Showing posts with label Americas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Americas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 July 2021

COVID-19: Emirates airline extends ban on flights from India, Pakistan

Dubai: Emirates airline will suspend flights from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka until July 28.

Furthermore, passengers who have connected through India, Pakistan, Bangladesh or Sri Lanka in the last 14 days will not be accepted to travel from any other point to the UAE, said the airline on its website.

This is the latest extension of a travel ban on flights from India as COVID-19 cases surge around the globe due to the highly transmissible 'Delta' variant virus.

UAE Nationals, holders of UAE Golden Visas and members of diplomatic missions who comply with updated COVID 19 protocols, are exempt and may be accepted for travel.

"Our Contact Centres are experiencing a greater volume of calls than anticipated. If your call is not related to travel within the next 48 hours, please consider calling back later," said Emirates.

Etihad had previously confirmed that inbound flights from India would remain suspended until July 31.

Etihad responded to a customer query: "Following the latest UAE Government directives, passenger travel from India to UAE and Etihad's network has been suspended effectively until 31 July 2021"



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Australia sees COVID-19 cases climb, police warn against protest repeat

Sydney: Australia’s most populous state reported a rise in new COVID-19 cases on Monday despite a weeks-long stay-at-home order, while police vowed to crack down on any repeat of a anti-lockdown protest which turned violent at the weekend.

New South Wales, which has had more than 5 million people in Sydney city under lockdown for a month, reported 145 new cases of the virus, from 141 a day earlier, as it struggles to contain an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.

The state also reported two new deaths, a man and a woman both in their 80s, taking its total fatalities to 10 since the flare-up began a month ago and the national total to 920 since the start of the pandemic.

Of particular concern, 51 of the newly diagnosed were active in the community before testing positive, raising the risk of transmission. The authorities have said they want that number near zero before lifting the city’s most restrictive lockdown of the pandemic at a July 30 target date.

“We might need to go harder in some areas and release some settings in others,” state premier Gladys Berejiklian said at a televised news conference, apparently referencing five government areas of Sydney’s suburbs at the epicentre of the outbreak.

Berejiklian added that she would give an update on movement restrictions in the next few days.

Protests

At the weekend, thousands of people marched in an anti-lockdown protest which turned violent in central Sydney, an event that state chief health officer Kerry Chant called “distressing”.

As images and videos of the protest circulated on social media, including one image of a man apparently punching a police horse in the head, state police commissioner Mick Fuller said some 10,000 people had called the police hotline to report people suspected of breaking lockdown orders.

The calls to police were “an amazing outcry by the community, not just in terms of their disgust at the protest but at the way the police were treated”, said Fuller.

Police knew of plans for a repeat protest and similar behaviour “won’t be tolerated again”, he added.

Victoria state, also under lockdown, reported 11 new cases, although all were in quarantine during their infectious period.

Authorities said they would decide the next day whether to lift restrictions as hoped.

Neighbouring South Australia said it was on track to exit its snap one-week lockdown on Wednesday, after reporting one new local case, also in quarantine through their infectious period.

Vaccine rush

The outbreak, sparked by an infected airport transit driver in Sydney, has resulted in thousands of new cases of the fast-moving Delta variant and reimposed lockdown on more than half the country’s 25 million population.

With only about 16% of Australians aged over 16 years so far fully vaccinated, the country’s main drug regulator on the weekend changed its recommendation to encourage wider takeup of the AstraZeneca Plc vaccine.

The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI) had previously recommended restricting the AstraZeneca shot, the main vaccine in the country’s immunisation arsenal, to people aged over 60 due to an extremely rare risk of blood clots in younger people.

Many Australians including those over 60 had opted to wait for an alternative made by Pfizer Inc which has had its use restricted to people aged 40 to 60 due to supply constraints.

ATAGI on the weekend recommended that all adults in Sydney should now “strongly consider the benefits of earlier protection” with the AstraZeneca jab.

The move was supported by lawmakers, with Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg telling reporters that “getting vaccinated is our ticket out of this crisis”.

AstraZeneca welcomed the change, saying regulators around the world had “stated that the benefit(s) of using our vaccine significantly outweigh the risks”.

With about 32,900 cases and less than 1,000 deaths, Australia has kept its coronavirus numbers relatively low although the Delta strain and low vaccination numbers among developed economies have worried residents.



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Pakistan’s Shehroze Kashif, 19, becomes youngest person to summit K2

Islamabad: A 19-year-old Pakistani has become the youngest person to summit K2, the world’s second highest mountain, the Alpine Club of Pakistan said on Tuesday.

Shehroze Kashif reached the 8,611 metre (28,251 foot) summit at 8.10am on Tuesday.

Kashif, who began climbing in his early teens, scaled the world’s 12th highest mountain, 8,047-metre (26,400 foot) Broad Peak, at the age of 17. In May, he became the youngest Pakistani to scale Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain. He now holds an additional record as the youngest person to have summitted K2 and Everest.

Several of Pakistan’s youngest climbers have been on K2 in recent days. Sajid Ali Sadpara, who in 2019 became the youngest to climb K2 at the age of 20, is part of an expedition there to find the body of his father, who went missing along with two other climbers in February.

On Monday, sherpas affixing ropes for climbers about 300m below an obstacle known as the Bottleneck discovered the bodies of Muhammad Ali Sadpara of Pakistan, Iceland’s John Snorri and Chile’s Juan Pablo Mohr. The same day, Samina Baig, 30, said she was abandoning an attempt to summit the mountain because of dangerous conditions. Baig became the youngest Pakistani woman to scale Mount Everest in 2013.

On Sunday night the body of Scottish climber, Rick Allen, 68, was recovered after he was swept away by an avalanche while attempting to traverse a new route on K2’s southeastern face.

Earlier this month, Kim Hong-bin, 57, a South Korean Paralympian, went missing after falling from the nearby Broad Peak.



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Southeast Asia’s COVID-19 cases hit new highs, Malaysian doctors protest

Kuala Lumpur / Bangkok: Thailand reported a record number of coronavirus infections on Monday, while neighbouring Malaysia has more than a million, as the virulent Delta variant carves a deadly path through Southeast Asia, now a global epicentre for the virus.

