SINGAPORE, WEEKEND OF FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 30, 2
0
2
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UZBEK DEATHS
LINKED TO
INDIA-MADE SYRUP
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IN PURSUIT
OF
PASSION
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MCI (P) 079/10/2022
CO-STAR
ARRESTED FOR
ACTRESS’ DEATH
PAGE 8
Community spirit
shines at Sikh event
Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam and members of the Sikh community at the Naam Ras Kirtan Darbar last Saturday.
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REPORT ON PAGE 7
First Covid-19 nasal vaccine to be
rolled out next month
Indian vaccine-maker Bharat Biotech
International on Tuesday announced it
would roll out its newly-developed
Covid-19 nasal vaccine iNCOVACC
from the fourth week of January.
The vaccine, which costs Rs325
($5.30), will be available on CoWin,
the Central government’s web portal
for Covid-19 vaccination registration.
The booster dose is for those aged
above 18 who have already received
two doses of vaccine.
Rahul Gandhi’s cross-India march
reaches Delhi
A cross-country march led by
opposition leader Rahul Gandhi
reached New Delhi on Saturday,
hoping to regain some of the
popularity it lost to the ruling
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
More than 1,000 people joined
Mr Gandhi’s march against “hate and
division”, which aims to turn the
Congress party’s fortunes around after
its drubbing by the BJP in a 2019
election.
The march will take a nine-day
break in Delhi before starting its final
leg on Jan 3 towards Srinagar.
Adani gets control of NDTV as
founders sell stake
Founders Prannoy Roy and Radhika
Roy will sell the bulk of their
shareholding in New Delhi Television
to a firm controlled by the Adani
Group, giving the conglomerate a
majority control in the broadcaster
and capping a months-long hostile
takeover that triggered concerns about
press freedom.
The Roys will sell 27.26 per cent of
their equity in NDTV to RRPR
Holding via an inter-se transfer and be
left with 5 per cent in the media
company after the proposed
transaction is carried out, the company
said in an exchange filing on Friday.
The Adani Group, through RRPR
and another entity, Vishvapradhan
Commercial, will control 64.71 per
cent in NDTV, the filing said.
Serial killer Charles Sobhraj
arrives in France after release
French serial killer Charles Sobhraj,
responsible for multiple murders in the
1970s across Asia including India,
arrived in France on Saturday after
almost 20 years in prison in Nepal.
Nepal’s top court on Dec 21 ruled
that he should be freed on health
grounds and deported to France within
15 days.
On Friday, he was released and put
on a flight to take him from
Kathmandu to Paris via Doha.
While on the flight to Doha, he
insisted to an AFP journalist that he
was “innocent”.
Homeless Hyderabad man pushed
under truck over Rs400
A daily-wage earner was killed
following a row with a co-worker over
Rs400 in Hyderabad on Sunday.
Mr Billipuram Srinivas, 35, who
lived on the pavement at Narsapur
crossroads in Balanagar, argued with
Mr Kashiram over the payment they
received for a job they did together.
Mr Kashiram insisted he should be
paid Rs400 more, which
Mr Srinivas refused to hand over.
On Sunday morning, when
Mr Srinivas was sleeping on the
footpath, Mr Kashiram attacked him
with a stick and pushed him under a
passing truck that crushed him to
death.
Balanagar Inspector K. Bhaskar said
investigations were ongoing for the
murder.
Police probe deaths of Russian
lawmaker and friend
Police in Odisha are investigating the
sudden deaths of a wealthy Russian
politician who reportedly criticised the
Ukraine war and his travelling
companion at a luxury hotel,
authorities said Tuesday.
The body of Pavel Antov, 65, was
found last Saturday in a pool of blood
outside his lodgings in Rayagada,
where he was on holiday with three
other Russian nationals.
His death came two days after
another member of the travel party,
Vladimir Bidenov, was found
unconscious after suffering an
apparent heart attack at the same
hotel and could not be revived.
Delhi fog disrupts air, rail travel
Low temperatures and fog in New
Delhi hit air and rail movement on
Tuesday as a cold wave gripped the
Indian capital with minimum
temperatures dipping as low as
5.6 deg C.
With visibility of just 50 metres in
some areas, Delhi Airport took to
Twitter to alert passengers that flights
not equipped to operate in such
conditions “may get affected”. Local
media reported that 15 trains to Delhi
were also running late because of fog.
