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REPORT ON PAGE 5
Apsaras Arts artistic director Aravinth Kumarasamy receiving his Cultural Medallion
from President Halimah Yacob at the Istana on Monday.
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SINGAPORE, WEEKEND OF FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 9, 2
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LALU RECOVERING
IN SINGAPORE
AFTER KIDNEY OP
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WORLD CUP:
CLASS WILL TELL IN
QUARTER-FINALS
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MCI (P) 079/10/2022
PRIYANKA GETS
EQUAL PAY
AFTER 20 YEARS
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BJP set to retain power in Gujarat
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was
headed for a landslide victory in his
home state of Gujarat on Thursday – a
big boost to the party ahead of general
elections due in 2024.
The western industrial state is a
bastion of the BJP, which has not lost
state assembly elections there since
1995. Mr Modi was Gujarat’s chief
minister for 13 years before becoming
prime minister in 2014.
BJP led in more that 80 per cent of
the 182 seats in early counting of votes
and was on its way to wrest a larger
majority than in 2017, when it won 99
seats in the last state assembly
elections.
The party was also set to surpass its
best results in Gujarat when it won
127 seats in 2002.
Work on Adani port to resume
Construction on a US$900 million
(S$1.2 billion) port in Kerala resumed
yesterday after villagers blocking the
entrance to the site of the Adani
Group project agreed to suspend their
four-month-old protest.
Fishermen camped in a makeshift
shelter at Vizhinjam since September
blocked vehicles and halted work on a
project they blamed for coastal erosion
and affecting their livelihoods.
Billionaire Gautam Adani’s
conglomerate has denied both
accusations.
Lightning strikes kill 907 in India
as extreme weather surges
India saw a jump in extreme weather
events such as heatwaves and lightning
strikes this year and related deaths
rose to their highest in three years,
government data showed on
Wednesday.
There were 27 heatwaves and
lightning strikes rose more than 111
times, killing 907 people, the Ministry
of Earth Sciences said in a report to
parliament. Thunderstorms increased
more than five times to 240.
This year’s 2,183 deaths due to such
events as of last month were the
highest since 2019’s 3,017. Lightning,
floods and heavy rains accounted for
78 per cent of the deaths this year, the
data showed.
Six dead, 10 injured after truck
barrels into group of people
At least six persons were killed and 10
others injured – eight of them critically
– when a speeding truck rammed into
a group of people standing at a
roadside bus stop in Madhya Pradesh’s
Ratlam district on Sunday, police said.
The incident occurred at a traffic
intersection near Satrunda village on
Ratlam-Lebad Road, about 30km from
the Ratlam district headquarters.
Still no consensus reached on
online gaming tax
A panel of state finance ministers has
yet to submit its report on taxation of
the booming online gaming sector that
is crucial to a final decision on how the
levies should be imposed, a senior
government officer said on Monday.
The panel has been deliberating for
weeks over how it should tax online
gaming companies – and whether
federal tax should be imposed on only
the profits of firms or on the value of
the entire pool of money collected
from participants.
The panel is unlikely to reach a
consensus this month, the officer said
in New Delhi.
Men jailed for rape and murder of
Latvian tourist
A court in Kerala sentenced two men
to life imprisonment for the rape and
murder of a Latvian tourist in 2018.
The 33-year-old woman, who was
travelling with her sister, went missing
from a resort in Kerala on March 14,
2018. Her body was recovered 38 days
later from an isolated mangrove
swamp in Kovalam.
A tourist guide and another man
were arrested for raping and killing
her. A sessions court in
Thiruvananthapuram found them
guilty on Tuesday.
The court observed that Umesh, 32,
and Udayakumar, 28, lured the tourist
with marijuana and “drugged her
heavily” before raping her.
November services activity growth
hits three-month high
India’s services activity grew at its
quickest pace in three months in
November on strong demand, lifting
optimism to its highest in eight years,
according to a business survey.
Data also showed prices rose at the
fastest rate since July 2017.
The S&P Global India services
purchasing managers’ index rose to
56.4 in November from 55.1 in
October, beating the 55.4 estimate in a
Reuters poll. It remained above the
50-mark separating growth from
contraction for a 16th straight month –
its longest stretch of expansion since
October 2016.
