Saturday 31 October 2020

Teen's habit of all-night streaming saves 75 lives in Mumbai

Mumbai: Around 75 occupants of a two-storey building in Dombivli were miraculously saved by a young boy before it collapsed on Thursday morning.

The 18-year-old Kunal Mohite, the teenager who was watching a web series till dawn saved the lives of the residents.

Kunal told ANI over the phone that he was watching a web series till 4am in the morning when a part of his kitchen inside the house suddenly started falling down. He immediately woke up his family members and alerted other residents to vacate the building before it collapsed to sand and dust.

"While watching a web-series till dawn, I saw part of my kitchen falling down and immediately alerted everyone to vacate the building," Kunal said.

As per the official sources, this building in the Kopar area was declared dangerous nine months ago and the residents were asked to vacate their houses.

"We received a notice from the authorities but people residing here are financially very weak. They had no place to go to and thus stayed back here," Kunal said.



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Bihar residents panic as BJP candidate tests positive for COVID-19

Patna: Thousands of residents in Patna are panicking after coming in contact with a local Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) candidate who has tested positive for COVID-19. The candidate Arun Kumar Sinha had been constantly campaigning in Patna, the capital city of Bihar, despite having symptoms of the deadly virus for the past fortnight, a report said.

The revelation came to light after the BJP candidate was tested before he could be granted permission to attend the October 28 rally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Patna. After testing positive for coronavirus, he was denied permission to attend the rally.

Reports said Sinha, also a local BJP lawmaker, had developed COVID-19 symptoms after he filed his nomination papers on October 14. But he concealed this fact and continued campaigning and meeting city residents.

On Thursday, Sinha tweeted about testing positive and that he had quarantined himself at home. He also promised not to go among the voters until he recovers, but requested the people to vote for him after seeing his “helplessness”.

“We are panicking. He had been moving in the area and seeking our support for long. Leaders should not put citizens’ lives in danger just to win elections,” said Ravi Kumar, a resident of Kumhrar locality in Patna.

Sinha is among a dozen top BJP leaders who are currently in the grip of COVID-19. On Wednesday, federal minister for Textiles and Women & Child Development Smriti Irani tested positive for COVID-19. She was one of the many top BJP leaders extensively campaigning for party candidates in Bihar.

“It is rare for me to search for words while making an announcement, hence here’s me keeping it simple—I have tested positive for COVID and would request those who came in contact with me to get themselves tested at the earliest,” Irani tweeted.

Top leaders test positive

Other top BJP leaders who have tested positive during the Bihar poll campaign include Sushil Kumar Modi, deputy chief minister, Devenedra Fadnavis, former Maharashtra chief minister and the party’s Bihar election in-charge, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Syed Shahnawaz Hussain, both national spokesperson, Mangal Pandey, Bihar health minister and party parliamentarian Ajay Nishad. All of them figure among the list of 30 leaders declared as party’s “star campaigners”.

Mukesh Sahni, president Vikashseel Insan party (VIP), a BJP ally, too tested positive. Prime Minister Modi himself shared the news with the masses at a rally in Darbhanga on Wednesday.

The BJP was one of the ruling parties which had strongly batted for the elections on time while most opposition parties in the state were in favour of deferring polls in view of the pandemic. They even petitioned the Election Commission to postpone elections till the situation gets normal but the BJP mocked this demand alleging the opposition was trying to run away from the poll process on the pretext of COVID-19. Eventually, the EC announced the date of polling and campaigning started.

According to a latest report of the Bihar health department, COVID-19 has claimed 1,076 lives in Bihar and also left 214,946 people infected in the past six months in the state.



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From trash to treasure: 129-year-old British-era tunnel restored in Pakistan

Islamabad: A remarkable discovery was made while digging a pit for a plantation in Ayubia National Park in northern Pakistan when a 100-year-old British-era tunnel was found from a trash mound. The historic ’Moto Tunnel’ built in 1891, which was buried in a garbage dump due to neglect, has now been restored to its original glory by the Ministry of Climate Change.

Historic and cultural site

The historic tunnel that will now attract more tourists, hikers and history lovers was inaugurated on October 29 by Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Climate Change, Malik Amin Aslam.

A century ago, the 250-feet long tunnel connected the two valleys in Ayubia and Murree. The restoration will now reduce the travel distance for the pedestrians living in the mountainous region. The meticulous work of illuminating the tunnel has been done carefully, keeping the heritage and original beauty intact. Various facilities including paved track to the tunnel, information centre, guide, resting areas and coffee shop have also been set up for tourists.

Located in picturesque park

The historical and archeological tourist site is located in the picturesque and biodiversity-rich Ayubia National Park - spread over 3,312 hectares in the Galliat region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province and home to 256 species of birds, 33 species of mammals and 104 kinds of plants.

Before and after photo of Moto Tunnel, discovered from garbage dump and now restored, in Ayubia National Park in northern Pakistan. Image Credit: MoCC

The Ministry of Climate Change and KP’s wildlife department jointly renovated and restored the tunnel to its original glory the ‘Moto Tunnel’ as a cultural and heritage icon due to its archaeological significance under the Global Environment Facility and UNDP’s Sustainable Forest Management project, said Suleman Khan, Inspector General Forest at the climate change ministry.

Preserving nature while promoting tourism

There is an increasing realisation in Pakistan to promote sustainable tourism and development that does “not lead to exploitation of natural resources rather their protection and preservation,” said Amin Aslam. “Protecting and preserving natural resources like lakes, mountains, beaches and rivers, which are the main sources of tourism attraction and promoting ecotourism concepts and practices at all levels, which promote sane use of natural resources, is inevitable for overall environmental and economic sustainability,” he asserted.

This has been the focus during the renovation of the British-era tunnel to preserve the historic relic while causing no damage to the environment.

Protecting environment and national parks

Over the last several years, Pakistan’s ecosystem has greatly suffered due to unsustainable development and tourism especially in biodiversity-rich areas. Many of these areas “are at risk of vanishing because of damage caused due to unsustainable tourism practices and mining of natural resources, particularly tree-felling and contamination of natural water channels,” said the premier’s aide, Amin Aslam. To encourage tourists while protecting the environment, the government is taking all-out measures to promote sustainable models of ecotourism in consultation with local partners and communities as part of Prime Minister’s vision for Clean and Green Pakistan, he said.



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Focus on COVID-19 vaccine pricing, distribution at global forum

Dubai: Scientists, vaccine developers, humanitarians, and decision makers from around the world will come together to discuss the best vaccines to use, and develop appropriate plans for global distribution and pricing.

The COVID-19 Vaccine Forum, hosted by the King Abdullah International Medical Research Center (KAIMRC) in Riyadh, is a key event as it provides a hub for leading COVID-19 vaccine scientists, regulators, developers, and distributors to learn about COVID-19 vaccines in development.

9

number of vaccines in Phase II–III trials

In attendance will be top vaccine scientists from Harvard University Medical School, Stanford University School of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, University of Oxford, Imperial College London, The Chinese Academy of Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences, Jazan University, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, King Abdullah International Medical Research Center, King Fahad Medical Research Center, King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Nova Southeastern University, will present at the conference.

Representatives from Janssen, Zhifei Biological, Moderna, Inovio Pharmaceuticals, and the US National Institutes of Health will report on progress in developing COVID-Vaccines.

"The COVID-19 Vaccine Forum is one of the most important healthcare events this year." said Dr. Bandar Al Knawy, MD, FRCPC, Chief Executive Officer, Ministry of National Guard-Health Affairs, and President, King Saud Bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences. "It aims to bring together leaders in the field of COVID-19 vaccine development and production, health institutions, academic institutions, businesses and world organizations to discuss the latest updates on COVID-19 vaccine development and availability to the public."

“The event is unique and significant, enabling the scientific community, health workers, governmental and non-governmental institutions and the public to be informed regarding the progress of COVID-19 vaccines, and discuss concerns and issues,” said Dr. Ahmed Alaskar Executive Director, King Abdullah International Medical Research Center, Ministry of National Guard-Health Affairs, and President of 11th KAIMRC Annual Forum for Medical Research.

“We thank all the prominent speakers who are presenting during the forum, the organizing committee, the collaborators and sponsors who made it possible”.

20 CATASTROPHIC EPIDEMICS
Over the course of human history at least twenty catastrophic epidemics and pandemics have gripped our planet causing tremendous suffering and death. These diseases have devastated human health and changed the course of history. The current COVID-19 pandemic is one of the most severe pandemics in history. The present situation is unprecedented. As of October 2020, over 40 million people have been infected and over a million people have died from COVID-19. No previous pandemics have shut down the planet as COVID-19 has. More than 4 billion people in more than 90 countries have been asked or ordered to stay at home by their governments.

Since the pandemic emerged in China in December 2019 there have been global efforts to limit the spread of the disease. People around the world have demonstrated remarkable solidarity. Scientists have shared data and resources to help accelerate discovery and development of therapies and vaccines.

Vaccine numbers

There are currently 321 vaccine candidates in development. No candidate has completed clinical trials to prove safety and efficacy, however, there are 42 vaccines in clinical research, 33 vaccines in Phase I–II trials, and 9 vaccines in Phase II–III trials.

