City
Epaper

Can't scarp existing policy: SC on plea seeking door-to-door Covid vaccination

By IANS | Updated: September 8, 2021 15:40 IST

New Delhi, Sep 8 The Supreme Court on Wednesday said door-to-door COVID-19 vaccination is not feasible and it ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 8 The Supreme Court on Wednesday said door-to-door COVID-19 vaccination is not feasible and it cannot pass a general direction to scrap the existing vaccination policy.

A bench headed by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and comprising justices Vikram Nath and Hima Kohli asked the petitioner Youth Bar Association, to present its suggestions before a competent authority.

The plea had urged the top court to pass a direction allowing door-to-door COVID-19 jab for the disabled and people belonging to weaker sections of society. The bench responded that the vaccination drive is already in progress and over 60 per cent of the population has been administered the first dose.

The bench told the petitioner's counsel, "With one brush you want an order for the entire country. The vaccination drive is already in progress and over 60 per cent of the population has been administered the first dose".

The bench further added that it is matter of governance and it cannot scrap the existing policy. It said in Ladakh the situation is different from Kerala and in Uttar Pradesh the situation is different from any other state. The bench said: "In urban areas, situation is different from rural areas. There are different kinds of problems in every state in this vast country..."

The petitioner's counsel submitted that health ministry should be asked to consider the representation in a time bound manner. The bench replied that it understands that the ministry officials are under pressure during these testing times. "They have to look for oxygen supplies across the country, besides looking into other aspects", it added.

The bench told the petitioner's counsel that vaccination programme is already underway, and it is monitoring the situation under suo motu proceedings.

The bench further emphasized that in the backdrop of the diversity in the country, it is not feasible to pass general directions. "Any directions passed should not impinge upon the existing vaccination policy of the government," it said.

The plea sought direction to the Centre and all state governments to begin door to door COVID vaccination of less privileged, disabled, weaker sections of society. The petition contended that these people find it difficult to register on the CoWIN portal.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Youth bar associationThe Supreme CourtHima kohliVikram nath
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalPatanjali Misleading Ad Case: 'Is Your Apology As Big As Your Advertisements?' Supreme Court Asks Ramdev, Aide Acharya Balkrishna

NationalSC Constitution Bench defers hearing after AG says govt has set up expert committee on arbitration

NationalSC Constitution Bench defers hearing after AG says govt has set up expert committee on arbitration

InternationalAfghanistan: Four people publicly flogged by Taliban

National2020 Delhi riots: SC adjourns Umar Khalid's bail plea hearing for July 24

International Realted Stories

InternationalTaiwan detects 7 sorties of Chinese aircraft near its territory

InternationalTaiwan: MAC flags essay contest tied to CCP-affiliated publisher for possible legal breach

InternationalArab Parliament, AL condemn Israeli airstrikes near Syria's Presidential Palace

InternationalSecond Emirati-Iraqi Business Forum discusses enhancing trade partnerships

InternationalEuropean Commission welcomes Ukraine-US fossil fuel deal that doesn't hinder EU accession