Thailand’s 15,376 new cases were a daily high for a second consecutive day in the nation of more than 66 million.

Malaysia, which has one of Southeast Asia’s highest infection rates relative to its population, passed the one-million mark on Sunday, with a record 17,045 infections, despite being under lockdown since June.

Like many parts of the region home to more than 650 million, Malaysian hospitals and medical staff have taken the brunt of the outbreak as beds, ventilators and oxygen run short.

Thousands of Malaysian contract doctors staged a walkout on Monday, but pledged patients would not be affected by the protest.

“Almost 150 medical staff have resigned this year because they are fatigued with the current system,” said a doctor at a protest in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur, who gave only his first name, Muhammad.

A government medical contract doctor participates in a walkout strike at Kuala Lumpur Hospital amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia July 26, 2021. Image Credit: Reuters

The doctors, who want permanent postings, as well as better pay and benefits, said an offer by Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin to extend their contracts did not go far enough.

Malaysia has outpaced many neighbours with its vaccination campaign, however, as about 16.9% of its 32 million people have been fully inoculated.

Last week, Thailand imposed tougher lockdown measures in the capital, Bangkok, and 12 high-risk provinces, suspending most domestic fights and widening the areas subjected to curfews.

The government has faced public criticism over the pace of its vaccination rollout, with only 5.6% of the population fully inoculated.

“I believe that the virus can be eliminated from the country if everyone is vaccinated,” said 48-year-old Charn, who was accompanying an elderly relative getting a vaccine dose at a Bangkok train station and declined to give his full name.

Indonesia relaxing some surbs

Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s most populous nation, with more than 270 million people, also has its biggest caseload. It has reported more than 3.1 million infections and 83,000 deaths.

Still this week it said that although curbs would be extended by a week, some measures would be relaxed, allowing traditional markets and restaurants with outdoor areas to re-open.

Hospitals have been filled with patients in the past month, particularly on the densely populated island of Java and in Bali, but on Sunday President Joko Widodo said infections and hospital occupancy had declined, without giving specifics.

“The decision doesn’t seem to be related to the pandemic, but to economics,” said Pandu Riono, an epidemiologist at the University of Indonesia, urging people to follow health protocols.

Indonesia’s death toll set records on four days last week, culminating in 1,566 on Friday, as authorities pledged to add more intensive care units.

After having reined in the virus for much of the pandemic, Vietnam has faced a renewed outbreak, with southern business hub Ho Chi Minh City and surrounding provinces accounting for most new infections.

Since June, infections have surged in Myanmar, already in turmoil after February’s military coup. Sunday’s 355 deaths were a record, while daily cases topped 6,000 last Thursday.

In the Philippines, authorities have been scrambling to curb the spread of the Delta variant.

Infections have recently started to rise and authorities this week suspended travel from Malaysia and Thailand, as well as tightening curbs in the area around the capital, Manila.



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India: Now Kerala government employees have to affirm that not taken or given dowry

Thiruvananthapuram: In wake of a spate of suicides by young women in the previous month and the day-long fast undertaken recently by Governor Arif Mohammed Khan, a new Kerala government order has asked all state government employees to give an affidavit to their departmental heads that they have neither taken or given dowry.

The new order, issued by the Woman and Child Welfare Department, directs all the heads to ensure that they submit a report to this effect to the department every six months.

Following the spate of suicides last month by young women after being harassed for dowry, the Kerala government appointed a Chief Dowry Prohibition officer and the new order was handed out to District Collectors, Women and Child development officers and Women Protection officers.

Incidentally, soon after the various reports of suicides came out last month, a note by the then Chief Minister Oommen Chandy in 2014, had turned viral.

In the Facebook note, he says the rules about dowry are quite clear - that it first was mentioned in the 1961 Kerala Government Servants Contract Rules and through an amendment in 1976, it was made more clear, holding that government servants are banned from giving or taking dowry.

Chandy said that, in 2014, he further tightened these rules when a fresh directive came wherein each and every government official who gets married has to give an affidavit to his head of department that he has not taken any dowry.

Even though giving or taking dowry is banned, today the going rates of dowry, cutting among religions, continues unabated and among Christians, even though the amount of gold is very less, hard cash has to be given and a doctor with a post-graduate degree can easily get anything above Rs one crore in cash, and of late, women are given a share of the property of their parents.

Among Hindus, it is gold and 100 sovereigns of gold is a common feature and then comes the share of the properties, and not to mention about pocket money given to the bridegroom by the bride’s parents.

In the Muslim community also, things are no different.



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Kuwait to deport Pakistani actor

Cairo: Kuwaiti authorities have decided to deport Pakistani actor Farhan Al Ali charged with outraging public morality on social media, a local newspaper has reported, citing a security source.

Last September, a Kuwaiti criminal court sentenced Al Ali to two years in prison after convicting him of violating public decency.

The court also ordered the actor to pay a fine of 1,000 Kuwaiti dinars and deportation from the country after serving the penalty.

Kuwait’s top appeals court recently revoked the verdict.

The security source said that the deportation order is effective despite the Court of Cassation’s verdict overturning the jailing sentence.

“The administration of the deportation prison will determine his deportation date for his homeland within 48 hours,” the source told Al Qabas newspaper.

Al Ali, who performed in a number of Kuwaiti TV serials and stage shows, was arrested in June last year.

He was charged with releasing a video deemed immoral on social media.

Last year, Kuwaiti media reported that the actor had appeared naked in a video on his snapchat account. At the time, he claimed his snapchat had been hacked.



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Tokyo Olympics 2020 at a glance: Day 2 major moments and updates

Lee Kiefer Image Credit: AP

FENCING

Lee Kiefer has earned the third gold medal for the United States by beating defending champion Inna Deriglazova of Russia 15-13 in the women’s foil final. Kiefer ripped off her mask after the final point and shouted “Oh my God!” She was fifth at the 2012 London Games and was 10th at Rio.