321

number of vaccine candidates in development

In addition to reviewing the latest vaccine data with top vaccine developers, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Bring Hope Humanitarian Foundation, and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), will present their plans for distributing the vaccines to people in need in all parts of the world.



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India: Headless body of a woman, found chopped into 15 pieces and stuffed in a sack

In a horrific incident, the headless body of a woman was found stuffed in a sack and dumped at a garbage site near a cemetery in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh on Monday.

According to police, children who were playing nearby spotted the sack being pulled by stray animals at a garbage dumping zone in Meerut.

When people reached the spot, they found a plastic bag dumped over a heap of garbage with a foul smell emanating from it. They said that streets dogs were trying to grab pieces from the sack.

As panic spread, locals called the police.

Police officials who reached the spot inspected the sack and found a woman’s body chopped into 15 pieces stuffed inside it, with the head missing.

"Prima facie it appears that somebody known to the woman has killed her and beheaded her to hide her identity,” a cop told news media outlets.

Police officials believe the woman was in her thirties.

The cop added that field units of the police had begun work, and officials were checking CCTV camera footage in nearby areas to determine further details.

"An investigation is on to work out the case," the officer said.



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5-year-old helps crack San Francisco Zoo theft case

San Francisco: Police said on Friday they arrested a man suspected of stealing a ring-tailed lemur from the San Francisco Zoo, where officials rewarded a 5-year-old boy who helped recapture the endangered primate with a lifetime membership.

The theft of Maki, an arthritic 21-year-old lemur, made the news Wednesday in San Francisco and beyond when zoo officials reported the animal missing and found evidence of forced entry at his enclosure.

Five-year-old James Trinh was unaware of the headlines when leaving his preschool Thursday in Daly City, about 5 miles from the zoo, and exclaimed, “There's a lemur! There's a lemur!'' Cynthia Huang, director of the Hope Lutheran Day School, told the San Francisco Chronicle Friday.

Huang was skeptical at first. “I thought, Are you sure it's not a raccoon?'' she said.

Maki scurried from the parking lot into the school's playground and took refuge in a miniature play house, as the school called police who quickly alerted animal control and zoo officials. The children, parents and teachers watched as caretakers arrived and coaxed the lemur into a transport cage, Huang said.

Also Thursday, police took 30-year-old Cory McGilloway into custody, San Francisco police Lt. Scott Ryan told reporters Friday.

McGilloway, whom investigators had identified as a suspect in the lemur's abduction, was arrested Thursday evening by San Rafael police on unrelated charges. He was expected to be transferred to San Francisco County Jail to be booked on charges of burglary, grand theft of an animal, looting and vandalism all related to the lemur theft, Ryan said.

Police did not provide other details, saying the investigation was still under way but credited a multi-agency effort and tips on a public tip line that led to the suspect's capture.

San Francisco Zoo director Tanya Peterson said Maki was “an aging wild animal who needed special care" for ailments including arthritis. “He's still agitated, dehydrated and hungry," she said, adding that veterinarian teams were working to get him back to health. Due to his travels, she added, “He's socially distancing from his primate family" but would hopefully join the other lemurs soon.

Authorities had offered a $2,100 reward for locating Maki, which the zoo will be giving to the church.

“I understand there is a young boy there who witnessed this and also called in the tip, and we are giving his family a free membership to the zoo,'' said Peterson, who thanked the boy and everyone who helped. “They literally saved a life.''



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Frantic rescue effort after deadly earthquake in Turkey

Rescue workers scrambled into the early morning Saturday in a frantic effort to save people trapped under debris in the western Turkish city of Izmir, several hours after a major earthquake in the Aegean Sea leveled several buildings and severely damaged many more.

At least 24 people were killed in Turkey and hundreds were reported injured. Another two people were killed in Greece from the earthquake, which had a magnitude of 7.0 according to the US Geological Survey, and was centered off Samos, a Greek island near Turkey's coast.

Turkey, Greece earthquake impact

More than 1,200 workers were involved in rescue efforts involving at least 13 buildings in Izmir, the country's third-most populous city with about 3 million people. Images posted to social media and videos aired on state television showed people being pulled from the rubble into the embrace of loved ones.

Nearly 10 hours after the quake struck, three people were rescued from the rubble of an eight-story building, Turkish television reported, showing dramatic footage of one being pulled from the debris.

The quake struck just before 3pm on Friday, causing panicked residents of Izmir to dash into the street, many of them wearing face masks because of the coronavirus pandemic. Video showed tremors lasting 35 seconds or more.

In Greece, two teenagers died in Samos when a wall collapsed on them, state news reported.

The quake rattled several parts of Greece and was felt in Istanbul, about 200 miles northeast of Izmir. But much of the damage appeared to be in the city of Izmir, a center for tourism and industry that is prone to earthquakes.

One young man was pulled from the debris of a fallen building and was quickly reunited with his mother. "My three children were at home. I was not," she told Haber Turk Television. "They are all fine, survived."

Gulen Kurtcebe, who was at a market in Izmir when she felt the tremors, said that local residents were accustomed to earthquakes but "this was different." Initially, she said, she thought she was having a dizzy spell, but then a woman nearby started screaming, "Earthquake!"

"At that moment, we all started to run," she said.

In Seferihisar, a town near Izmir, video showed seawater flooding a shoreline neighborhood. Yasar Keles, a local official, said a woman in a wheelchair drowned as the waves hit.

"I saw five, six cars in the sea, and more than 50 yachts washed up on the shore,'' he said in a phone interview. Some of the vessels, pulled from their anchors, had sunk.

Grrece hit

On the Greek island of Samos, residents also poured into the streets, with many posting photos and videos to social media that showed flooding in the main port. State television reported that two teenagers, 15 and 17, were killed after being crushed under a collapsed wall in the main town on Samos.

"Words are too poor to describe how one feels faced with the loss of these children," Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis of Greece said in a post on Twitter.

The deputy mayor of Samos, Giorgos Dionysiou, described "scenes of chaos" on the island in comments carried by several Greek news websites. "People are panicking and have run out onto the streets," he said. "We've never seen anything like this."

He said that several buildings had been damaged, mainly older ones.

In August 1999 a 7.6 magnitude earthquake in northwestern Turkey caused extensive damage, leaving more than 17,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands displaced.



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Pakistan Democratic Movement's third power show in Quetta today

Islamabad: The 11-party anti-government bloc ‘Pakistan Democratic Movement’ (PDM) today put up an impressive show of power in its third public meeting in Quetta after Gujranwala and Karachi and drew quite a large number of protesters, mostly workers of the Balochistan’s nationalist and Jamiat Ulema Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

PDM’s President and JUI-F leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman and Vice President of the PML-N and daughter of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Maryam Nawaz are among the leading speakers who criticized Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government for failing on its promises with the masses.

‘Nawaz popularity on the rise’

Earlier, on her arrival at the Quetta airport, while talking to media persons, Maryam Nawaz said the PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif’s popularity was on the rise as is seen by the overwhelming public reaction to his speeches via video link.

“The reality is that despite silencing him on mainstream media, Nawaz Sharif has become the sole voice that is echoing in Pakistan.

He is the only political personality, who despite not being in this country, being sick and in London, is shining on the land and sky of the country. There is only one face that the public can see, in which they are trying to find the solution for their problems and considering their messiah after Allah,” she said.

JUI-F leader Fazlur Rehman also had a brief interaction with the media upon his arrival in Quetta before the rally.

“From the Quetta rally, we shall send a clear and unified message to the incompetent selected government of Imran Khan that people are no longer ready to accept him as prime minister,” said Maulana adding Imran Khan’s government has failed miserably in every field of life.

He said Balochistan’s message to Khan is clear “You are inefficient, you are unsuccessful. The message to the forces standing behind you is that under no circumstances can anyone be above the Constitution and the law,” he said

Bilawal Bhutto to address via video link

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari who is currently in Gilgit-Baltistan for an election campaign is scheduled to address the PDM rally via video link.

According to the party’s spokesperson, Bhutto will address the rally via video link as the latter is busy in the GB election campaign and it was not possible for him to reach Quetta for tomorrow’s power show.

Meanwhile, ahead of the rally, Balochistan government has taken a number of strict measures ensuring fool proof security in and around the PDM’s public meeting venue, Ayub Stadium.

The Balochistan government has deployed more than 4,000 security officials from police, Frontier Corps (FC) and other forces for the rally of the opposition alliance. Balochistan government’s spokesperson Liaquat Ali Shahwani said that cell phone services have been suspended due to “security concerns.” He urged PDM leaders to direct their party workers to cooperate and not politicize the move.



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Photos: Catalan cat shelter gets smart to help COVID-19 orphans



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Spain parliament approves six-month extension of state of emergency

The Spanish parliament approved on Thursday the extension for six months of a state of emergency declared to fight a surge in coronavirus infections.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's leftist government on Sunday declared an initial 15-day state of emergency and the extension approved by lawmakers means it will now run until May 9.

The measure allows the regional governments, who are in charge of health, to restrict people's movements, including by imposing nighttime curfews and closing their borders.



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Watch: Indian PM Narendra Modi pays tributes to Sardar Patel at Statue of Unity

Kevadiya, Gujarat: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday paid floral tributes to Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, India's first home minister, at the 182-meter tall Statue of Unity in Gujarat on his 145th birth anniversary.

