September 19, 2024

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Decide on reopening Anganwadi Centres outdoors containment zones earlier than Jan 31: SC to states, UTs

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THE SUPREME COURT on Wednesday requested states and Union Territories who haven’t but reopened Anganwadi Centres, which have been shut resulting from Covid-19 pandemic, to take a call to open these centres located outdoors containment zones on or earlier than January 31.
A bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, R Subhash Reddy and M R Shah famous that the Union Ministry for Women and Child Development had by its steerage word dated November 11, 2020 “permitted all the States and Union Territories to open Anganwadi Centres” and that it’s was now “the obligation of the States/Union Territories to take decision for opening” them.
Any choice for not opening the centres shall be taken solely after the State Disaster Management Authority directs so, it stated, including that “Anganwadi centres situated in the containment zone shall not be opened till the containment continues”.
The court docket stated that “it is for the State to secure health to its citizens as its primary duty” and that “no doubt, the government is rendering this obligation through various schemes, such as, opening of Aanganwadis, providing nutritious food through Aanganwadis, Mid-day Meal Scheme, etc., but in order to make it meaningful, it has to be within the reach of its people, as far as possible, and the government must supply the nutritious food in the real sense bearing in mind the provisions of National Food Security Act”.
The court docket stated that after the November 11 word, some states like Punjab and Rajasthan reopened their Aanganwadi centres, whereas Arunachal Pradesh determined to open in phases and Assam stated that it’s going to reopen when permitted by the Centre, going by the impression that the central authorities has not sanctioned it.
The states of their affidavits additionally pointed to the “Take Home Ration” being offered to the beneficiaries.
On Gujarat offering eight 500 gm packets of ‘Balshakti’ to youngsters below six years to match dietary necessities and 1 kg ready-to-eat dietary conventional candy (Sukhadi) per week in lieu of scorching cooked meals to a few to 6 years’ youngsters, the court docket stated it’s “of the view that the State ought to have included certain cereals” additionally within the Take Home Ration.
The judgment got here on a PIL, which questioned the closure of the Angawadi centres.
The bench stated that “children are the next generation and therefore unless and until the children and the women have nutritious food, it will affect the next generation and ultimately the country as a whole”.
“It is now statutory obligation of the Centre and the States to provide for nutritional support to the pregnant women and lactating mothers, nutritional support to children and to take steps to identify and provide meals for children who suffer from malnutrition. Government has a constitutional obligation to preserve human life. Good health of its citizens is its primary duty. International covenants also aim at highest attainable standards of physical and mental health. This is in interest of social justice,” the court docket stated.