Custody of former Navy officers in
Qatar extended by a month
The families of the eight former Indian
Navy officers in custody in Qatar
learnt on Sunday that the duration of
the men’s custody was increased by
one more month at a court hearing.
Family sources told The Indian
Express that the news was relayed to
them by officials at the company
where the men had been working.
The company, Dahra Global
Technologies and Consultancy
Services, provided services to the
Qatari Navy, including training,
providing maintenance work for
equipment and logistics.
The men were picked up by Qatari
State Security personnel on Aug 30
and have been held in solitary
confinement since. There is no public
information of the charges against
them.
Private construction banned in
smoggy New Delhi
New Delhi has been engulfed in thick
smog this week as cooler weather
exacerbated pollution and the
government banned private
construction in and around the city to
try to limit dust and emissions.
Residents in the national capital and
its suburbs endure poor air every
winter as colder, heavier air traps
construction dust, vehicle emissions
and smoke from the burning of crop
stubble in the nearby states of Punjab
and Haryana.
India to reinstate e-visas service
for UK nationals
Just ahead of the winter holidays,
India will resume its e-visa service for
United Kingdom citizens for the first
time since the Covid-19 outbreak in
March 2020.
The visa website will be ready soon
for applicants to apply for their visa,
said the High Commission of India in
London.
This service was reinstated for
almost all nations earlier this year with
the exception of a few, notably the UK
and Canada.
Jigsaw launches
anti-misinformation campaign
Google’s Jigsaw subsidiary is launching
a new anti-misinformation project in
India, aimed at preventing misleading
information that has been blamed for
inciting violence, a top executive said.
The initiative will use “prebunking”
videos – designed to counter false
claims before they become widespread
– circulated on the company’s YouTube
platform and other social media sites.
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A man sells photos of
Dr B.R. Ambedkar on his
66th death anniversary in
Mumbai on Tuesday.
Thousands of people
from Maharashtra and
neighbouring states gathered
at Chaitya Bhoomi to pay
tribute to Dr Ambedkar, an
iconic low-caste Hindu
leader who fought against
caste-based discrimination.
The death anniversary of
Dr Ambedkar, the architect
of India’s constitution, is
observed as Mahaparinirvan
Diwas.
The civic administration
in Mumbai put up various
facilities at Chaitya Bhoomi,
including mega screens
showing highlights of
Dr Ambedkar’s life.
Cultural events and
musical performances in
memory of one of the tallest
figures in India were also
organised.
Thousands gather to remember Ambedkar
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December9,2022
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INDIA
A rescue operation is un-
derway for a boy who
has been stuck in a well
for more than two days.
Eight-year-old Tan-
may Sahu fell into the
narrow well in Betul dis-
trict, Madhya Pradesh,
on Tuesday while play-
ing with friends.
According to BBC, he
is stuck at 16m in the
122m-deep well.
Rescuers on Thursday
were reportedly adminis-
tering oxygen to the boy.
Additional District
Magistrate Shyamendra
Jaiswal said the boy
could be unconscious because he was
“not responding” and that it would
take many more hours to rescue the
child.
Mr Jaiswal said on Wednesday
night: “The rescue operation is still
underway. Excavation is going on and
about 10 metres of excavation has
been done. We have a target to reach
14 metres and then dig a tunnel. It
might take some time as there are hard
stones in the way.
“The child, however, is not respond-
ing as he might have fallen uncon-
scious. Efforts are on to save the boy.”
Tanmay’s father Sunil Sahu told The
Hindu: “My 12-year-old daughter saw
him and informed me that her brother
had fallen into the borewell. We imme-
diately rushed to the spot. He was
breathing and we listened for sounds
from him from inside the borewell.”
State Chief Minister Shivraj Singh
Chauhan tweeted: “The incident of an
8-year-old boy who fell into a borewell
in Mandvi village of Aathner block of
Betul is sad.
“I have instructed the local adminis-
tration to take the necessary steps. I
am in constant touch with the adminis-
tration.