COVID

Olympic medalists can now remove their masks - briefly - on the podium after the IOC relaxed its health rules. Acknowledging that athletes want to smile and show emotion, the IOC is now letting them have 30 seconds of maskless time for photographs. The IOC says this is a “a unique moment in their sporting career”. The new maskless moments require athletes to stay on their own podium steps. Masks must be back on for group photos on the top step.

Saif bin Futtais in men's skeet qualifying Image Credit: Reuters

SHOOTING

The UAE"s Saif bin Futtais had a frustrating day in the men’s skeet shooting with a first-day score of 70 in qualifying at the Asaka Shooting range to sit 27th. Competing in a field of 30, Bin Futtais could not find his rhythm as Frenchman Eric Delaunay and American Vincent Hancock (75) lead the standings.

Uta Abe celebrates judo gold Image Credit: Reuters

JUDO

Hifumi Abe won Japan’s third judo gold medal with an ippon victory over Georgia’s Vazha Margvelashvili. He joins his younger sister among Japan’s gold medalists in the country’s beloved homegrown martial art. Hifumi triumphed in men’s 66kg shortly after Uta Abe claimed her own first gold medal in the women’s 52kg division at the Budokan. Uta beat France’s Amandine Buchard. Brazil’s Daniel Cargnin and South Korea’s An Baul won bronze at men’s 66kg.

VOLLEYBALL

Defending champions China lost their opening match of the women’s volleyball tournament for the second straight Olympics. Turkey stunned the favourites in Pool B 25-21, 25-14, 25-14. The Chinese are once again following a similar pattern to five years ago when they lost their opening match to the Netherlands and two others in pool play before finding a groove in the knockout round.

WEIGHTLIFTING

Li Fabin of China has added Olympic gold to his world title in the men’s 61kg weightlifting category. Li lifted a total of 313kg and was assured of victory when Eko Yuli Irawan of Indonesia failed twice on what would have been a world record 177kg clean and jerk. Li missed his own record shot at 178kg. He earlier added a quirky touch by standing on one leg during his 166kg clean and jerk in a rarely-seen style known as the flamingo stance. Igor Son of Kazakhstan lifted a total 294kg for bronze.

Naomi Osaka Image Credit: Reuters

TENNIS

Naomi Osaka made quick work of her first match in nearly two months. The Japanese superstar, who lit the Olympic cauldron, eased past 52nd-ranked Zheng Saisai of China 6-1, 6-4 in the first round of the tennis. It was Osaka’s first match since she withdrew from the French Open and sat out Wimbledon to take a mental health break while revealing she has dealt with depression.

Bryson DeChambeau Image Credit: Reuters

GOLF

USA's Bryson DeChambeau and world No. 1 Jon Rahm have tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss the Olympics. Dechambeau will be replaced by Patrick Reed. He says he is “deeply disappointed not to be able to compete in the Olympics for Team USA”. Reed was scheduled to undergo testing on Sunday and Monday to clear himself to compete in Tokyo. Spain's Rahm is the highest-profile athlete to withdraw from the Games through COVID. The the first round at the Kasumigaseki Country Club is set for Thursday.

TENNIS

The International Tennis Federation is giving Olympics players extra time during breaks in play after facing criticism for staging matches during the highest heat of the day. The federation says change of ends and set breaks have been extended by an extra 30 seconds to 90 seconds. Temperatures have risen above 30C for a second straight day at Ariake Tennis Park. Second-seeded Daniil Medvedev had asked for longer breaks to bring the Olympics into line with regular tour events.

Yuto Horigome Image Credit: AFP

SKATEBOARDING

Japan’s Yuto Horigome has won the first ever skateboarding competition at the Games, taking gold in ‘men’s street’ in the city where he learnt to skate as a kid and where his sport is often frowned upon. Silver went to Brazilian Kelvin Hoefler. American Jagger Eaton took bronze. One of skateboarding’s biggest stars, Nyjah Huston from the US, fell repeatedly trying to land tricks and placed 7th in the eight-man final.

Ash Barty Image Credit: NYT

TENNIS

Top-ranked Ash Barty has been upset by 48th-ranked Spanish opponent Sara Sorribes Tormo 6-4, 6-3 in the first round of the tennis. It was Barty’s Olympic singles debut. She won a doubles match with Australian teammate Storm Sanders on Saturday. The defeat comes 15 days after Barty won Wimbledon for her second Grand Slam title.

TENNIS

Two-time defending champion Andy Murray has withdrawn from the singles tennis tournament. Organisers did not immediately say why the British player pulled out shortly ahead of his scheduled opener against ninth-seeded Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada on Centre Court. Max Purcell of Australia will play Auger-Aliassime instead. Organisers said Murray remained in the doubles tournament with partner Joe Salisbury. Murray and Salisbury beat the second-seeded French team of Pierre-Hughes Herbert and Nicolas Mahut 6-3, 6-2 on Saturday.

SWIMMING

Australia has set the first swimming world record of the Tokyo Games in the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay. The Aussies touched in 3 minutes, 29.69 seconds, breaking the mark 3:30.05 that they set in 2018. The winning team included sisters Bronte and Cate Campbell, who took the lead and anchor legs. They were joined by Meg Harris and Emma McKeon. Canada was second in 3:32.78, while the American took their sixth medal with a bronze in 3:32.81.

Gold medallist Vitalina Batsarashkina Image Credit: Reuters

SHOOTING

Russian shooter Vitalina Batsarashkina has won gold in women’s 10m air pistol, five years after taking silver at the Rio Games. Batsarashkina shot an Olympic-record 240.3 points, finishing 0.9 ahead of Bulgaria’s Antoaneta Kostadinova. China’s Jian Ranxin took bronze. Georgia’s Nina Salukvadze made history by becoming the first athlete to compete in nine Olympics and announced her retirement after failing to qualify for the finals.

SWIMMING

Yui Ohashi has given Japan its first swimming gold in the women’s 400m individual medley, touching first in 4 minutes, 32.08 seconds. Her performance made up for the disappointment of the previous night, when gold medal favourite Daiya Seto didn’t advance to the final of the men’s 400m individual medley.

