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Top law officers ask NTPC to move SC on RIL gas row
India"s top two law officers have advised NTPC to move Supreme Court at once to secure gas at a contracted price from Reliance Industries (RIL), a position in variance with Oil Ministry"s plea on the Ambani borthers" gas dispute.

Ask CBI for files, DoT tells CAG
The audit of the grant of telecom licences and allocation of 2G and 3G spectrum by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) has taken an interesting turn, with the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) asking CAG to directly communicate with the CBI, as the required documents have already been seized by the investigation agency.

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Bell offers help to probe YSR's chopper crash
The manufacturer of Bell helicopters has offered its assistance to Indian authorities in probing into the crash of the Bell-430 chopper which claimed the lives of Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y S Rajashekhar Reddy and four others.
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SC to hear Novartis case next week

The Supreme Court will hear Swiss drug maker Novartis AG"s plea against denial of patent for its blood cancer drug, Glivec, next week. - SC to decide Bajaj Auto-TVS row over Flame on Sep 15 - SC to start final hearing on gas row on Oct 20 - Novartis moves SC against Glivec order - SC refuses relief to Roche on patent plea against Cipla - SC to commence final hearing on Ambani gas row on Oct 20 - Govt for filling up vacancies of judges in SC, HC A Bench headed by Justice Markandaya Katju, before which the matter was listed for hearing today, recused itself from hearing the case. The Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) had in July rejected the company"s appeal against a Chennai patent office"s decision citing Sections 3(d) and 3(b) of Indian patent law. Section 3(d) of patent law restricts patents for already known drugs unless the new claims are superior in terms of efficacy and Section 3(b) restricts patents for products that are against public interest and do not demonstrate enhanced efficacy over existing products. Novartis had obtained an exclusive marketing right (generic versions of Glivec were stopped from being made) in 2003 for the drug based on its patent application. Its patent plea was rejected in 2006 by the Chennai Patent Office on several grounds, including Section 3(d). While the Swiss firm had challenged the patent office"s verdict in the Madras High Court, its appeals were transferred to IPAB, which held in July that Glivec did not meet the requirement of increased therapeutic efficacy.


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