“The rescue team is trying to save
the child safely. I pray for the well-be-
ing of the innocent.”
Due to water shortages, several
farmers in India dig borewells for
irrigation purposes. But, after these
wells run dry, they are abandoned and
left uncovered, posing a serious risk to
passersby, especially children.
Several children have died due to
suffocation after falling into narrow
borewells.
Indo-Asian News Service
A woman
walking on
a dried pond
in Uttar
Pradesh.
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Severe heatwaves, responsible for thou-
sands of deaths across India over the
last few decades, are increasing with
alarming frequency and soon the coun-
try might experience heatwaves that
break the human survivability limit,
according to a new report.
The World Bank report, Climate
Investment Opportunities In India’s
Cooling Sector, said the country is
experiencing higher temperatures that
arrive earlier and stay far longer,
reported the Press Trust of India.
“In April 2022, India was plunged
into the grip of a punishing early
spring heatwave that brought the coun-
try to a standstill, with temperatures in
New Delhi topping 46 deg C,” it said.
“The month of March, which wit-
nessed extraordinary spikes in tempera-
tures, was the hottest ever recorded.”
The report, which was released on
Wednesday during the two-day India
Climate And Development Partners’
Meet organised by World Bank along
with the Kerala government, said the
recent heatwave supports what many
climate scientists have long cautioned
about, with reference to rising tempera-
tures across South Asia.
“In August 2021, the Sixth Assess-
ment Report of the Inter-governmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
warned that the Indian subcontinent
would suffer more frequent and in-
tense heatwaves in the coming decade.
“The G20 Climate Risk Atlas in
2021 warned that heatwaves across
India were likely to last 25 times
longer by 2036-65 if carbon emissions
remain high, as in the IPCC’s worst-
case emission scenario,” the report
stated. It also warned that rising heat
across India can jeopardise economic
productivity.
“Up to 75 per cent of India’s
workforce (380 million people) depend
on heat-exposed labour. By 2030,
India may account for 34 million of
the projected 80 million global job
losses from productivity decline associ-
ated with heat stress.”
It further said India showed the
largest heat exposure impacts on
heavy labour among South Asian coun-
tries, with more than 101 billion hours
lost a year.
Analysis by global management con-
sulting firm McKinsey & Company
shows that lost labour from rising heat
and humidity could put up to 4.5 per
cent of India’s GDP – about
US$150-250 billion (S$204-340 bil-
lion) – at risk by the end of this
decade.
It said India’s long-term food secu-
rity and public health security will
depend on a reliable cold chain net-
work.
Transporting food and pharmaceuti-
cal goods across India requires a sys-
tem of cold chain refrigeration that
works every step of the way.
“A single temperature lapse in the
journey can break the cold chain,
spoiling fresh produce and weakening
the potency of vaccines. With only 4
per cent of fresh produce in India
covered by cold chain facilities, annual
estimated food losses total US$13
billion,” the analysis said.
It also noted that the third-largest
producer of pharmaceuticals in the
world in pre-Covid times lost approxi-
mately 20 per cent of temperature-sen-
sitive medical products and 25 per
cent of vaccines due to broken cold
chains, leading to losses of US$313
million a year.
“As temperatures rise across India,
so will the demand for cooling. How-
ever, in a country where two-thirds of
the population live on less than US$2
a day, and where the average cost of
an air-conditioning unit can vary be-
tween US$260 and US$500, air-cool-
ing systems are a luxury available only
to a few.”
According to analysis presented in
the India Cooling Action Plan, only
8 per cent of Indian households own
air-conditioning units.
“Indoor and electric fans can help
to maintain thermal comfort, but these
too are expensive to buy and ineffi-
cient. As a result, many poor and
marginalised communities across India
are more vulnerable to extreme heat,
living in inadequately ventilated, hot
and crowded homes without proper
access to cooling,” the report warned.
Staying cool during extreme heat is
about more than just comfort – it can
constitute the precarious line between
life and death, it added.
Indo-Asian News Service
Discourse in Hindi.
Translation in English.
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India might get unsurvivable heatwaves
Boy, 8, stuck in borewell
INDIA
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December 9, 2022
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