Tunisia's Ahmed Hafnaoui celebrates after winning the men's 400m freestyle gold Image Credit: AFP

SWIMMING

Tunisia’s Ahmed Hafnaoui caused a sensation in the pool when he won the 400m freestyle. Australia’s Jack McLoughlin settled for silver after leading much of the race, and Kieran Smith grabbed bronze.

SWIMMING

Chase Kalisz has won the first American medal of the Games, taking gold in the men’s 400m individual medley. Jay Litherland made it a 1-2 finish for the US, rallying on the freestyle leg to take the silver. Brendon Smith of Australia claimed the bronze.

April Ross and Alex Klineman of the US Image Credit: AP

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

Americans April Ross and Alix Klineman cruised to a straight-set victory over China in their beach volleyball opener. Ross is making her third appearance in the Summer Games with her third different partner. She’s already won a silver medal and a bronze. Klineman is making her Olympic debut. They’re among the favourites for the gold medal in Tokyo. The Americans won the first set 21-17 and then took the second 21-19 over Xue Chen and Wang Xinxin. Ross and Klineman play Spain on Tuesday.

Adam Peaty remains on course to become the first British swimmer to retain an Olympic title as he breezed into the 100m breaststroke final in Tokyo. Image Credit: Reuters

SWIMMING

World record holder and defending champion Adam Peaty shaved his moustache but won, as usual, by much more than a whisker as he powered through to the Tokyo Olympics 100m breaststroke final with the fastest time today. The 26-year-old Briton won his morning semi-final comfortably in 57.63 seconds, slower than the 57.56 in Saturday's evening heats but more than a second quicker than China's Yan Zibei.



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India: Teenager allegedly killed for being in love, cremated in front of girlfriend’s house

Patna: A teenager who was brutally killed for being in love was cremated in front of the house of the accused in Bihar, triggering tension in the area.

A heavy police force has been deployed at the village to calm the tension even as the police have arrested the main accused.

According to reports, Saurabh Kumar, 17, a resident of Muzaffarpur district, had gone to meet his girlfriend on Friday evening when the family members caught him. Subsequently, the boy was tied to a tree and badly beaten with sticks and iron rods until he fell unconscious. The boy’s genitals were also chopped by the accused, police said.

The victim was immediately rushed to a local private hospital and his family members informed but he succumbed to the injuries.

Angry over his death, the victim’s family members attacked the house of the accused on Saturday and performed the funeral of the youth in front of the main entrance of the house belonging to his girlfriend. All the family members of the girl are absconding after the incident.

Video footage showed an angry mob inside the house of the prime accused Sushant Pandey, brother of the girl, and later burning a funeral pyre in front of the main door. A heavy police force has been deployed at the village after the boy’s cremation. The police have arrested three people, including the prime accused, in connection with the incident.

“Prima facie, the boy was killed over an alleged love affair. He was beaten and his genitals were cut off. Post mortem is being done and further details about the injuries will be revealed after the report comes,” local Muzaffarpur district superintendent of police Rajesh Kumar told the media on Sunday. He added an investigation was already underway.

The victim’s father Manish Kumar alleged the girl and the boy had been talking to each other for some time and wanted to marry but the girl’s family was totally against it. According to him, the girl’s family called his son to their house and killed him.

“After his death, the girl’s brother called me to his house and forced me to sign a statement saying Saurabh was handed over to us alive at the point of a gun,” the father of the deceased alleged.



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Pakistan is latest country to pass grim milestone of 1 million COVID-19 cases

Islamabad: Pakistan has passed the grim milestone of 1 million cases of Covid-19 since the pandemic began last year.

Pakistan reported another 11 deaths on Friday and 1,425 new cases of infection, bringing the country’s tally to 1,000,034 people infected. The nation has confirmed 22,939 deaths.

Infections have been steadily increasing as the more contagious delta variant spreads, and authorities expect a new surge from public activities during the Eid Al Adha holiday this week.

About 30 nations exceed 1 million cases, and more than 190 million people have been infected worldwide, a number considered an undercount.

New cases below 2,000

The new daily cases marked the first time that the country reported less than 2,000 new cases in a day after almost one week’s time, the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) data showed.

The Centre said that the Sindh province has been the worst hit, with a total of 362,182 confirmed cases, followed by Punjab province with 351,707 infections.

A total of 22,939 people have so far died of the disease nationwide, the NCOC said, adding that 2,525 people are in critical condition.

The country currently has 53,623 active cases while 923,472 others have recovered from the disease.

Pakistan is currently facing the challenge of the surging fourth wave with the delta variant spreading across all provinces.

According to a recently conducted survey in Karachi, almost 100 per cent of new COVID-19 cases being detected in the city are of the delta variant.

Meanwhile, the Sindh government has decided to reimpose restrictions in the province from Monday amid a spike in cases.

The decision came following a meeting of the provincial coronavirus task force chaired by Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah, reported Geo News.

The Health Secretary Kazim Jatoi informed the meeting that the positivity ratio of the province has climbed to 10.3 per cent, while the provincial capital’s ratio is at 21.58 per cent.

Shah said that the coronavirus situation in the provinces was alarming and warned that it could turn worse after Eid holday.

From Monday, shopping malls and markets will be allowed to operate from 6am till 6pm and, general stores, bakeries and pharmacies will be allowed to remain open, reported Geo News.

The provincial government has also decided that there would be a ban on marriage halls and other functions. It was also decided that shrines in the province will be closed.

Restaurants will only be allowed to offer takeaway and delivery services from Monday onwards. The provincial government has also decided that education centres will be closed across Sindh from Monday, but exams will be held as per schedule.

Meanwhile, the Sindh government has decided to write to the NCOC and the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to get the mobile sims of unvaccinated people blocked, reported Geo News.

Adviser to Chief Minister Murtaza Wahab on Friday tweeted that the Sindh government has decided to approach the NCOC and the PTA that mobile sims of unvaccinated people should be blocked.

