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TAMIL THALAIVAS
LIFT WESTLITE
INTEGRATION CUP
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Fears
grow
over
new
Covid
variant
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India steps up surveillance
amid rising BF.7 infections
Retired lawyer Parthasarathi
Gangopadhyay was
diagnosed with cancer a few
years ago.
The 68-year-old has now
recovered and is living a
happy life in Kolkata thanks
to the plants he keeps at his
house on Seven Tanks Lane.
In 2019, he decided to
play his part in saving the
environment and began to
adorn his garden with plants
grown in recycled materials.
There are more than 10,000
plants, big and small,
planted in earthen tubs,
plastic bottles, tin cans, tyres
and jars.
“When I go out, I pick up
discarded plastic bottles and
tyres and wash them, paint
them and put plants in them.
Now people give me old,
broken materials,” he said.
“Returning from the face
of death, I have found a ‘true
friend’ in nature.”
RBI says inflation ‘down but
certainly not out’
India’s headline inflation has
broadened and become “stubborn”,
the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in
its monthly bulletin on Tuesday.
“Inflation may be slightly down, but
it is certainly not out,” it said.
India’s annual inflation rate fell to
5.88 per cent in November – below
the upper end of the RBI’s comfort
band of 6 per cent for the first time
this year.
According to the central bank’s
estimates, annual inflation is seen
cooling to 5.9 per cent in Q1 2023 and
5 per cent in Q2 2023 but set to rise to
5.4 per cent in the subsequent quarter.
Kerala culls hundreds of birds
amid avian flu outbreak
Hundreds of birds have been culled in
Kerala where a district has seen a
surge in the number of bird flu or
avian influenza cases, local health
officials told ANI.
After an outbreak last week in
broiler chickens in two villages in
Kottayam district, authorities culled
hundreds of ducks and other domestic
birds, district veterinary doctors said.
The spread of the virus is a concern
for governments and the poultry
industry due to the devastation it can
cause to flocks, the possibility of trade
restrictions and a risk of human
transmission.
Hydrogen-powered train to be
rolled out by end of 2023
India will roll out its first
domestically-designed and built
hydrogen-powered train by December
next year, the country’s railway
minister said on Monday.
“We are already designing and the
design should be out by May or June,”
Minister for Railways Ashiwni
Vaishnaw said during a visit to
Bengaluru.
Called the Vande Metro, the train
will be manufactured in large numbers
and the ultimate aim is to replace
trains built in the 1950s and 1960s.
Most trains in India run on diesel or
electricity.
Market regulator to phase out
buybacks via stock exchanges
India’s market regulator on Tuesday
said buybacks through stock exchanges
would be phased out gradually.
The Securities and Exchange Board
of India (SEBI) also increased the
minimum utilisation amount for
buybacks through stock exchange to
75 per cent from 50 per cent.
SEBI said it would permit an
upward revision of buyback price
through tenders until one working day
before the record date.
The timeline for completion of
buybacks through tender offers has
been reduced by 18 days.
Woman asks son’s teacher for
Rs500 to buy food, gets Rs51 lakh
Left with no option, a woman in
Kerala sought Rs500 ($8.15) from her
son’s teacher to buy food for her three
children, one of them bedridden with
cerebral palsy.
Ms Subhadra, 46, from Palakkad,
lost her husband in August and was
struggling to make ends meet.
Teacher Girija Harikumar posted
her plight on social media and sought
assistance.
The crowdfunding campaign went
viral and people around Kerala raised
Rs51 lakh ($83,000) in two days for
the widow and her children.
Wheat to be offered to millers,
biscuitmakers to tame prices
India is set to offer 2 to 3 million
tonnes of wheat to bulk consumers
such as flour millers and biscuitmakers
as part of efforts to cool record-high
prices, even as state reserves have
dropped to the lowest in six years.
Wheat prices surged in India this
year after a sudden rise in
temperatures hit crop yields and
output.
A jump in exports following
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine also
pushed up local wheat prices,
prompting India – the world’s
second-biggest producer of the grain –
to order a ban on exports in May but it
failed to stop domestic prices from
rising.
Gay couples ask Supreme Court to
legalise same-sex marriage
Four gay couples have asked the
Supreme Court to recognise same-sex
marriages, setting the stage for a legal
face-off with Prime Minister Narendra
Modi’s government which in the past
refused to legalise such marriages.
In a historic verdict in 2018, India’s
top court decriminalised
homosexuality by scrapping a
colonial-era ban on gay sex.