Sardar Patel's birth anniversary is being celebrated as 'Rashtriya Ekta Diwas' (National Unity Day) since 2014.

Modi, whose two-day Gujarat visit started on Friday, reached the Statue of Unity at Kevadiya in Narmada district this morning and offered flowers at the feet of the monument of Sardar Patel.

At the same time, rose petals were showered on the statue from helicopters.

Modi then headed to the parade ground and administered 'national unity pledge' to the gathering on this occasion.

On Friday, Modi had inaugurated as many as 17 new projects, including new tourist attractions near the Statue of Unity. Some of the major attractions include Arogya Van, Ekta Mall, Children Nutrition Park, Sardar Patel Zoological Park or Jungle Safari, and a boat ride.



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How common men, women are mobilising Americans to vote

Washington: Sometimes her hand hurt, but Nancy Gehman kept writing. Every evening from July until mid-October, the 85-year-old retiree sat with a gel pen, writing notes imploring fellow Americans to find a way to vote.

Then she mailed them: All 1,260 letters.

“It was comforting to know that I was doing something productive,” she says.

Gehman, who lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is one of 182,000 people who have participated in Vote Forward, a 50-state letter-writing campaign to more than 17.5 million homes. The grassroots effort is one of countless ways in which individuals and organisations are working to get people to the polls in an election where, it’s safe to say, nothing is normal.

In the best of times, it’s a massive logistical challenge to get millions out to vote. In 2020, the difficulty has been compounded: by fear of the coronavirus, by complications and confusion over mail-in ballots, by palpable anxiety over the bitter divisions in the country.

As early voting has surged dramatically, with more than 73 million people estimated to have cast ballots, advocates have been mobilising in myriad ways, from neighbourhood groups to national movements, from block associations to college marching bands to lone violinists. Voters have been ushered to the polls by fleets of minivans, with bicycle parades and on horseback in Indian Country. When they get there, they’re sometimes welcomed by a cello performance or a choreographed dance party.

Often unable to knock on doors or chat in person because of virus concerns, advocates have had to adapt. They’ve been texting and phone banking, holding drive-in rallies and organizing caravans.

Election year like no other

What unites these efforts is the certainty that this is an election year like no other, and that voting is essential.

In Native American tribal communities devastated by the coronavirus, from job losses to sickness and death, advocates are mindful of causing further stress.

“As much as we know voting is important and necessary ... people are struggling,” says advocate Ahtza Dawn Chavez. “In some ways, a lot of it can come off as just being insensitive.”

In a normal election cycle, Chavez, who lives in Albuquerque and is Navajo and Kewa, and colleagues would knock on doors and sit down for coffee. Now, they’re relying on ambassadors within communities to talk with their neighbors. They’re also using robocalls, phone banking and mass texting. Of special concern are older adults.

Neighbourhood Assistance Corporations of America, employee, Malcom Williams, 65, of Loganville, Ga., left, works on paperwork for first time voter, Gary Ragland, 64, of East Point, Ga., for "Roll to the Polls" a daily event to help usher voters to the polls for early voting on Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2020, in East Point, Ga. Image Credit: AP

“Our elderly are basically our library, they are our encyclopedia, our historical and cultural knowledge holders,” Chavez said. “Making sure people have a safe way to cast their votes and access their polling locations was something we were very concerned about.” In Arizona’s Indian Country, “Ride to the Polls” has targeted younger voters with organized groups on horseback.

Options and rights

It’s not only the coronavirus that’s been an obstacle. In North Carolina, civil rights leader the Rev. William Barber II and others have been training clergy members to mobilize their congregations and make sure they know their options and rights, and to push back against any misinformation that might prevent them from voting.

“Don’t let anybody suppress, stop, stymie, deter, detract your right to vote,” Barber recently told attendees of a get-out-the-vote event.

In 2016, Patrisse Cullors, one of the creators of Black Lives Matter, hadn’t thought about how she could leverage the platform to get out the vote. Now, after an unprecedented surge of Black Lives Matter-themed protests in recent months, Cullors and the foundation are hosting pandemic-safe drive-in rallies, text-banking voters and leveraging the millions of dollars in donations to run ads focused on the Black vote, Cullors said.

In Louisville, Kentucky, a city that has been rocked by demonstrations over the killing by police of Breonna Taylor, community groups, voters and activists have joined together in a parade of cars, trucks and buses through the city’s predominantly Black West End in an effort to get out the vote. The effort, called “Protest to the Polls,” is led by the Louisville Urban League and aims to take the summer’s demands for racial and social justice to the ballot box, said Sadiqa Reynolds, president and CEO.

“We are reclaiming our votes,” she said.

Large-scale planning

Some get-out-the-vote efforts have involved large-scale planning” others have been the work of one or two people with a sudden idea. On the larger side is the nonprofit Neighbourhood Assistance Corporations of America, which has deployed a fleet of vans in southwest Texas and Atlanta, and recently expanded to Charlotte, North Carolina. The vans have carted 25,000 people to the polls, said media coordinator Tim Trumble.

The community justice organisation hopes it sends a message: Voter suppression efforts in minority communities will backfire. The 15-passenger vans, which accommodate six people with social distancing, get going as the sun comes up and drive all day, and are sanitized between each trip.

On the smaller side: “Play for the Vote,” a nonpartisan effort by Boston cellist Mike Block that organized musicians to play for voters while they wait to cast their ballots. Block came up with the idea while practicing his instrument the morning after the chaotic first presidential debate.

“I thought, `The music is helping me - maybe I should just go down to my polling location and play.’ It became obvious how great it would be if every musician did that,” he said.

So Block, 38, has since enlisted several hundred musicians from 39 states and the District of Columbia who will perform classical, folk, bluegrass, country, hip hop or rock - but nothing with a political bent - for voters stuck standing in long lines. Participants range from musicians with New York’s Metropolitan Opera orchestra to a high school orchestra in Wyoming.

Also on the musical front, “Joy to the Polls” seeks to make a memorable experience of waiting in line to vote. A recent video on social media showed voters in Philadelphia dancing joyfully as they waited, alongside members of the Resistance Revival Chorus.

Patio gatherings

In Cincinnati, Diane Cunningham Redden, an official with the Hamilton County Republican Party, has been holding small, socially distanced patio gatherings, on the theory that “if 28 people each go home and talk to five friends, those are votes.”

Redden heads a group called SHELeads, which identifies and supports female candidates. She has also helped organize bring-your-own-sign events supporting President Donald Trump and others at busy intersections.

Some voters are wary of catching the virus by voting in person, but they’re also concerned about the mail-in option. In Columbus, Ohio, 80-year-old Carol Tonkins requested an absentee ballot this year for the first time, but didn’t totally trust the mail.

So she called Katie Beaumont, who directs a programme, At Home on High, that helps older adults like Tonkins stay home by providing transportation, yardwork, shopping and other services. Beaumont dropped Tonkins’ ballot off last Wednesday. “We don’t care the way you vote. We just want you to vote,” Beaumont said.

In some cases, new strategies have yielded unexpected benefits.

In Sacramento, California, advocate Nichole Rice can’t knock on doors because of the coronavirus, and she can’t make phone calls because of her two small, sometimes loud, children.

Instead, she’s texting hundreds of people every day from an app on her phone. She says that when she can convince them she’s not a robot - which takes some doing in 2020 - she can have extended conversations with many more voters than she ever would have knocking on doors.

Vulnerable moments

It’s led to some vulnerable moments. Rice said one voter said her priorities had changed because her husband had just undergone bypass surgery. Another person revealed her husband was cheating on her. “People are way more willing to disclose things ... than they ever did in person,” she said.

In Mississippi, which has some of the country’s most restrictive voting regulations - rules that historically have kept African Americans from voting - retired educator Fran Bridges has been volunteering with several neighbourhood associations in Jackson to conduct street-by-street registration.

The idea was that people might be more inclined to register if contacted by their neighbours. She enlisted one person to be the point person for each street. They covered at least 100 streets that way.

Like Gehman in New Mexico, Rhada Pyati in Philadelphia has devoted untold hours to writing letters as part of Vote Forward. “I don’t want to wake up on the morning of Wednesday, Nov. 4, and feel I didn’t try as hard as I possibly could,” she said.

There’s at least some evidence that her efforts and those of fellow letter writers have had an impact. One recipient, Carlos Flores in Miami, said he’d already been planning to vote, but the passionate letter he received from Portland, Oregon, on Tuesday got him fired up.

A bakery owner, Flores, 34, voted this week in his first presidential race since gaining citizenship in 2018. “Lots of people in the world can’t vote,” Flores said. “This is a privilege. Every vote counts.”



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Pope says ‘lady’ COVID must be obeyed, forgoes mask

Vatican City: Pope Francis on Wednesday described the COVID-19 pandemic as a tough “lady” taskmaster who must be obeyed, but he and most close aides did not wear masks at his general audience.

At the start of the indoor audience Francis apologised to people for not coming down from the marble stage.

“I will stay up here. I would very much like to come down and greet each of you but we have to keep our distances,” he said to the crowd of several hundred, nearly all wearing masks.