A spokesperson to Sindh CM said that the PTA would be asked to send messages to the telecom users asking them to get vaccinated and block the sims of those not getting the jab within a week.

The chief minister also directed to stop salaries of unvaccinated government employees from the next month, reported Geo News.



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Malaysian doctors stage walkout amid worsening COVID-19 outbreak

Sungai Buloh, Malaysia: Hundreds of junior doctors at state-run Malaysian hospitals staged walkouts Monday demanding better conditions as the country faces its worst coronavirus outbreak yet.

Dressed in black and holding signs with slogans including “equal pay, equal rights, equal opportunity” and “we are your future specialists”, they protested at medical facilities nationwide.

The doctors are on contracts for a set period and say their treatment is worse than that of permanent government staff, even as they have found themselves on the frontline of the fight against COVID-19.

They complain of a lack of job security, poor benefits and that very few are eventually offered permanent positions.

We want “equal rights, to be a permanent doctor,” said a medic at a government hospital that treats virus patients outside Kuala Lumpur.

“We would definitely not be here if we were treated fairly... we should be appreciated for what we do,” the doctor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters.

The medic was among dozens who took part in the action at the hospital, which lasted around half an hour.

Local media reported that several hundred participated across the country, but some doctors complained they were threatened by police and senior hospital staff in a bid to halt the protests.

Those involved said senior doctors took over their duties before they walked out, to ensure that patient care was not jeopardised.

Malaysia is currently battling its most serious outbreak, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant. Officials have reported over one million cases and about 8,000 deaths.

There are over 23,000 doctors on these contracts in Malaysia - about 45 percent of the total medical doctors in the public healthcare system, according to official estimates.

Last week, the government said it would extend junior doctors’ contracts for up to four years in a bid to forestall the protests.

But they stopped short of offering permanent jobs, and the organisers of Monday’s walkout criticised the move as “short-sighted”.



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Sindh opens its first drive-through COVID-19 vaccination facility in Karachi

Karachi: The Sindh government has set up its first drive-through COVID-19 vaccination facility in Karachi.

The drive-through vaccination camp has been set up in the posh Clifton neighbourhood of Karachi near the coastal strip of the city. The Sindh government has partnered with a private bank to establish the facility under the public-private partnership mode.

Sindh Law and Environment Adviser, Barrister Murtaza Wahab, inspected the drive-through facility and interacted with the people who queued up in vehicles, mostly with their families, while waiting for their turn to get the coronavirus jab.

Wahab said the drive-through facility provided free vaccinations to citizens.

He said the centre was well-staffed to check the vital signs of vehicle occupants before providing them with the coronavirus jab.

He said the Moderna, CanSinoBio, and Sinopharm vaccines were available at the drive-through facility.

The Sindh Law Adviser appealed to the citizens of Karachi to use this facility.

President’s advice

Meanwhile, President Dr Arif Alvi appealed to the public to get vaccinated as soon as possible and observe precautionary measures prescribed by the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) against the spread of COVID-19.

The President made the appeal while chairing a top-level meeting here at the Sindh Governor House.

Alvi also expressed concern that there had been widespread violations of the government-prescribed standard operating procedures (SOPs) against the spread of COVID-19. He said there was a need to strictly act upon these SOPs in view of the ongoing deadly fourth wave of the coronavirus infection in Pakistan.

He expressed remorse that the people who recently had offered Eid Al Adha prayers at the Faisal Mosque of Islamabad had not acted upon the due health safety precautions prescribed by the NCOC for such congregations.



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More than 60 killed in landslides, many more trapped in Indian state of Maharashtra

New Delhi: At least 65 people have died in the western Indian state of Maharashtra after torrential monsoon rains caused landslides and flooding that submerged low lying areas and cut off hundreds of villages, authorities said on Friday.

Rivers in Maharashtra were flooded after authorities released water from dams made full after many parts on the west coast received more than 200mm of rain in 24 hours and some parts received as high as 594mm rainfall.

At least four people died after a building collapsed in the financial capital Mumbai, and another 61 were killed in four landslides in other parts of Maharashtra, state government officials said.

“Rescue operations are going on at various places in Satara, Raigad and Ratnagiri. Due to heavy rainfall and flooded rivers, we are struggling to move rescue machinery quickly,” said a state government official, who declined to be named.

NDRF personnel rescuing stranded villagers from low lying areas flooded after heavy monsoon rains in Chiplun district of Maharashtra. Image Credit: AFP

Several dozen people were feared to have been trapped at landslides in Satara and Raigad districts, the official said. “At least 35 to 40 people are still trapped, we are trying to rescue them,” a local official in Raigad said,

In coastal districts, the Indian navy and army have been helping in rescue operation, Maharashtra chief minister Uddhav Thackeray said.

Thousands of trucks were stuck on a national highway linking Mumbai with the southern technology hub of Bengaluru, with the road submerged in some places, another Maharashtra government official said.

Hundreds of villages and dozens of towns in the affected areas of Maharashtra were without electricity and drinking water, he said.

In neighbouring southern states of Karnataka and Telangana some rivers are overflowing, and authorities are monitoring the situation, government officials said. Seasonal monsoon rains from June to September cause deaths and mass displacement across South Asia every year but they also deliver more than 70% of India’s rainfall and are crucial for farmers.

Frequent danger
Flooding and landslides are common during India’s treacherous monsoon season between June and September, while also causing poorly constructed buildings and walls to collapse. At least 34 people were killed after several homes were crushed by a collapsed wall and a landslide triggered in Mumbai, capital on Maharashtra, last weekend. Rainwater also inundated a water purification complex, disrupting supply “in most of the parts of Mumbai”, a megacity of 20 million people, civic authorities said. Last month, 12 people were killed when a building collapsed in a Mumbai slum. And last September, 39 people died when a three-storey apartment block collapsed in Bhiwandi near the financial capital. Climate change is making India’s monsoons stronger, according to a report from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) published in April. The report warned of potentially severe consequences for food, farming and the economy affecting nearly a fifth of the world’s population. “Since Indian society is overall affected by the monsoon in a very strong way, stronger variability produces problems for agriculture, but also for the organisation of public life,” said Anders Levermann from PIK and Columbia University. Last year, five of the most costly extreme weather events in the world were related to Asia’s unusually rainy monsoon, according to a tally by the charity Christian Aid. In 2013, some 6,000 people died when flash floods and landslides swept away entire villages in the Indian state of Uttarakhand as rivers swollen by monsoon rains overflowed.