Despite the ruling, members of
India’s LGBT community complain
about a lack of acceptance, and
discrimination against gay people in
society.
In three Supreme Court filings, the
couples say that without legal
recognition of being married, they are
denied rights such as those linked to
medical consent, pensions, adoption or
even simpler things like club
memberships for couples.
Lawyers and a court listing
confirmed a fourth similar petition
already received by the court.
Gambia parliament wants Indian
drugmaker sued over child deaths
Gambia should sue the Indian
drugmaker whose cough syrup was
blamed for the death of 70 children in
West African nation, according to
lawmakers.
Maiden Pharmaceuticals’ remaining
products should also be banned in the
country, the parliament’s health
committee said in a report on Tuesday.
Four of the New Delhi-based
manufacturer’s cold and cough syrups
were potentially linked to acute kidney
injuries and dozens of deaths, the
World Health Organisation said in
October.
They contained “unacceptable
amounts” of diethylene glycol and
ethylene glycol.
Electric-bus ambition hits
financing speed bump
Indian banks are reluctant to lend to
electric-bus makers for supply to ailing
state transport operators over concerns
on recovery of dues, hurting the
country’s goal of curbing vehicle
emissions, reported Reuters.
The lack of funding is limiting the
ability of e-bus makers to participate in
federal government tenders to supply
to states, threatening to slow the
electrification of major public transport
now reliant on diesel.
India wants to deploy 50,000
e-buses in tranches over the next five
years at an estimated cost of Rs1
trillion (S$16 billion). As of now,
6,740 e-buses have been approved by
the federal government, of which
nearly a third have been deployed in
states.
Sargam Koushal wins Mrs World
2022 title
Sargam Koushal, who hails from
Jammu and Kashmir, was named
Mrs World 2022 at the Westgate Las
Vegas Resort and Casino on Saturday,
besting contestants from 63 countries
to bring the title back to India after
21 years. Mrs Polynesia was named
the first runner-up, followed by
Mrs Canada as the second runner-up.
Actress-model Aditi Govitrikar last
brought the Mrs World crown to India
in 2001.
Cancer survivor finds ‘true friend’ in nature
An SPH Media Limited publication
Editor-in-Chief
(English/Malay/Tamil Media group)
Wong Wei Kong
Editor
Jawharilal Rajendran
Contributing Editor
V.K. Santosh Kumar
Cluster Head
(International & Transactional Sales)
Martin Boey
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Page 2
December 23, 2022
tabla
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INDIA
Serial killer ‘the serpent’ freed from jail due to age
“The BF.7
variant has
a high
transmission
ability. It is
very quick to
transfer to other
people and has a
short incubation
period. It is a
horrible scenario
that can take place
and with people
travelling all across
the globe, it is
possible for the
disease to spread
worldwide with
air travel.”
– Dr Ravindra Gupta from
the Department of Internal
Medicine at CK Birla
Hospital in Gurugram
A health worker administering a dose of Covid-19 vaccine.
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India’s government has asked the
states to keep a sharp lookout for any
new variants and urged people to wear
masks in crowded areas, citing an
increase in Covid-19 cases in China
and other parts of the globe.
Health Minister Mansukh Man-
daviya met senior government officials
on Wednesday to discuss the matter,
with all those present wearing masks –
a practice that has not been mandatory
in most parts of the country for several
months.
“Covid is not over yet. I have
directed all concerned to be alert and
strengthen surveillance,” he tweeted.
“We are prepared to manage any
situation.”
Local media reported on Wednes-
day that India detected at least three
cases of the highly transmissible BF.7
Omicron sub-variant, which in October
led to a surge in infections in China.
China has registered a surge in
infections after ending strict restric-
tions, while data from the World
Health Organisation shows infections
have risen in countries including
Japan, South Korea and the United
States in recent days.
The Indian government has asked
all states to ensure that samples of
positive cases are sent to the country’s
54 designated genome sequencing labo-
ratories.
Some opposition leaders and Twit-
ter users in India have called for a
suspension of flights to and from
China.
India Today, citing sources, said that
authorities would randomly test inter-
national arrivals at airports.
With more than 44 million
Covid-19 cases to date, India has
reported the most in the world, behind
the United States.
However, its number of confirmed
infections has fallen sharply in the past
few months, with about 1,200 cases
being reported every week at present.
The worry now is whether the BF.7
strain will cause a fresh wave in India.
