Today Current Affairs In Hindi
News of the day – 10 July 2019
- July 10, 2019
- Posted by: Shivam
- Category: NEWS Worth To Read
News of the day – 10 July 2019
India-New Zealand semi-final pushed to reserve day after rain interruption
With less than four overs to go in what was a New Zealand batting innings that never really did get going, rain halted play first temporarily for three hours, and then permanently for the day. This, then, ensured that the umpires had no other option than to push the first semi-final of this World Cup into its reserve day on Wednesday, where the match will resume (hopefully, considering there is rain forecast for Wednesday as well) exactly where it left off; Bhuvneshwar Kumar bowling the 47th over to Ross Taylor.
Taylor’s unbeaten 85-ball 67 was a large reason why New Zealand found themselves on an overnight score of 211 for five in 46.1 overs, what with Taylor unable to push on at any stage even as his captain Kane Williamson was already anchoring the innings when their partnership began in the 19th over.
Rain, then, may just have been what the Kiwis needed to turn their fortunes on Tuesday. Had the officials slipped in a 20-over second inning—the minimum quota needed in an innings in the semis—in their effort to complete the match on the day itself, India would have needed 148 runs to win. That’s a required run rate of 7.4 runs an over, on a pitch which would’ve, in all likelihood, been spiced up under the covers against the dangerous Trent Boult and Lockie Ferguson; and all this after Jasprit Bumrah & Co had restricted them to run rate of 4.56 when play was called off.
But the same rain clouds that made Williamson’s side watch out for silver linings, snatched away their hopes in the eleventh hour, drizzling down over Old Trafford just when the umpires were inspecting the field to usher in a 20-over chase. That, as they say, was that. Given just how well the Indian bowlers were bowling all day long, New Zealand’s final target for India on Day 2 will be no more than 240 runs, which Virat Kohli’s side should be able to hunt down without too much trouble, weather permitting.
According to the forecast, there is more rain to follow on the reserve day as well, but the first big spell on Wednesday is expected at about the same time as it first began to wet the outfield on Tuesday—2pm Manchester time. But by then, if there are no other interruptions earlier, India should’ve already boarded their bus to London and the World Cup final.
Both India openers, Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul, are coming into this match on the back of hundreds (Sharma, of course, is coming in on the back of three successive tons and five over all in this tournament) and will do well not to start the innings like New Zealand’s openers did. After winning the toss and choosing to bat (a decision Kohli said he would’ve taken too), Williamson may have felt let down when Martin Guptill and Henry Nicholls took 17 balls to score the team’s first run.
Guptill was dismissed soon after, edging a short and fierce Bumrah delivery to Kohli at second slip, who took the catch with his fingers pointing up and even managed to injure one of those digits. But not even a possible injury was going to stop India’s halt. At 1 for 1, in walked Williamson, a man who has scored over 30 per cent of New Zealand’s runs in this World Cup. And once again, he was going to show how it was done.
In the seventh over, Williamson cut Bhuvneshwar through point and ran a double. It took NZ’s score to double digits: 10 for one in 6.2 overs. He soon found his groove, and a beautiful straight drive down the ground off Bhuvneshwar for four even brought appreciation from Kohli. But Williamson was never going to take the game away from the Indians, so when a badly mistiming Nicholls was out in the 19th over, the few Kiwi fans in the stands would’ve sighed with relief and expected the incoming batsman to get going immediately.
Taylor never did, nurdling singles and even blocking deliveries that should have been dispatched for boundaries (although there were very few of the latter bowled by the Indians). So, very soon, New Zealand had two anchors batting in the middle. And the anchors did as anchors do, stalling the movement out of the vessel and knocking the wind out of its sails.
News of the day – 10 July 2019
After wage code, labour safety on Cabinet table
The Union Cabinet could consider clearing the Occupational, Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, also known as the OSH Code, when it meets on Wednesday, Hindustan Times learns. It’s a clear indication that the Narendra Modi government, in its second term, is ready to push ahead with labour reforms.
If cleared by the Cabinet, this will be the second major labour reform approved by the government. It cleared the Wage Code last week that contained “provisions of minimum wages and payment of wages to cover employees in both the organised and unorganised sectors”, unlike the current Minimum Wages Act and the Payment of Wages Act that apply only to employees engaged in certain kinds of jobs.
Government officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) administration is very keen that both bills be introduced and passed in the ongoing Budget Session of Parliament.
The OSH code will cover 400 million workers in the organised and the unorganised sectors and encompass provisions from around 13 labour laws, including the Factories Act, the Mines Act, the Dock Workers Act, the Working Journalists and other Newspaper Employees Act, and the Cine Workers and Cinema Theatre Workers Act.
India’s labour laws are complex and cumbersome and the government’s plan is to simplify them into four codes: wages; OSH; industrial relations; and social security. For instance, according to government officials, the OSH Code will ensure that provisions pertaining to 622 sections in 13 laws will now be simplified and covered by just 134 sections.
A draft of the OSH Code that was circulated by the government last year said that it will now be mandatory for employers not just to provide a safe working environment, but also to have annual medical examinations for all employees. The code also says that women working in mines should be provided creches for children under the age of six.
The code also suggests showers or bathing places and locker rooms with separate ones for women mine workers. The code empowers every employee to demand information.
“This government increased the maternity leave for women. This code will help increase the number of women in the workforce,’’ said a person directly involved in the framing of the code who asked not to be identified.
“The biggest difficulty with our labour laws is that the multiplicity of labour laws has been a nightmare for employers and employees. As our economy evolved and the labour force grew, the government kept adding new laws without considering that contradictions might arise with older laws. So 2014-19 saw a repeal of over 10 laws seen as redundant. The remaining 35 or so have been rationalised into four codes. What this attempts to do is fantastic but the devil lies in the details,’’ said Santosh Mehrotra, a professor of economics at Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University.
Source – Hindustan Times
News of the day – 10 July 2019