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17 Bangladeshi migrants drown off Tunisia in shipwreck — Red Crescent

TUNIS: At least 17 Bengaladeshi migrants drowned in a shipwreck off Tunisia as they tried to cross the Mediterranean to Italy from Libya, while more than 380 were rescued by the coastguard, the Tunisian Red Crescent said on Wednesday.

The ship had set off from Zuwara, on Libya’s northwest coast, carrying migrants from Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea, Mali and Bangladesh, the humanitarian organisation said.

“17 Bengalis died and more than 380 other migrants rescued in a ship that set off from Libya’s Zuwara towards Europe,” Red Crescent official Mongi Slim said.

In recent months, several people have drowned off the Tunisian coast, with an increase in the frequency of attempted crossings to Europe from Tunisia and Libya towards Italy as the weather has improved.

Hundreds of thousands of people have made the perilous Mediterranean crossing in recent years, many of them fleeing conflict and poverty in Africa and the Middle East.

Arrivals in Italy, one of the main migrant routes into Europe, had been falling in recent years, but numbers picked up again in 2021.



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Bubble burst: New Zealand suspends COVID-19 quarantine-free travel with Australia

Wellington: New Zealand will pause its quarantine-free travel arrangement with Australia for at least eight weeks starting Friday night, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said, as Australia fights an outbreak of the highly infectious Delta virus variant.

“We’ve always said that our response would evolve as the virus evolved. This is not a decision we have taken lightly, but it is the right decision to keep New Zealanders safe,” Ardern told reporters in Auckland.

The “travel bubble” had already been paused for travellers to and from New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia.

The bubble was a rare two-way quarantine-free arrangement in Asia, where countries have kept their borders mostly closed during the pandemic. Plans for a Singapore-Hong Kong bubble have been delayed several times.

Demand for flights between Australia and New Zealand has been more subdued than anticipated since the bubble opened on April 19. read more

Scheduled airline capacity between Australia and New Zealand this month is about 44% of 2019 levels, according to data from aviation analytics firm Cirium, well below initial forecasts of more than 70%.

Air New Zealand Ltd (AIR.NZ) and Qantas Airways Ltd (QAN.AX) have been the only operators on the route, and several pauses in the bubble because of small outbreaks dented consumer confidence.

The travel bubble had been launched as test-free as well as quarantine free, but New Zealand this month introduced a testing requirement that made it more costly for Australians to visit.

Air New Zealand said the suspension of the travel bubble was expected to have a short-term operational and financial impact on its business.

The New Zealand government said for the next week there will be return flights for New Zealanders from all Australian states and territories that will require proof of a negative pre-departure test. Passengers arriving from Sydney will be required to spend two weeks in government-managed quarantine.

Qantas and Air New Zealand said that starting July 31, most Australia-New Zealand services would be cancelled, and that they would maintain a small number of flights for essential travel and freight.



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Pakistan’s Gujranwala Commissioner deploys district machinery to search for missing dog

Islamabad: Punjab’s Divisional Commissioner Zulfiqar Ahmed Ghuman has directed the police and the municipal department of the city to start door-to-door search for his pet dog that went missing on Tuesday from his house.

Local police and administration staff were given a one-point agenda: to find the German shepherd.

Acting on the orders of the Commissioner, the police and municipal officials have used loudspeakers on autorickshaws to provide information about the dog.

The local people are also being warned that strict action would be taken if the dog was found in someone’s house.

The Commissioner’s office clarified that the Municipal Corporation of Gujranwala was tasked to recover the dog and it went on to broadcast the message on the streets.

The commissioner lodged a missing complaint for the dog and demanded a ‘house-to-house search’.

Put GPS on your dog

Netizens took to social media posting comments about the commissioner’s fondness for his pet.

Hussain, a social media user, suggested to the Commissioner to put a GPS tag on his pet dog so that next time it would not get lost.

Dog worth Rs400,000

According to the police, the dog is a rare breed of the German shepherd and its market price is PKR400,000 (Dhs9,056).



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Parents of suspect in murder of Pakistan ex-ambassador’s daughter arrested

Islamabad: The Islamabad police have arrested the parents of the main accused Zahir Zakir Jaffer and their two household staff members for tampering or hiding evidence and for helping the alleged murderer in brutally killing 27-year old Noor Mukadam, daughter of the former Pakistani Ambassador to South Korea, Shaukat Ali Mukadam.

She was allegedly murdered and beheaded a day before Eid Al Adha by the suspect at his house in Islamabad’s posh area F-7/4.

On Sunday the police produced the accused before a local court of Islamabad and got two-day physical remand from the court.

Arrests based on statements of Noor’s father

In a statement, a police spokesperson said several people including Zahir’s father Zakir Jaffer, mother Asmat Adamjee and household staff Iftikhar and Jameel were taken into custody for investigation based on the statement of the victim’s father.

All those who are connected to the case in any capacity are included in the investigation, it said, adding that evidence was being collected from all the people.

Earlier during the hearing of the case, a police official told the court that Noor had jumped from an air shaft in order to escape and the household staff saw the suspect dragging the victim back into the house.

The household staff and the security guards all played silent spectators during the show of violence and torture by the accused.

If they had informed the police on time, the murder could have been prevented, the police prosecutor told the court.

Police arrived on neighbour’s call

The police reached the house within three minutes on the call of a neighbour, said the investigation officer requesting the court to grant physical remand of the suspects so their mobile phones could be retrieved.

When the police reached the crime scene, Zahir was tied up by the people as he had allegedly tried to attack others also.

