NE NEWS SERVICE
PUDUCHERRY, APRIL 20
Chief Minister V Narayanasamy on Sunday questioned the imposition of GST by the Centre on medical equipment for hospitals to treat COVID- 19 patients.
Central Govt should freely allow import of #Ventilators , Monitors #PPEkits & 3ply #Masks without charging #GST . Levying GST on #COVID19 equipment’s is unreasonable and take decision early. pic.twitter.com/nnkP0nLU1g
— V.Narayanasamy (@VNarayanasami) April 19, 2020
He told reporters here that the Centre should help the rescue of the states and facilitate availability of the equipment like ventilators, monitors, face masks and drugs and medicines at the government hospitals.
The state governments could in the alternative is permitted to buy the equipment either from within the country or outside the country, he said.
But the imposition of GST (goods and services tax) on the devices pushed the prices up and hence the GST should be rescinded to make the devices available to the states, he said.
The Chief Minister appealed to the Centre to make sufficient number of equipment available for the doctors and nurses taking care of the coronavirus patients.
The Centre should supply adequate number of Personal Protection Equipment (PPE), masks and other facilities for the doctors and nurses attending to the infected patients, he said.
Stating that everyone is presently at a crucial and testing time in battling the virus, the Chief Minister said the people should continue to adhere to the social distancing and voluntary isolation at their homes.
The lockdown has been extended till May 3, hence there should be strict adherence to the norms of lockdown lest all the achievements made so far here would go for a toss, he said.
Thanking the police for their work braving the hot spell and other hardships, the Chief Minister said the joint efforts of staff and workers of Health Department, PWD, Electricity, Civil Supplies, the volunteers of NCC and ASHA unit had been effective in enforcing the lockdown.
He said the doctors and nurses taking care of the patients admitted at the Indira Gandhi Government Medical college hospital for treatment for COVID-19 had also been rendering their service excellently.
There were only three active cases of COVID-19 in the hospital while as many as 3,045 people were in home quarantine in the Union Territory.
Narayanasamy appealed to industries’ owners to adhere to the conditions stipulated for resuming work in their units from Monday and no worker from outside should be brought into Puducherry. ‘Only the locals and the migrant workers who were already available within the factories should be engaged to restart the units,’ he said adding that any violation would lead to cancellation of licences for the entrepreneurs.
District Collector T Arun said vigil was being maintained on the adherence to the conditions on which permissions were granted to entrepreneurs to run the factories in the wake of relaxation of restrictions as per the latest guidelines of the Central government.
He said the Centre had permitted activities under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act after the restrictions were relaxed and hence around 10,000 workers would be benefitted by getting job during the ongoing lockdown.
The Industries and Labour departments would also keep vigil on the industries to ascertain they did not violate the lockdown norms, he said.