“If I come down, immediately people will form groups ... and this is against the care, the precautions, we must have in the face of this lady named COVID, who is doing us much harm,” he said.

The pope and most aides and translators on the stage did not wear masks. Swiss Guards and official photographers on the stage wore masks but bishops and priests who greeted the pope close up removed their masks as they approached him.

Thirteen Swiss Guards and a resident of the guest house where the pope lives have recently tested positive for COVID-19.

The pope, who had part of one lung removed because of an illness when he was a young man, has come under fire, mostly on social media, for not always wearing a mask in public.

On Oct. 20, he wore a mask for several hours at a prayer service in Rome with other religious leaders, taking it off only when he spoke. Last Saturday, no-one in the pope’s private library wore a mask when he spoke with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and his delegation.

In a video conference call with reporters on Tuesday, Father Augusto Zampini, a member of a Vatican commission the pope set up to advise him on the social effects of the crisis, acknowledged Francis’ inconsistency.

“We are trying to convince him, we are almost there,” Zampini said.



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Thank you India: Woman killed for standing up against sexual harassment of her daughters in Uttar Pradesh

A 55-year-old woman was allegedly beaten to death by four people for opposing their attempts of sexual harassment against her daughters at Nara village in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh on Monday. The incident has created an uproar in the social media, and online users were quick to share the news with their severe criticism.

Sharing the news on his Facebook profile, a user, Kamal Khan posted: “Our women are not safe even inside the house. The world has become so cruel and no justice…Its really painful to read women abuse every day as it happens.”

Talking to the Indian media outlets, Mansurpur police station official, K P Singh said that a case had registered against four people - Akash, Gopi, Binendra, and Rajesh.

Later the woman was identified as Savita Devi. Police raided the residences of all four accused to arrest them, but they have escaped. While confirming the incident officer Singh added that all of them are absconding and the investigation is underway.

Another Facebook user, Sudip Mishra, commented: “We need a new law…something more powerful that it will never allow the culprit to escape by any chance.”

According to the complaint lodged by the victim’s family members, the four neighbours were harassing the young women of the family which was bitterly resisted by the mother.

As per their statement, on Monday evening, the four accused entered her house and attacked the woman. The men severely beat her up, and she was rushed to a nearby hospital where she was declared dead.

The body of the deceased was handed over to the family after the post-mortem was conducted.



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Workers eradicate first nest of 'murder hornets' found in US



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Indonesia says 'Jurassic Park' project no threat to Komodo dragon

Jakarta: Indonesia's environment ministry on Tuesday sought to calm outrage over construction of an island tourism project being dubbed "Jurassic Park", after an image went viral on social media of a Komodo dragon facing off with a big truck.

The picture of the dragon, one of the world's largest lizards, blocking the path of a big vehicle on Indonesia's Rinca Island prompted an outpouring of anger about perceived threats to the natural habitat of the vulnerable species.

Reuters was not able to verify the authenticity of the picture.

Wiratno, a senior environment ministry official, said rangers would ensure the safety of dragons roaming near the construction, which will include an elevated deck, a dam and an information centre, to be completed in June.

"They will intensively make checks of whether the Komodo dragons are under the buildings, remnants of buildings, and under the trucks carrying material," he said in a statement.

A Komodo Dragon is seen in Komodo National Park, Indonesia on April 6, 2018. Image Credit: Reuters

Indonesia's current Komodo population is about 3,000, according to government data.

Komodo dragons reach up to 10 feet (3 metres) long, have curved and serrated teeth, a yellow forked tongue, strong limbs and a long tail. They can take down prey as big as a water buffalo with a single venomous bite.

The project, which involves the country's public works and housing ministry, seeks to cater to visitors of the Komodo National Park, where the Komodos can be seen in the wild.

Social media users have likened the project to one on a dinosaur island featured in the "Jurassic Park" films.

The public works ministry in a statement on Monday also assured the safety of the Komodos.

But environmentalists said the construction must stop.

"Komodo needs to be the main priority. They need to be protected in a designated area," said Umbu Wulang Tanaamahu Paranggi, director of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) in East Nusa Tenggara. "What's going on now is a destruction of the dragons' living spaces."



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IPL 2020 in UAE: Dreadful Delhi Capitals slump against Mumbai Indians – in pictures



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Nitish Kumar’s ‘8-9 children’ remark triggers storm in Bihar politics ahead of polls

Patna: A personal comment by Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar against his rival Lalu Prasad, head of Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), has triggered a storm in the state ahead of the first phase of polling on Wednesday with commentators terming it as “bitter and ugly”. Kumar is the National Democratic Alliance’s chief ministerial candidate for Bihar again.

“Does anyone care? They have eight-nine children. They have no faith in daughters. The son was born after many daughters,” the chief minister told an election rally in Vaishali district on Monday, in an oblique reference to RJD president Lalu Prasad.

He warned everything would be destroyed in Bihar if the masses look up to “such people.” “Everything will get destroyed if the people choose them. I want to serve the people but they want to make money,” the chief minister alleged.

The remark has drawn bitter criticism from across the political spectrum and the common people. “Such things are not acceptable. Nitish should focus his campaign on basic issues but he is losing restraint over words. Such things were never seen in the past,” said Vijay Anand, a local resident.

Another voter Rajiv Kumar Singh said the NDA’s chief ministerial candidate should maintain dignity. “We strongly condemn such remarks from a person who served as the chief minister of the state thrice and is again seeking re-election,” he said.

Voters react

Local TV news channels went to various parts of the state to seek comments of the voters over the remark by the chief minister. Terming the statement “ugly”, the people said they would vote over the issues of development, employment, health and education rather than personal issues which are meaningless.

Tejashwi Yadav, opposition Grand Alliance’s CM face and son of RJD chief Lalu Prasad, said every bad word used by the chief minister was like “blessings” to him. “Nitish Kumarji is mentally and physically tired and that’s why he can speak whatever he likes. I treat his words like blessings,” Tejashwi said, adding Bihar had decided to vote on the issues of development and employment in this poll.

Tejashwi also gave a new twist to Nitish’s “8-9 children” jibe saying, “By commenting on my family, Nitish Kumar is targeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he also has six siblings. By using such language, he has insulted women and my mother’s sentiments.”

Political leaders across the country also reacted bitterly. “This language is undignified and unacceptable. This shows his loss is visible,” said Congress leader Randeep Singh Surjewala.

“What a disgusting comment to make. Losing all dignity and respect he gathered in 11 years as CM. Won’t include his last 3 years since his mask began to fall since then,” said Shiv Sena leader Priyanka Chaturvedi.



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US appeals court rejects immediate WeChat ban

A US appeals court on Monday rejected a Justice Department request that it allow the government to immediately ban Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google from offering Tencent's WeChat for download in US app stores.

The three-judge panel for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said in a brief order the government had not demonstrated it would "suffer an imminent, irreparable injury during the pendency of this appeal, which is being expedited." On Friday, a US judge in San Francisco rejected a Justice Department request to reverse her decision preventing the WeChat ban sought by the US Commerce Department in response to a lawsuit filed by WeChat users.

The WeChat users said the ruling will avoid an "unprecedented shutdown of a major platform for communications relied on by millions of people in the United States." The Commerce Department order, which had been set to take effect September 20, would also bar other US transactions with WeChat, potentially making the app unusable in the United States.

The appeals court said the case will be placed on its January 2021 calendar.

Tencent and the Commerce Department did not immediately comment.

The Justice Department argues WeChat and Chinese short video sharing app TikTok threaten US national security.

WeChat has an average of 19 million daily active users in the United States. It is popular among Chinese students, Americans living in China and some Americans who have personal or business relationships in China.

WeChat is an all-in-one mobile app that combines services similar to Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and Venmo. The app is an essential part of daily life for many in China and boasts more than 1 billion users.

In a similar case, a US appeals court agreed to fast-track a government appeal of a ruling blocking the government from banning new TikTok downloads.



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Greece, Turkey rattled by massive earthquake

At least 12 people were killed in Turkey and two in Greece when a major earthquake in the Aegean Sea rattled parts of both countries Friday, leveling structures in the western Turkish province of Izmir and severely damaging several residential buildings.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, speaking from Istanbul on Friday evening, said that another 438 people had been injured in his country. Rescue efforts were still under way in 17 buildings in Izmir late Friday.

Murat Kurum, the Turkish environment minister, said in televised remarks that there were reports of people trapped under debris, many of them in the Bayrakli neighborhood of Izmir, a province with a population of more than 4 million.

Images posted to social media and videos aired on state television showed people being rescued from the rubble. The full extent of the injuries and deaths was still unclear as rescue operations continued.

The earthquake, which had a magnitude of 7.0, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, was centered off Samos, a Greek island near Turkey's coast, according to Turkey's disaster management agency.

Two children died in Samos when a wall collapsed on them, Greek state news reported.

The quake was felt in Istanbul, about 200 miles northeast of Izmir, and in parts of Greece. But much of the initial damage seemed to be centered in the city of Izmir, a center for tourism and industry that is prone to earthquakes.

At least six buildings were destroyed in the city, Suleyman Soylu, the interior minister, said in a tweet, although the city's mayor put the number of destroyed buildings closer to 20. Soylu said there were no initial reports of casualties from nearby cities.

The IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation said on Twitter that it had sent a 250-person search-and-rescue team to the area.

Footage aired by the Turkish news agency DHA showed at least one building flattened and people climbing atop the debris to shout for survivors in the rubble.

Here's a look at the developments in both Turkey and Greece.


Turkey toll at 12

The death toll in Turkey due to the earthquake that struck on Friday rose to 12, the country's Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) said.

The number of people injured rose to 419, it said, adding that search and rescue operations at 17 collapsed or damaged buildings continued. The strong earthquake was felt in both Greece and Turkey. Two people died on the Greek island of Samos, officials there said.


Teen deaths

Two teenagers were found dead on the Greek island of Samos after a quake rattled Greece and Turkey, an emergency official said on Friday.

Media reports said the two victims, the first to be reported in Greece, were aged 15 and 17, and were walking home from school in the port of Vathy when disaster struck.

"Two unconscious youngsters were pulled from the rubble of a collapsed wall and taken to hospital for identification," the fire service said.

The Greek authorities said another four people have been injured in the quake, which caused the walls of several old buildings to crumble.


Toll at 6 in Turkey

Six people were killed in Turkey after a strong earthquake struck the Aegean Sea on Friday, bringing buildings crashing down and setting off tidal waves which slammed into coastal areas and nearby Greek islands.

People ran onto streets in panic in the coastal city of Izmir, witnesses said, after the quake struck with a magnitude of up to 7.0 at around 1150 GMT. Some neighbourhoods were deluged with surging seawater which swept a flood of debris inland and left fish stranded as it receded.

The Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) said six people died, one due to drowning, while 202 people were injured.

There were various reports of collapsed buildings with people stuck in the rubble in some of districts of Izmir, one of Turkey's main tourist regions, and partial damage to property in other provinces, Turkish officials said.

Izmir mayor Tunc Soyer said around 20 buildings came down in the province. Izmir's governor said 70 people had been rescued from under the rubble.

Ilke Cide, a doctoral student who was in Izmir's Guzelbahce region during the earthquake, said he went inland after waters rose after the earthquake.

"I am very used to earthquakes... so I didn't take it very seriously at first but this time it was really scary," he said, adding the earthquake had lasted for at least 25-30 seconds.


Earthquake diplomacy

The two uneasy neighbours also suffer from historically poor relations despite both being members of the NATO military alliance.

But the quake saw a spurt of what pundits immediately termed "earthquake diplomacy", after the two countries' foreign ministers promised to help each in a rare phone call.

"Greek Foreign Minister (Nikos) Dendias called our minister Mevlut Cavusoglu to wish him the best. Both ministers stressed they were ready to help each other in case of need," the Turkish foreign ministry said.

Top Erdogan aide Fahrettin Altun tweeted that the disaster "reminds us once again how close we are despite our differences over policy".


Four dead, 120 injured

Athens/Istanbul: Four people were killed and 120 injured Friday in Turkey when a powerful earthquake struck the country's western coast and parts of Greece, the Turkish health minister said.

"Unfortunately, four of our citizens lost their lives in the earthquake" that destroyed buildings in Turkey's coastal resort city of Izmir, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca tweeted.

Fahrettin Koca said 38 ambulances, two ambulance helicopters and 35 medical rescue teams were working in Izmir.  About 70 people trapped under rubble in Izmir had been rescued, state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the quake had a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 with an epicenter 13 kilometers (8 miles) north northeast of the Greek island of Samos. The United States Geological Survey put the magnitude at 7.0. It is common for preliminary magnitudes to differ in the early hours and days after a quake. Multiple aftershocks struck the region.

'Tsunami' footage

Dramatic footage of what is said to be a minor Tsunami, tweeted by Ragıp Soylu Turskish journalist.

More footage by Ragip Soylu


Greece quake causes mini-tsunami on Samos

A powerful earthquake in Greece on Friday caused a mini-tsunami on the Aegean island of Samos and a number of buildings were damaged, public television ERT reported.

The quake caused the walls of several homes to collapse and triggered flooding in the port of Samos, according to images broadcast by the station.


Initial report

A strong earthquake struck the Aegean Sea on Friday and was felt in both Greece and Turkey, where some buildings collapsed in the coastal province of Izmir and a government minister said people were trapped in rubble.

People crowded onto the streets in Izmir city, witnesses said, after the quake struck with a magnitude of up to 7.0. The tremor could be felt as far away as in Istanbul and on Greek islands, where officials said some people were panicking although there were no immediate reports of injuries.

There were various reports of damage to property, with Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu saying six buildings had collapsed in two districts of the coastal city of Izmir.

Urbanisation Minister Murat Kurum put the number of collapsed buildings in the area at five, and added that some people were stuck under the rubble. Izmir mayor Tunc Soyer said nearly 20 buildings had collapsed in the province.

In a tweet, Soylu said there were no reports of casualties from six other provinces where the earthquake was felt but added there were small cracks in some buildings.

Ilke Cide, a doctoral student who was in Izmir's Guzelbahce region during the earthquake, said he went inland after waters rose after the earthquake.

"I am very used to earthquakes... so I didn't take it very seriously at first but this time it was really scary," he said, adding the earthquake had lasted for at least 25-30 seconds.

The epicentre of the Magnitude 7 quake that hit off Turkey on Friday. Image Credit: Courtesy of USGS

Crisscrossed by major fault lines, Turkey is among the most earthquake-prone countries in the world. More than 17,000 people were killed in August 1999 when a 7.6 magnitude quake struck Izmit, a city southeast of Istanbul. In 2011, a quake in the eastern city of Van killed more than 500.

Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) said its teams had been sent to the region of Friday's quake.

Residents of the Greek island of Samos, which has a population of about 45,000, were urged to stay away from coastal areas, Eftyhmios Lekkas, head of Greece's organisation for anti-seismic planning, told Greece's Skai TV.

"It was a very big earthquake, it's difficult to have a bigger one," said Lekkas.

High tidal wave warnings were in place in Samos.

"We have never experienced anything like it," said George Dionysiou, the local vice-mayor. "People are panicking." A Greek police spokesman said there was damage to some old buildings on the island, with no immediate reports of injuries.

AFAD put the magnitude of the earthquake at 6.6, while the U.S. Geological Survey said it was 7.0. It struck at around 1150 GMT and was felt along Turkey's Aegean coast and the northwestern Marmara region, media said.

The epicentre was some 17 km (11 miles) off the coast of the Izmir province, at a depth of 16 km, AFAD said. The U.S



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Shutdown in Kashmir as Valley protests India’s new land laws

Srinagar: Shops and businesses shut in several parts of Indian Kashmir on Saturday as separatists challenging Indian rule called for a general strike to denounce new laws that allow Indians to buy land in the disputed region.

Government forces in riot gear patrolled streets in Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar in anticipation of anti-India protests. Public transport also stayed off the roads.

Kashmir’s main separatist grouping called the strike to protest new land laws that India enacted on Tuesday, allowing any of its nationals to buy land in the region. Pro-India politicians in Kashmir have also criticised the laws and accused India of putting Kashmir’s land up for sale.

The move exacerbates concerns of Kashmiris and rights groups who see such measures as being aimed at changing the Muslim-majority region’s demography.

Removing protections

Until last year, Indians were not allowed to buy property in the region. But in August 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government scrapped Kashmir’s special status, annulled its separate constitution, split the region into two federal territories - Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir - and removed inherited protections on land and jobs. The action triggered widespread anger and economic ruin amid a harsh security clampdown and communications blackout.

Since then, India has brought in a slew of changes through new laws.

The new laws, part of a series of Modi’s hard-line Hindu nationalist policies, also authorise the Indian army to declare any area as “strategic” for operational and training purposes against Kashmiri rebels.

The Indian government said the decision was made to encourage development and peace. Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, and both claim the region in its entirety. Rebels have been fighting against Indian rule since 1989.



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Pakistan: 15 men accused of gang-raping and filming two sisters aged 15 and 17

Fifteen men have been accused of gang-raping and filming two teenage sisters in Pakistan’s Faisalabad city. While the incident happened last month, the case came to light only after the victims' mother filed a police complaint recently.

According to an October 25 news report by an Urdu newspaper, Jang, the mother in her complaint stated that her two daughters, aged 17 and 15, were kidnapped on September 11 by a group of people.

She told the police that the kidnappers took her daughters to different locations for six days and gang-raped them.

The mother added that the suspects allegedly intoxicated the teenage girls and took indecent photographs and videos of them.

The First Information Report (FIR) states that later, the men dropped off the 15-year-old girl at Jhang Bazar in Faisalabad, and her sister at another spot in Gujranwala, before fleeing.

Explaining why she did not file a complaint last month, the mother said that the family could not afford to seek legal action because they were poor. So, they decided to leave their residence and settled somewhere else.

However, the suspects did not leave the family alone. They followed the two sisters, continued to catcall, and record videos of the teenage sisters wherever they went.

According to the complaint, six days ago, the two sisters were traveling with their mother when the suspects followed them and started filming videos of the girls again.

When the mother reprimanded them, they assaulted her and the girls before fleeing.