Accused’s lawyer confronts charges

The counsel for Zahir’s parents and household staff, Advocate Rizwan Abbasi, however, confronted the charges saying, “My clients want justice to be done. Police took them into custody despite the fact they obtained pre-arrest bail.”

We will file a contempt case and get an FIR registered against the police, he warned.

He added that his clients were never supporting the suspect Zahir Jaffer. The accused’s parents sent people from the rehabilitation organisation after they heard noise in the house, Abbasi said, adding that they came to know about the murder after it was done.

“My clients came from Karachi to Islamabad themselves and went to the police station.”

On the other hand, the lawyer for Noor’s family, Salaar Khan, said the due process of law must be followed, arguing that the parents should remain in police custody for investigation.

‘Therapy clinic sealed’

Meanwhile, the Islamabad administration sealed “Therapyworks” where Zahir reportedly worked as a therapist supporting his mother who is also a well-known therapist of the city.

He even held counseling classes with students of various schools and youth groups.

Deputy Commissioner of Islamabad, a day earlier in a tweet shared the sealing orders of ‘Therapyworks’ have been issued and both the parents of the main accused have been arrested.

A friend of Noor requesting not to be named recalled Noor had broken up with Zahir a couple of years ago which had infuriated him and he had started sending abusive texts to her friends. “Noor was a soft-spoken girl and it gives me shudders to imagine how much pain and torture she had suffered before dying,” she further said.



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Malaysia says emergency to end as parliament sits after COVID-19 shutdown

Kuala Lumpur: Malaysia’s government will not extend a controversial coronavirus state of emergency beyond August 1, a minister said Monday, as parliament convened after a months-long suspension that sparked widespread anger.

The king in January declared the country’s first nationwide state of emergency in more than half a century to fight Covid-19, following the advice of Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin.

It allowed the government to rule by decree and suspend parliament, prompting critics to accuse Muhyiddin of using the crisis to avoid a no-confidence vote and shore up his weak coalition.

Despite the emergency and a nationwide lockdown, the outbreak only worsened, fuelled by the highly infectious Delta variant. Malaysia’s caseload breached the one million mark at the weekend, and there have been around 8,000 deaths.

Facing mounting public anger and pressure from the king, Muhyiddin agreed to reconvene the legislature for a five-day sitting before the state of emergency officially ends next month.

However, the opposition has slammed the short session as a sham that will not truly test the embattled premier’s support.

As lawmakers gathered in the 222-seat lower house Monday wearing masks and separated by transparent screens, Law Minister Takiyuddin Hassan announced the government would not request an extension of the state of emergency.

Muhyiddin also defended his handling of the pandemic in an address to the legislature, saying he understood “the public’s anxiety amid the spike in COVID cases”.

“The government is not sitting back and watching the public suffer - (we are) acting to save lives.”

Other ministers are due to brief MPs on matters related to the pandemic.

But opposition lawmakers expressed anger at not being able to debate or vote on anything during the session, pointing out the king himself had called for important issues to be scrutinised.

“The prime minister has acted as a traitor for not adhering to the wishes of the king,” opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim told the legislature.

Muhyiddin, who seized power in March last year without an election after the collapse of a reformist government, has seen his administration riven by infighting.

The biggest party backing him, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), announced it was withdrawing support for his coalition earlier this month.

But UMNO itself is split - some of its MPs still back Muhyiddin - and his position seems secure in the short term.



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Mixed AstraZeneca-Pfizer shot boosts COVID-19 antibody level: Study

Seoul: A mixed vaccination of first AstraZeneca and then a Pfizer COVID-19 shot boosted neutralizing antibody levels by six times compared with two AstraZeneca doses, a study from South Korea showed.

The study involved 499 medical workers - 100 receiving mixed doses, 200 taking two doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech shot and the remainder getting two AstraZeneca shots.

All showed neutralizing antibodies, which prevent the virus from entering cells and replicating, and the result of the mixed schedule of vaccines showed similar amounts of neutralizing antibodies found from the group that received two Pfizer shots.

A British study last month showed similar results - an AstraZeneca shot followed by Pfizer produced the best T-cell responses, and a higher antibody response than Pfizer followed by AstraZeneca.

The data provides further support for the decision of several countries to offer alternatives to AstraZeneca as a second shot after the vaccine was linked to rare blood clots.

The South Korean study also analysed neutralizing activity against major variants of concern, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.

None of the groups demonstrated reduced neutralising activity against the Alpha variant, first identified in Britain, but the neutralization titre decreased by 2.5 to 6 fold against Beta, Gamma and Delta, first detected in South Africa, Brazil and India respectively.



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From China to Germany, floods expose climate vulnerability

Berlin/Beijing: Deadly floods that have upended life in both China and Germany have sent a stark reminder that climate change is making weather more extreme across the globe.

People walk on a damaged bridge after heavy rainfall flooded Gaomiao village of Gongyi in Henan province, China, on July 21, 2021. Image Credit: REUTERS

At least 25 people in the central Chinese province of Henan died on Tuesday, including a dozen trapped in a city subway as waters tore through the regional capital of Zhengzhou after days of torrential rain.

Coming after floods killed at least 160 people in Germany and another 31 in Belgium last week, the disaster has reinforced the message that significant changes will have to be made to prepare for similar events in future.

“Governments should first realize that the infrastructure they have built in the past or even recent ones are vulnerable to these extreme weather events,” said Eduardo Araral, associate professor and co-director, Institute of Water Policy, at Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.

This combination of photos created on July 20, 2021 shows debris placed outside buildings in Euskirchen, western Germany, on July 18, 2021. Image Credit: AFP

In Europe, climate change is likely to increase the number of large, slow-moving storms that can linger longer in one area and deliver deluges of the kind seen in Germany and Belgium, according to a study published on June 30 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

As the atmosphere warms with climate change, it also holds more moisture, which means that when rainclouds break, more rain is released. By the end of the century, such storms could be 14 times more frequent, the researchers found in the study using computer simulations.

While the inundation that devastated wide swathes of western and southern Germany occurred thousands of kilometres from the events in Henan, both cases highlighted the vulnerability of heavily populated areas to catastrophic flooding and other natural disasters.

