain that it was solely because of the communal riots of the Malabar coast (more informed researches reveal that it was more an agrarian tension than a religious strife).

The communal conflicts should rather be tried to be understood in terms of assertions for power-sharing. With the Act of 1919, and its previous incarnations, the scrambles for power-sharing increased manifold, and the colonial set up of identity-based representations, perpetuated through the tool of census along those lines, had already unleashed identity-based mobilisations which were the ways of being recognised for representations in the evolving structures and processes of power.

On page 108 of your book you mention that Rajendra Prasad, later India’s first President, was involved in the Shuddhi movement (bringing Muslims back into the Hindu fold). This seems an unbelievable assertion. Can you elaborate on this fact?

You are referring to my book, Muslim Politics in Bihar . Please also refer to my book, Contesting Colonialism and Separatism ( page 96 ). Dr Rajendra Prasad was among the founders of the Bihar Hindu Sabha ( founded in 1907 and revived in 1911 ), and at least till 1926, Rajendra Prasad was on the executive committee of the All India Hindu Mahasabha.

He was also the chairman of the reception committee of the Gaya session of the Hindu Mahasabha in 1923 where he had persuaded Madan Mohan Malaviya ( 1866-1946 ) to preside over the session.

In August 1923, at Benaras, the Hindu Mahasabha resolved to go for a Shuddhi programme and to raise squads for Hindu self-defence. Rajendra Prasad’s autobiography ( page 182 ) gives all these details.

What was the reason for Dr Rajendra Prasad not allowing Dr Syed Mahmud to become chief minister of Bihar in the provincial autonomy government?

It is rather puzzling that Rajendra Prasad does not elaborate much upon it. Maulana Azad, in his India Wins Freedom ( page 16-17 ) does express his indignation unambiguously at neglecting Syed Mahmud — the tallest one in terms of stature in the Bihar Congress, excepting Prasad himself who was evidently not interested in becoming Bihar premier — and in his stead propping up Shri Krishna Sinha ( 1887-1961 ), a Bhumihar, and Anugraha Narayan Sinha ( 1887-1957 ), a Rajput, who were then in the Central Assembly, and not in the provincial assembly.

Yet, quite interestingly, in fact misleadingly, Rajendra Prasad, in his autobiography ( page 438 ) rather records that Maulana Azad was quite satisfied with Prasad’s decision.

Main Image: Kadamdeen, a 70 year old who was displaced in the Muzaffarnagar riots last year. Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Reuters

Filed Under: Uncategorized Bihar, Muslim, Bakhtiyar Khilji, Dr Rajendra Prasad, Hindu Mahasabha, Government of India, Nalanda University, Maulana Azad, Bihari Muslims, Mohammad..., asean political security community, political communication, Political Security Community

Puducherry crisis deepens after two MLAs quit

February 22, 2021 by www.thehindu.com Leave a Comment

A legislator each from the Congress and the DMK resigned from their posts on Sunday, leaving the Narayanasamy-led Puducherry government grasping at straws ahead of Monday’s trust vote in the Assembly.

Shortly after K. Lakshminarayanan, Congress legislator representing Raj Bhavan and Parliamentary Secretary to the Chief Minister, submitted his resignation to Speaker V.P. Sivakolundhu at his residence, K. Venkatesan, representing Thattanchavady, became the first legislator from the ruling party’s ally, the DMK, to quit his post.

In total, six MLAs, including five from the Congress, have quit, while a legislator from the national party was disqualified earlier.

The resignations have brought down the House strength to 26, with the ruling combine — the Congress (9), the DMK (2) and an Independent — having only 12 legislators. The Speaker, from the Congress, can vote in a floor test only if there is a tie.

In the Opposition, the AINRC has seven legislators, the AIADMK four and the BJP three (all nominated MLAs).

‘No impact on floor test’

After tendering his resignation, Mr. Lakshminarayanan said his move would have no impact on the floor test, as the government had already been reduced to a minority. He said he resigned because he had not been given due importance in the ruling party.

He hinted that other parties had approached him, but he was yet to take a call.

In the space of a month, Ministers A. Namassivayam (who joined the BJP) and Malladi Krishna Rao and legislators Theepainthan, A. John Kumar and Lakshminarayanan quit their posts. Last year, the Congress suspended N. Dhanavelou for anti-party activities.

As a result of Sunday’s developments, the ruling dispensation’s position in the House has become all the more vulnerable. A defeat in the floor test is now a certainty, unless the votes of the three BJP nominated MLAs in a trust motion are disallowed on technical grounds, as is being demanded by the Congress.

The Chief Minister earlier claimed that the three nominated MLAs could not be considered as BJP members.