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India: 1kg of tea sold for Rs75,000

Guwahati: Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, the Guwahati Tea Auction Centre (GTAC) on Thursday sold a Speciality Tea at a record price of Rs75,000 (Dh 3,699) per kg, the highest this year, an official said.

After a gap of one year GTAC got another opportunity to sell Manohari Gold Speciality Tea in auction sale at Rs75,000 per kg, Guwahati Tea Auction Buyers Association (GTABA), secretary, Dinesh Bihani told PTI.

The tea was sold by Contemporary Brokers Private Limited and purchased by Guwahati-based tea trader Vishnu Tea Company, which will sell it across the world on their digital e-commerce website 9amtea.com, Bihani said.

"This is a great achievement amidst the global pandemic when the entire world is affected. Manohari Tea Estate has made extra effort to produce this speciality tea in the month of September and sent it to GTAC for sale", the GTABA secretary said.

The earlier record was also set by the same mark of tea at Rs50,000 per kg by the same tea garden last year now breaking their own record, he added.

The GTAC is emerging as a centre for showcasing high priced Assam Speciality tea, he said, adding, an exotic tea is judged by its aroma, taste and colour.

On August 13 last year, another specialised Assam Tea had created a record with Upper Assams Dikom Tea Estate selling its Golden Butterfly tea at a record price of Rs75,000 at the Guwahati Tea Auction Centre.

The tea was so named as only the soft golden tips go into the making of this exceptionally rare and special tea that was auctioned through J Thomas and Company and bought by Guwahati-based Assam Tea Traders, Bihani said.

Guwahati tea auction centre had last year witnessed two big records when Orthodox Golden Tea Tips fetched the highest price of Rs 70,501 per kilogram and prior to that a kg of Manohari Gold Tea was sold at Rs50,000.



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Friday 30 October 2020

India may face mental illness pandemic post COVID-19, say experts

Thiruvananthapuram: India appears to have reached its COVID-19 peak as daily numbers of new patients have fallen from around 90,000 to 50,000 but there is a warning from medical experts: As Covid retreats, a mental illness pandemic is likely to sweep the country.

According to them, there is a two-fold challenge India is likely to face as it gets over the spread of Covid, namely a sharp rise in mental diseases like anxiety, stress and depression, which in turn is a trigger for diabetes.

Lockdown blues

India’s stringent lockdown which is into its eight month this week, has severely impacted the economy, and thrown millions out of jobs. The situation is hurting for the country’s youth, particularly the 15 million who have been entering the job markets each year.

The resultant jobs crunch is poised to add to stress and depression, which are triggers for diabetes.

Ironically, India’s president Ram Nath Kovind while addressing graduating students of the National Institute for Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bengaluru in 2017 had warned, “India does not simply have a mental health challenge, it is facing a possible mental health epidemic.”

India already leads the world, along with China and the US, in anxiety, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

Shortage of medics

“India has only a mere 6,000 psychiatrists for a population of 1.40 billion. According to World Health Organisation norms, there must be at least one psychiatrist for each 100,000 population. By that yardstick India must have a bare minimum of 14,000 psychiatrists. We are not going to reach that number anytime soon”, Dr. Roy Abraham Kallivayalil, who was the secretary general of the World Psychiatric Association until earlier this month, told Gulf News.

He said all the pain inflicted by the economic and social impacts of the lockdown would lead to a pandemic of mental illnesses after we got over Covid.

Children, adolescents affected

Kerala state president of the Indian Psychiatric Society, Dr. Thomas John said children and adolescents were the most affected as their regular routines were affected, classes were disrupted and many were practically cocooned at their homes without a chance to mingle with friends.

“Even though Covid is a physical illness, its impact on mental health is unimaginable,” Dr. John said adding that society ought to be prepared for increased cases in the coming days.

Dr. Roy Abraham Kallivayalil

Dr. Roy Abraham Kallivayalil

Dr. Thomas John

Dr. Thomas John

Scarce statistics

Mental health statistics are scarce in India, with the only recent nation-wide survey having been done by NIMHANS during 2014-16. That survey had shown that as many as 10.6 per cent of the population had some mental morbidity.

And the treatment gap for various mental ailments ranged between 28 per cent and 83 per cent. Many patients in India do not take medical help either because of the stigma attached to mental illness or because treatment is expensive.

Meanwhile, Covid-induced anxiety, stress and depression are already triggering diabetes in many people and the sales of diabetes-related equipment from insulin pumps to glucometers are breaking records. Pharma industry data point to India’s glucometer sales poised to double from the current level of Rs 5 billion per annum.

Silver lining

One silver lining in recent years has been the enactment of the National Mental Healthcare Act, 2017. The Act includes mental illnesses also in the list of diseases for insurance coverage.

Manoj Chandran, CEO of Bengaluru-based White Swan Foundation for Mental Health says the COVID-19 pandemic has created visibility for mental health care, and that it is a time for influencers to play their role in addressing the challenges in this sector.

Manoj Chandran

Manoj Chandran



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France recalls envoy after Erdogan jibe at Macron

Istanbul: France on Saturday said it was recalling its envoy to Turkey for consultations after comments by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan suggesting French counterpart Emmanuel Macron needed a mental health check-up that Paris condemned as unacceptable.

France and its NATO ally are at loggerheads over a range of issues including maritime rights in the eastern Mediterranean, Libya, Syria and the escalating conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.

But Ankara has now been particularly incensed by a campaign championed by Macron to protect France's secular values against radical Islam, a debate given new impetus by the murder this month of a teacher.

"What can one say about a head of state who treats millions of members from different faith groups this way: first of all, have mental checks," Erdogan said in a televised address in the central Anatolian city of Kayseri.

"What's the problem of the individual called Macron with Islam and with the Muslims?" Erdogan asked.

"Macron needs mental treatment," Erdogan added, while indicating he did not expect the French leader to win a new mandate in 2022 elections.

'No condolences'

In a highly unusual move, a French presidential official said that the French ambassador to Turkey was being recalled from Ankara for consultations and would meet Macron to discuss the situation in the wake of Erdogan's outburst.

"President Erdogan's comments are unacceptable. Excess and rudeness are not a method. We demand that Erdogan change the course of his policy because it is dangerous in every respect," the official told AFP.

The Elysee official, who asked not to be named, also said that France had noted "the absence of messages of condolence and support" from the Turkish president after the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty outside Paris.

The official also expressed concern over calls by Ankara for a boycott of French goods.

Macron this month described Islam as a religion "in crisis" worldwide and said the government would present a bill in December to strengthen a 1905 law that officially separated church and state in France.

He announced stricter oversight of schooling and better control over foreign funding of mosques.

But the debate over the role of Islam in France has hit a new intensity after the beheading of Paty, which prosecutors say was carried out by an 18-year-old Chechen who had contact with a extremists in Syria.

'Behind the disasters'

The other new rift between the two leaders is over Nagorno-Karabakh - a majority ethnic Armenian breakaway region inside Azerbaijan, which declared independence as the USSR fell, sparking a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives.

Turkey is strongly backing Azerbaijan in the conflict but has denied allegations by Macron that Ankara has sent hundreds of Syrian militia fighters to help Azerbaijan.

Erdogan on Saturday accused France - which along with Russia and the United States co-chairs the Minsk Group tasked with resolving the conflict - of "being behind the disasters and the occupations in Azerbaijan".

He also repeated previous claims that France, which has a strong Armenian community, is arming Yerevan. "You think you will restore peace with the arms you are sending to Armenians. You cannot because you are not honest."

But the Elysee official said that Erdogan had two months to reply to the demands for a change in stance and that it ends its "dangerous adventures" in the eastern Mediterranean and "irresponsible conduct" over Karabakh.

"Measures need to be taken by the end of the year," said the official.



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Pakistan courts sealed after judges, staff test positive for COVID-19

Islamabad: Pakistan on Friday reported 1,078 cases of coronavirus in a day for the first time since July, when it recorded 1,074 cases.

According to the National Health Services (NHS) Ministry’s portal, Pakistan’s daily death toll has also jumped and on Friday 20 deaths were reported taking the total number of fatalities to 6,795.

Pakistan’s coronavirus cases have risen to 332,186 with 11,864 active cases.

Highest positivity rate of 3% in 70 days

Pakistan has witnessed an uptick in the COVID-19 positivity ratio in recent days. A day earlier, Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives Asad Umar had said the national positivity rate had exceeded 3 percent after more than 70 days.

Punjab Health Minister Dr Yasmin Rashid also urged the nation to wear face masks and practice social distancing to curb the spread of the virus. “If standard operating procedures (SOPs) are not followed, I’m afraid we will have to resort to stricter measures,” she warned.

“COVID-19 reached its highest rate of 3% after 70 days today (national). People are advised strongly to wear masks, keep social distancing for themselves & for others. If SOPs are not followed, I’m afraid we will have to resort to stricter measures,” said Dr Yasmin Rashid in her tweet.

Courts sealed after judges, staff test positive

Meanwhile, a number of district and session courts were closed in Islamabad after judges and staff there tested positive for COVID-19.

The district and the health administration have sealed 11 such courts out of 70 where 12 judges and staff were diagnosed with the disease. The sealed courts are three courts of additional and sessions judge, a senior civil judge court and seven courts of civil judges, said an official of the District Health Office (DHO).