“You need technical measures, bolstering dikes and flood barriers. But we also need to remodel cities,” said Fred Hattermann at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

He said there was increasing focus on so-called “green-adaptation” measures, like polders and plains that can be flooded, to stop water running off too fast.

Helpers work in the streets of Dernau in Rhineland-Palatinate. Image Credit: dpa

“But when there’s really heavy rain, all that may not help, so we have to learn to live with it,” he said.

Reinforcing dikes and climate-proofing housing, roads and urban infrastructure will cost billions. But the dramatic mobile phone footage of people struggling through subways submerged in chest-deep water in Zhengzhou or crying in fear as mud and debris swept through medieval German towns made clear the cost of doing nothing.

“It is shocking and I have to say it is scary,” said John Butschkowski, a Red Cross driver who was involved in rescue work in western Germany this week. “It is ghostly, no people anywhere, just rubbish. And it is inconceivable that this is happening in Germany.”

ONE YEAR’S RAINFALL IN THREE DAYS

Koh Tieh-Yong, a weather and climate scientist at Singapore University of Social Sciences, said an overall assessment of rivers and water systems would be needed in areas vulnerable to climate change, including cities and farmlands.

“Floods usually occur due to two factors combined: one, heavier-than-normal rainfall and two, insufficient capacity of rivers to discharge the additional rainwater collected,” he said.

In both China and northwestern Europe, the disasters followed a period of unusually heavy rain, equivalent in the Chinese case to a year’s rainfall being dumped in just three days, that completely overwhelmed flood defences.

After several severe floods over recent decades, buffers had been strengthened along major German rivers like the Rhine or the Elbe but last week’s extreme rainfall also turned minor tributaries like the Ahr or the Swist into fearsome torrents.

A truck travels on a flooded road after heavy rainfall in Zhengzhou in Henan province on July 21, 2021. Image Credit: REUTERS

In China, built-up urban areas with inadequate water evacuation and large dams that modified the natural discharge of the Yellow River basin may also have contributed to the disaster, scientists said.

But measures such as improving the resilience of buildings and raising riverbanks and improving drainage are unlikely to be enough on their own to avert the effects of severe flooding. As a last resort, warning systems, which were heavily criticised in Germany for leaving people insufficient time to react, will have to be improved.

“It really needs to be embedded in practical knowledge that people have so they know what to do,” said Christian Kuhlicke, head of a working group on environmental risks and extreme events at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research.

“If you can’t keep the water back, if you can’t save your buildings then at least make sure that all vulnerable people are moved out of these places.”



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Pakistan: Suspect in murder of former ambassador’s daughter on Exit Control List

Islamabad: Islamabad Police Inspector General (IG) Qazi Jamilur Rehman on Friday instructed the investigation team probing the killing of 27-year old Noor Mukadam, daughter of a former Pakistani ambassador to South Korea, to seek the placement of suspect Zahir Zakir Jaffer’s name on the Exit Control List (ECL).

According to a statement issued by the Islamabad police, Noor, daughter of former Pakistani diplomat Shaukat Mukadam, was found murdered at a residence in Islamabad’s upscale Sector F-7/4 a day before Eid (Tuesday).

The IGP, in a meeting with the investigation team and during his visit to the crime scene, directed the police team to recommend to the relevant authority that the suspect’s name be placed on the no-fly list.

He also instructed the team to acquire Jaffer’s criminal records from the United States and United Kingdom and asked them to approach the relevant quarters for this purpose.

The police chief further recommended that the evidence collected from the crime scene be sent for forensic analysis.

“The case should be concluded in the light of concrete evidence at the earliest,” the statement quoted the IGP as saying. “All the requirements for justice should be met so that the culprit be handed severe punishment.”

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Ulema Council (PUC) has demanded that the cases of violence and abuse against women and children be heard by anti-terrorism courts and a time limit be set for verdicts in such cases.

The council urged Prime Minister Imran Khan and Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed to take notice, and expressed its concern over the recent surge in cases of violence and abuse against women and children.

“Cases such as Noor Mukadam and Usman Mirza bring disrepute to the country and the nation,” the statement read, adding that such cases were an indication that terror, frustration and sexual violence were on the rise in society.

A First Information Report (FIR) was registered against Jaffer under Section 302 (premeditated murder) of the Pakistan Penal Code on the complaint of the victim’s father late on Tuesday, after his arrest.

Later, police had obtained a three-day remand of the suspect from a local court, while officials had said they were investigating the suspect’s motive for allegedly killing the woman.

In his complaint, Shaukat Mukadam had stated that he had gone to Rawalpindi on July 19 to buy a goat for Eid Al Adha, while his wife had gone out to pick up clothes from her tailor. When he returned home in the evening, the couple found their daughter Noor absent from their house in Islamabad.

They found her mobile phone to be switched off, and started a search for her. Sometime later, Noor called her parents to inform them that she was travelling to Lahore with some friends and would return in a day or two, according to the FIR.

On Tuesday afternoon, however, the complainant said he received a call from Zahir, son of Zakir Jaffer, whose family was the ex-diplomat’s acquaintances. Zahir informed Mukadam that Noor was not with him, the FIR said.

At around 10pm the same day, the victim’s father received a call from Kohsar police station, informing him that Noor had been murdered.

Police subsequently took the complainant to Zahir’s house in Sector F-7/4 where he discovered that his “daughter has been brutally murdered with a sharp-edged weapon and beheaded”, according to the FIR.

Mukadam, who identified his daughter’s body, sought the maximum punishment under the law against Zahir for allegedly murdering his daughter.

Police had initially said the victim was shot at before being “slaughtered”. Another person was also injured in the incident.

However, the investigation officer of the case said on Thursday that while a pistol had been found at the suspect’s house, the initial investigation and medical report did not show a firearm injury in the incident. He added that a bullet was stuck in the pistol’s chamber at the time it was recovered.

He said the servants present in the house at the time of the incident had also been included in the investigation and were being questioned on various points such as the duration for which Noor was present in the suspect’s house.



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