Though the three legislators — V. Saminathan, K.G. Shankar and S. Selvaganapathy — had earlier submitted a request to then Speaker V. Vaithilingam to recognise them as BJP members, no decision was taken on the matter. Following the death of Mr. Shankar, T. Vikraman was sworn in as a nominated MLA, and he, along with the other two legislators, was not recognised as a BJP member in the Assembly, Mr. Narayanasamy contended.

The Chief Minister said that for recognising a nominated MLA as a party member, he/she would have to sign several papers. But no papers were signed by the three. If a nominated member wanted to join a party, he/she should do so within six months of his/her appointment, he noted.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Puducherry crisis, Pondicherry Congress MLAs, AIADMK Pondicherry, Pondicherry floor test, AIADMK...

Australia: Flesh-eating ulcer spreads to Melbourne

February 24, 2021 by www.stuff.co.nz Leave a Comment

In Australia, a flesh-eating disease affecting parts of coastal Victoria has spread to inland Melbourne for the first time, with several cases reported in the suburbs of Essendon, Moonee Ponds and Brunswick West.

Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said on Tuesday that the risk of acquiring the ulcer in those areas was considered low, but “this is the first non-coastal area in Victoria to be recognised as a potential area of risk”.

“A genetic analysis of bacteria isolated from these people as part of a research project suggests a common source of infection in the area,” Professor Sutton said in a health advisory issued to medical practitioners and residents on Tuesday.

“Lesions typically present as a slowly developing painless nodule or papule which can initially be mistaken for an insect bite. They can progress to a destructive skin ulcer, which is known as Buruli ulcer or Bairnsdale ulcer.”

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Internationally renowned Buruli ulcer expert Paul Johnson said what was significant about the latest cases was that it appeared the bacterium had been acquired in the inner and north-western suburbs of Melbourne.

“People in places like West Brunswick and Moonee Ponds have had it before, but nobody has really thought that they actually got it there,” Professor Johnson said.

“It has always been thought they’ve got it down the beach like everybody else does, but this time we know that they did get it there. We are absolutely certain that there is a little bit of local transmission, not very much, but in those suburbs as mentioned by the Department of Human Services.”

It is not known how people become infected, although it’s increasingly thought mosquitoes play a role in transmission.

The bacteria had also been detected in the faeces of a local possum in Essendon, in Melbourne’s inner north, but the source had not yet been established.

“While humans go on holiday possums don’t, so we now know that [the bacterium] is now there beyond reasonable doubt,” Professor Johnson said.

“What is different this time, also, is that as well as having people who think they’ve got it locally, we’ve also identified a possum that had to be euthanised that had Buruli ulcer. We’ve been able to use sequencing to show that the human and the possum are linked.”

The disease is not transmissible from person to person, and there is no evidence of transmission between possums and humans, the Health Department said.

If left untreated, the ulcers can require surgery or lead to amputation in extreme cases.

Two cases were previously detected in residents in the city’s western suburbs, but when they were reported in late 2018 authorities said they were yet to establish whether they became infected while travelling into affected areas.

Ulcer cases had been concentrated on the Mornington and Bellarine peninsulas. Rye, Blairgowrie and Sorrento are among the highest risk areas, and the disease had also been found in concerning levels in places such as Ocean Grove, Barwon Heads, Frankston and Seaford.

At least 21 cases of the ulcer have been confirmed so far this year, compared to 12 for the same period last year. There were 218 cases of the disease recorded in Victoria in 2020.

In 2020, five cases of Buruli ulcers were reported in the Moonee Valley area, compared to eight in 2019 and 10 in 2018.

There remains some uncertainty about what causes the skin infection, but scientists believe mosquitoes and possums are likely spreaders of the bacteria, resulting in human infections.

Researchers are set to lay thousands of mosquito traps in Victoria’s coastal and bayside areas in an attempt to curb the spread of the ulcer, which has a long incubation period of up to nine months.

To protect against the ulcer, people are advised to avoid insect bites, wear gardening gloves and protective clothing and reduce mosquito breeding sites around houses. Cuts and abrasions should always be cleaned promptly following outdoor activities.

Doherty Institute microbiology professor Tim Stinear said genomic testing had been conducted on a possum handed in to wildlife carers in the Essendon area.

The tests confirmed the animal carried the bacteria. He said tests of possum faeces in the area had also shown evidence of the disease.

“When you have possums that carry the bacteria and more than one case in humans you have good evidence of local transmission,” he said.

Professor Stinear said it was worrying the disease was spreading to new areas but early diagnosis and antibiotics enabled the condition to be treated effectively.

Professor Johnson said while the new cases were of concern there was no need to panic.

All Skin lesions – red patches, ulcers or lumps – that don’t heal should be assessed by a doctor and tested for Buruli ulcer.

“The purpose of the health alert is to draw the attention of local doctors and the public to it, not to cause panic because it’s actually quite a slow moving disease,” he said.

“It’s not a massive increase in cases, it’s just a definite change in the epidemiology that we need to monitor closely.”

The Age

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