According to a notice issued by the Islamabad District Bar Association Secretary Nabeel Tahir Mirza the situation has become dangerous because of violations of standard operating procedure (SOP), even though all members were repeatedly advised to follow these rules.

It said that 11 judges and court staffers have contracted the disease as a result, and the courts will be closed for 14 days.

NCOC launches WhatsApp number

Meanwhile, the National Command & Operation Control (NCOC) has launched a WhatsApp number “for registration of COVID-19 related violations by the public.”

A message on the website of the NHS ministry says, “If you come across any violation of COVID SOPs like non-wearing of mask, non-adherence to social distancing, overcrowding at public places etc, please take a picture and brief account of violation and send it to 03353336262 (0335333NCOC) along with location time and city details”



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Doctors may have found secretive new organs in the centre of your head

Washington: After millenniums of careful slicing and dicing, it might seem as though scientists have figured out human anatomy. A few dozen organs, a couple hundred bones and connective tissue to tie it all together.

But despite centuries of scrutiny, the body is still capable of surprising scientists.

A team of researchers in the Netherlands has discovered what may be a set of previously unidentified organs: a pair of large salivary glands, lurking in the nook where the nasal cavity meets the throat. If the findings are confirmed, this hidden wellspring of spit could mark the first identification of its kind in about three centuries.

Image Credit: Graphic News

Any modern anatomy book will show just three major types of salivary glands: one set near the ears, another below the jaw and another under the tongue. "Now, we think there is a fourth," said Dr. Matthijs Valstar, a surgeon and researcher at the Netherlands Cancer Institute and an author on the study, published last month in the journal Radiotherapy and Oncology.

Limited study

The study was small, and examined a limited patient population, said Dr. Valerie Fitzhugh, a pathologist at Rutgers University who wasn't involved in the research. But "it seems like they may be onto something," she said. "If it's real, it could change the way we look at disease in this region."

Even without a direct therapeutic application, Dr. Yvonne Mowery, a radiation oncologist at Duke University, said she "was quite shocked that we are in 2020 and have a new structure identified in the human body."

Valstar and his colleagues, who usually study data from people with prostate cancer, didn't set out on a treasure hunt for unidentified spit glands. But the structures are important to researchers and doctors who deal in oncology.

Salivary glands collectively churn out about a quart of spit each day, which is responsible for "a lot of things that make you enjoy life," Valstar said. It lubricates the mouth, making it easier to speak and swallow. It ferries the tasty chemicals in food to the microscopic cells that can sense them. It even comes imbued with crude healing powers, waging war against germs and speeding the closure of wounds.

Doctors take numerous precautions to avoid damaging the glands when administering radiation therapy, which can, with a single misdirected zap, permanently compromise the delicate tissues.

Unfamiliar structures

While perusing a set of scans from a machine that could visualise tissues in high detail, the researchers noticed two unfamiliar structures dead centre in the head: a duo of flat, spindly glands, a couple inches in length, draped discreetly over the tubes that connect the ears to the throat.

Puzzled by the images, they dissected tissue from two cadavers and found that the glands bore similarities to known salivary glands that sit below the tongue. The new glands were also hooked up to large draining ducts - a hint that they were funneling fluid from one place to another.

It's not completely clear how the glands eluded anatomists. But "the location is not very accessible, and you need very sensitive imaging to detect it," said Dr. Wouter Vogel, a radiation oncologist at the Netherlands Cancer Institute and an author on the study. The body's other large salivary glands, which sit closer to the surface of the skin, can also be poked and prodded; that's far less feasible with this fourth pair of structures, which are tucked under the base of the skull.

The new find, Vogel said, might help explain why people who undergo radiation therapy for cancer of the head or neck so often end up with chronic dry mouth and swallowing problems. Because these obscure glands weren't known to doctors, "nobody ever tried to spare them" from such treatments, Vogel said.

Tougher to find

Dr. Alvand Hassankhani, a radiologist at the University of Pennsylvania, said he was hesitant to label the structures "new organs." In addition to the three pairs of known large salivary glands, some 1,000 minor salivary glands are sprinkled across the lining of the mouth and throat. They are more petite and tougher to find through imaging or scanning than their heftier cousins. It's possible that the Dutch researchers just happened upon a better way to image a set of underappreciated minor glands, Hassankhani said.

Fitzhugh and Mowery were slightly more persuaded, but both called for more data. "To have it one clinical data set is never enough," Mowery said.

The patient population in the study also wasn't very diverse, Fitzhugh said. The original group examined by the researchers was made up entirely of people with prostate or urethral gland cancer, and included only one woman among 100 subjects.

"You'd like to see more balance," Fitzhugh said.

The imaging techniques used in the study were also specifically tailored to hunt for tumorous growths in this patient population. It may be worth widening these experiments to include a new group of people, using different methods, she said.

Fitzhugh added that it should be easier to spot the camera-shy glands with traditional techniques "now that they know to look for it."



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New study projects up to 500k US COVID-19 deaths by February

Washington: More than 500,000 lives could be lost across the US due to the novel coronavirus pandemic by the end of February 2021, a new study has projected.

According to the study published on Friday in the Nature Medicine journal, researchers at the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) also found that universal mask use could save around 130,000 lives in the country in the coming months, Xinhua news agency reported.

"We are heading into a very substantial fall/winter surge, so the idea that the pandemic is going away ... we do not believe is true," Christopher Murray, IHME director and a lead author of the study, told reporters.

"We expect the surge to steadily grow across different states and at the national level, and to continue to increase as we head towards high levels of daily deaths in late December and in January," he said.

The predictions came a day after President Donald Trump said the coronavirus is "going away" in his last and final presidential debate with his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who warned of a "dark winter" and encouraged mask-wearing.

In their face-off, while Trump claimed "we're learning to live with" the coronavirus, Biden rebutted that "we're learning to die with it" .

The fresh projection came as the US is trying to battle a resurgence of fresh coronavirus cases.

Presently the worst-hit country in the world by the pandemic, the US has so far reported 8,484,991 Covid-19 cases and 223,914 deaths.



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News in pictures: Typhoon kills many in Philippines; Gold seized in Kerala; Exam malpractice in India; Russia tightens virus restrictions...



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Pakistan Democratic Movement's third power show in Quetta today

Islamabad: The 11-party anti-government bloc ‘Pakistan Democratic Movement’ (PDM) today put up an impressive show of power in its third public meeting in Quetta after Gujranwala and Karachi and drew quite a large number of protesters, mostly workers of the Balochistan’s nationalist and Jamiat Ulema Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

PDM’s President and JUI-F leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman and Vice President of the PML-N and daughter of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Maryam Nawaz are among the leading speakers who criticized Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government for failing on its promises with the masses.

‘Nawaz popularity on the rise’

Earlier, on her arrival at the Quetta airport, while talking to media persons, Maryam Nawaz said the PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif’s popularity was on the rise as is seen by the overwhelming public reaction to his speeches via video link.

“The reality is that despite silencing him on mainstream media, Nawaz Sharif has become the sole voice that is echoing in Pakistan.

He is the only political personality, who despite not being in this country, being sick and in London, is shining on the land and sky of the country. There is only one face that the public can see, in which they are trying to find the solution for their problems and considering their messiah after Allah,” she said.

JUI-F leader Fazlur Rehman also had a brief interaction with the media upon his arrival in Quetta before the rally.

“From the Quetta rally, we shall send a clear and unified message to the incompetent selected government of Imran Khan that people are no longer ready to accept him as prime minister,” said Maulana adding Imran Khan’s government has failed miserably in every field of life.

He said Balochistan’s message to Khan is clear “You are inefficient, you are unsuccessful. The message to the forces standing behind you is that under no circumstances can anyone be above the Constitution and the law,” he said

Bilawal Bhutto to address via video link

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari who is currently in Gilgit-Baltistan for an election campaign is scheduled to address the PDM rally via video link.

According to the party’s spokesperson, Bhutto will address the rally via video link as the latter is busy in the GB election campaign and it was not possible for him to reach Quetta for tomorrow’s power show.

Meanwhile, ahead of the rally, Balochistan government has taken a number of strict measures ensuring fool proof security in and around the PDM’s public meeting venue, Ayub Stadium.

The Balochistan government has deployed more than 4,000 security officials from police, Frontier Corps (FC) and other forces for the rally of the opposition alliance. Balochistan government’s spokesperson Liaquat Ali Shahwani said that cell phone services have been suspended due to “security concerns.” He urged PDM leaders to direct their party workers to cooperate and not politicize the move.



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Bengaluru drug case: CPI(M) leader's son Bineesh Kodiyeri in custody till November 2

New Delhi, India: Bineesh Kodiyeri, son of CPI(M) Kerala secretary Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, was arrested by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and sent into custody till November 2 by a court in connection with a money laundering case related to the Bengaluru drugs case.

According to the ED, Bineesh Kodiyeri was arrested for the offence of money laundering under Section 19(1) of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA) on Thursday.

The economic offences watchdog said that Mohammed Anoop, a drug peddler arrested by the ED, had during his custodial interrogation inter-alia admitted that he was indulging in sale and purchase of narcotics drugs and was closely associated with Bineesh.