The first case of the highly-infec-
tious strain with greater transmissibil-
ity was detected in Gujarat in October.
Currently there are two cases in
Gujarat and one in Odisha.
While this hasn’t really created a
big panic, the new Omicron variant is
known to spread very fast and has a
shorter incubation period.
It has been reported that it will
infect 60 per cent of people in China
in the coming three months and more
than a million are likely to die.
Delhi logged five Covid-19 cases
with a positivity rate of 0.19 per cent,
according to data shared by the Health
department on Wednesday. It also
recorded one fatality.
Dr Ravindra Gupta from the Depart-
ment of Internal Medicine at CK Birla
Hospital in Gurugram, told Hindustan
Times that with people travelling dur-
ing the December holidays, the possi-
bility of Covid spreading worldwide is
high.
“The BF.7 variant has a high trans-
mission ability,” he said.
“It is very quick to transfer to other
people and has a short incubation
period. It is a horrible scenario that
can take place and with people travel-
ling all across the globe, it is possible
for the disease to spread worldwide
with air travel.”
Dr Charu Dutt Arora, Consultant
Physician and Infectious Disease Spe-
cialist at the Asian Hospital in Farid-
abad, said the R0 value of this mutant
according to studies is 10-18.6.
R0, pronounced “R naught,” is a
mathematical term that indicates how
contagious an infectious disease is.
“This means that any infected indi-
vidual can infect 10-18.6 people
around him,” he said.
“Also, there is quicker infection rate
of this virus, in hours, which makes it
difficult to be detected in RT-PCR test.
“People who are not vaccinated or
have weaker immunity, such as the
elderly, children, pregnant females or
those with multiple co-morbidities
(cancer, uncontrolled diabetes, cardiac
or kidney diseases) are at a high risk of
catching this infection.”
Dr Amitabha Ghosh, Consultant,
Internal Medicine at Manipal Hospitals
in Gurugram, said that a fourth shot of
vaccine may be helpful in preventing
deaths.
“The symptoms remain the same as
with any other upper respiratory infec-
tion such as fever, cough, sore throat
and running nose,” he said.
“There is suspicion that this wave
can kill one million people alone in
China. It is also probable that if people
get three to four shots of the vaccine,
they may get protected. It is therefore
very important for everyone to be
more vigilant and responsive to taking
Covid vaccines.”
Reuters, Indo-Asian News Service
Nepal’s Supreme Court on
Wednesday ordered the release of
Charles Sobhraj due to his age.
The French national is known
as “the serpent”, whom police say
is responsible for a string of mur-
ders in the 1970s and 1980s.
Sobhraj was convicted of
killing more than 20 young West-
ern backpackers across Asia, usu-
ally by drugging their food or
drink.
The 78-year-old has completed
19 years of his 20-year sentence.
Also known as the “bikini
killer”, Thailand issued a warrant
for Sobhraj’s arrest in the
mid-1970s on charges of drugging
and killing six bikini-clad women
on a beach in Pattaya.
He was called “the serpent”
because of his ability to disguise
himself following his escape from
a prison in India in mid-1980s,
where he was serving 21 years
imprisonment on murder charges.
Sobhraj was later caught and
jailed there until 1997.
BBC and Netflix last year co-
produced the TV series The Ser-
pent, in which Sobhraj’s crimes
were dramatised.
Sobhraj returned to France af-
ter his release from India.
In 2003, he was arrested in a
casino in Nepal’s capital Kath-
mandu and charged for murdering
American backpacker Connie Jo
Bronzich. He has been held in a
high-security jail in Kathmandu
since 2003.
In 2008, Sobhraj married Ni-
hita Biswas while in prison. She is
44 years his junior and the daugh-
ter of his Nepalese lawyer.
On Wednesday, Supreme Court
judges Sapana Pradhan Malla and
Til Prasad Shrestha ordered that
Sobhraj be freed and deported
from Nepal.
“The court has ordered that if
there is no other reason to keep
him in jail, he should be released
and sent back to his country
within 15 days,” said Supreme
Court spokesman Bimal Paudel.
Convicts sentenced to life im-
prisonment in Nepal usually serve
20 years in jail.
“He already served 95 per cent
of his jail term and should be
released earlier due to his age,”
said Sobhraj’s lawyer Ram
Bandhu Sharmag. He added that
Sobhraj might be freed this week.
Reuters
French serial killer Charles Sobhraj.
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India vigilant in face of new Covid variant
INDIA
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December23,2022
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