"During the course of the investigation, it is revealed that Mohammed Anoop is a Benamidar of Bineesh and all his financial dealings were done on the instructions of Bineesh who had paid huge amounts of money to Mohammed Anoop," the ED said in a statement.

The ED also said that the probe has revealed Anoop held various bank accounts and indulged in transferring and layering of huge proceeds of crime into several accounts.

However, Anoop could not explain these cash and fund transactions and was completely evasive in his replies, the ED said.

"Fund trail investigation also established that a huge amount of unaccounted funds were being regularly credited in his accounts by Bineesh. These were preceded by large cash deposits in Kerala into the accounts of Bineesh," it added.

The ED has initiated an investigation against Mohammed Anoop and others based on an FIR registered by Narcotics Control Bureau, Bengaluru, registered under various sections of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.



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IPL 2020 in UAE: Mumbai Indians take on Delhi Capitals with one eye already on play-offs

Dubai: Four-time kings and defending champions Mumbai Indians are the only side having the luxury of playing their last two Indian Premier League group games safe in the knowledge they are already qualified for the play-offs as the last of the double-headers come around this weekend.

Mumbai will take on third-placed Delhi Capitals in Dubai at 2pm on Saturday and then Royal Challengers Bangalore will be up against the steadily improving Sunrisers Hyderabad from 6pm at Sharjah Stadium.

Sitting pretty at the top of the table, Mumbai are the only team who can be mathematically assured of a spot in the play-offs as they head the standings with 16 points and two games in hand.

Delhi, on the other hand, need to seriously look at getting the two points they need to book their place and put their house back in order. The Capitals have lost all form after the initial euphoria of raking in those early points.

The Capitals’ last win came against the already out-of-contention Chennai Super Kings on October 17 when they won by five wickets with a ball to spare. But after that, they have fallen to three straight defeats — a five-wicket loss against Kings XI Punjab, a 59-run thrashing from the Kolkata Knight Riders followed by another batting display that led to them falling to a huge 88-run defeat against Hyderabad.

No doubt, Delhi have managed to cling to one of the top four spots despite those three losses. But, they will need to seriously add at least a couple of more points to fully ensure their right for the play-offs while holding of Punjab, Kolkata and Hyderabad.

Equally desperate for a win will be Bangalore as they take on Hyderabad, who have sort of become the late bloomers in this year’s IPL.

Having started off slowly, the David Warner-led Sunrisers have threatened the rest of the field with their steady and consistent displays in the second half of the competition.

Though presently sitting in sixth place, the Sunrisers have a much better net run-rate compared to all other teams, except Mumbai. So, two more wins and four points would take them to 14, and that could see off Kolkata and Punjab.

Looking like one of the best sides in the competition, the Sunrisers had just three wins from their first seven matches. They began with two successive losses — against RCB and KKR — only to bounce back with a couple of wins against Delhi and Chennai. They lost another two matches — against Mumbai and Rajasthan Royals — but did well with two points against Punjab to wrap up the first half of the competition.

It is in the second half that the Sunrisers have displayed their presence as a compact team while adding another two wins in the last five matches. Both their wins were amplified by the fact that the Sunrisers can be a side capable of challenging the best teams this year.

Their first was an eight-wicket thrashing of Rajasthan and this was followed by that thumping of Delhi — a match that witnessed the Sunrisers reach a huge total of 219-2 in their allotted overs and then bowl out the Capitals for just 131 in 19 overs.

The Sunrisers could well have had three wins in the second part of the competition, if it wasn’t for a Super Over loss against Kolkata.

The Virat Kohli-led RCB will still be looking at another two points against such a well-rounded team. The Bengaluru side are second with 14 points — the same as Delhi but with a much better net run-rate.

Besides that, they will also be aware of what exactly they need to do against a side like the Sunrisers as they continue their quest for a first-ever IPL crown.



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Rs4.84 billion for fighting COVID-19 lies unutilised in Pakistan

Islamabad: The Pakistan government has not utilised Rs4.84 billion (Dh 110.365 million) it received in the form of donations and funds from the public and overseas Pakistanis for the fight against COVID-19.

A reply submitted in the National Assembly by the minister in charge of Poverty Alleviation and Social Safety Division has revealed that this is available at present as no funds have been utilized so far in supporting those who have been affected by the virus.

Member National Assembly (MNA) Abdul Akbar Chitrali has sought details of the funds received in donations in the fight against coronavirus. The house was also informed that out of Rs4.84 billion, an amount of Rs1.06 billion (Dh24.170 million) was collected through international donations and Rs3.78bn (Dh86.194 million) through domestic donations.

Not only are the funds lying unutilised, they have not been transferred to the provinces as well.

Prime Minister Imran Khan had in April urged the nation to come forward and donate generously to the Prime Minister’s Coronavirus Relief Fund that had been established to help those “who have been made destitute by the lockdown.”

Pakistani citizens were asked to send their donations to a specific account number in different banks of Pakistan.

3 million jobs lost

According to the Finance Ministry’s survey, around 3 million jobs were lost because of novel coronavirus and the proportion of those living in poverty was also increased from 24.3% to 33.5% due to squeezed economic opportunities in the wake of the pandemic outbreak.

The ministry had also predicted Pakistan exports might fall to $22 billion (Dh 80.80 billion) owing to low commodity prices and decreased economic activity in the United States, European Union, United Kingdom and the Middle East. Before the pandemic, they amounted to $25.5 billion (Dh 93.66 billion).

Pakistan’s prestigious university locked down

Three departments in Quaid-i-Azam University (QAU) were sealed on Monday after five COVID-19 cases were reported there. A total of 49 schools and colleges have so far been sealed/locked down in the federal capital as new cases of coronavirus are being reported on a regular basis.

According to the District Health Office (DHO), Departments of Chemistry, Biochemistry and Bachelor of Business Administration were sealed for at least five days.

“According to the Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), educational institutions are sealed if two or more cases are reported from there. Once the building is disinfected, a request will be moved to open the university,” he said.

A girls’ college, the Islamabad Model College for Girls (IMCG) Sector F-10/2 has also been sealed after two positive cases were reported there.

The district health teams are taking precautionary measures on the entire campus to prevent the further spread of the virus.

With these latest figures, the number of coronavirus cases in Islamabad has jumped to 19,012 and deaths to 212. The recoveries in the federal capital have also shown some promising results with 17,454 recovered cases so far.

773 new cases in one day

Pakistan on Tuesday reported 773 new cases of coronavirus and 6 deaths in a period of twenty-four hours. With these latest figures Pakistan’s toll due to coronavirus stands at 6,745 and total number of infections 329,375. The county conducted 27,133 tests in a day making the total number of tests to 4.317678 million.



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COVID-19: All commercial activities in Pakistan to shut down after 10pm

Islamabad: The National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) has slapped a ban on all commercial activities after 10pm in eleven cities most adversely hit by the coronavirus.

According to the NCOC, 80 per cent of COVID-19 cases have been reported from these cities including Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Multan, Hyderabad, Gilgit, Muzaffarabad, Mirpur, Peshawar and Quetta.

After the NCOC decision, markets, shopping malls, marriage halls and restaurants were closed at 10pm there today. Besides, the NCOC also directed closure of amusement/public parks in these cities at 6pm daily.

Highest ratio of COVID-19 in 70 days

Chairman of the NCOC and Minister for Planning Asad Umar in a tweet warned that the national COVID-19 positivity ratio was higher than 3 per cent and this is happening after more than 70 days.

“NCOC has tightened restrictions on some high risk public activities. However, the rising spread of the disease can only be controlled if people believe in the need for precautions,” said Asad Umar in his tweet.

Rs 35,000 fine, 6-month imprisonment for not wearing masks

According to the NCOC, wearing of mask has been made mandatory in the country and violators will have to pay a maximum Rs35,000 (Dh 800) starting from Rs6,000 (Dh 137) fine along with 6-month jail term.

A notification in this regard will be published in the Gazette of Pakistan on Thursday, but it will come into effect after Eid Milad-un-Nabi.

All the parameters i.e. positivity of tests, mortality rate, admissions in hospitals, etc, are increasing. Though there is no exponential increase in cases, I believe that the time has come to take steps to control the virus, otherwise things can become worse,” Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Health Dr Faisal Sultan said after the NCOC meeting.

Pakistan should not lose the war won against the virus. We are taking provinces onboard and I have reached Lahore to talk to the Punjab government. Similarly, other provinces will also be taken onboard, he added.

Shops sealed, fine imposed

Following the NCOC guidelines, the Punjab government’s health department sealed 35 shops and five restaurants for flouting Covid-19 SOPs in various parts of Lahore.

According to details, 11 shops Model Town, 20 in Raiwind, while four in Cantonment area were sealed. Five restaurants were also sealed over SOPs’ violation.

Sealing notices were also affixed on the premises shut down by the administration.

16 deaths in 24 hours

Pakistan on Thursday reported 16 deaths (2% casualty rate) in last twenty-four hours due to coronavirus. The total number of fatalities caused due to Covid-19 stands at 6,775. Besides, 908 new cases of coronavirus were reported in the last 24 hours taking the tally to 331,108. The number of active cases of coronavirus has also gone up in the country, 11,695 to be exact.



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