Kolkata set to beat Delhi’s dismal
air pollution record
Environmentalists in Kolkata have
forecast a grim scenario for the city as
pollution levels there and in some
other towns in West Bengal hit
dangerous air-quality levels recently.
According to a recent report by
US-based Health Effects Institute,
Kolkata is the second-most polluted
city in the world after New Delhi.
But on Dec 12 and 13, the
pollution level in Kolkata surpassed
Delhi’s.
“While at times the air quality
index levels in the national capital
show minor positive trends, the
situation is reversed in Kolkata,” said
environmentalist Somendra Mohan
Ghosh.
“This finding is an alarming
indication. If administrative measures
for pollution control are not
implemented strictly, things will
worsen for Kolkata as well as the
entire state in the coming years.”
Ex-ICICI Bank CEO Chanda,
husband arrested for loan fraud
Former ICICI Bank CEO Chanda
Kochhar and her husband Deepak
Kochhar were arrested by the Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on
Friday in a case linked to alleged
irregularities in a Rs3,000 crore loan
given to Videocon Group when she
was heading the bank.
Ms Chanda, 59, quit as CEO and
managing director of ICICI Bank in
October 2018 over allegations that she
favoured Videocon Group, a consumer
electronics and oil and gas exploration
company. A whistle blower claimed
her husband and her family members
benefited from the dealings.
The CBI also arrested Videocon
Group chairman Venugopal Dhoot on
Monday.
Tech firm Byju’s hauled in by
watchdog over Context expose
Education technology giant Byju’s has
said it would stop selling tuition to
poorer families who could not afford
it, according to India’s child rights
body, which summoned the company’s
CEO on Friday for a Context
investigation.
In response to a two-part Context
expose of Byju’s working culture and
treatment of customers, the National
Commission for Protection of Child
Rights issued the summons, saying that
the company had “indulged in
malpractices to lure parents”.
On Friday, one of Byju’s founding
partners, Mr Pravin Prakash, attended
the closed-door hearing on behalf of
CEO Byju Raveendran.
This is believed to be the first such
notice issued against an edtech
company in India over its sales
practices.
Women pouring milk into
the waters of the Bay of
Bengal at Nochikuppam
beach in Chennai as
homage to the victims of
the 2004 tsunami.
Thousands of people
living in the coastal areas
of Tamil Nadu also held
silent processions and
tearfully sprinkled flowers
on the beaches on Dec 26
to mark the 18th
anniversary of the disaster
that killed 230,000
people in 14 countries.
“We cannot forget the
tragedy that claimed at
least 8,000 lives in Tamil
Nadu 18 years ago,” said
South Indian Fishermen
Welfare Association
president Ku Bharathi.
“Today, our members
kept away from the sea to
pay tribute to the
victims.”
Thousands pay homage to 2004 tsunami victims
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Editor-in-Chief
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Wong Wei Kong
Editor
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Contributing Editor
V.K. Santosh Kumar
Cluster Head
(International & Transactional Sales)
Martin Boey
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December30,2022
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INDIA
Uzbekistan’s health ministry has
said at least 18 children died after
consuming a medicinal syrup man-
ufactured by Indian drugmaker
Marion Biotech.
The ministry said 18 out of 21
children who took the Dok-1
Maks syrup for an acute respira-
tory disease died after consuming
it.
The syrup is marketed on the
company’s website as a treatment
for cold and flu symptoms.
A batch of the syrup contained
ethylene glycol, which is toxic.
The syrup was imported into
Uzbekistan by Quramax Medikal,
the ministry said in a statement
on Wednesday.
It also said the syrup was given
to children at home without a
doctor’s prescription, either by
their parents or on the advice of
pharmacists, with doses that ex-
ceeded the standard dose for chil-
dren.
It was not immediately clear
whether all or any of the children
consumed the suspected batch or
more than the standard dose, or
both.
Marion Biotech, Quramax
Medikal and India’s health min-
istry did not respond to a Reuters
request seeking comment.
An Indian government source
said the health ministry is looking
into the matter.
India on Tuesday launched an
inspection of some drug factories
across the country to ensure high
quality standards.
The Uzbek incident follows a
similar one in Gambia, where the
deaths of at least 70 children were
blamed on cough and cold syrups
made by New Delhi based
Maiden Pharmaceutical.
Both India’s government and
the company have denied the
medicines were at fault.
“Joint inspections are being
conducted all over the country, as
per standard operating proce-
dures,” the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare said in a state-
ment.
“This will ensure high stan-
dards of quality compliance with
respect to drugs manufactured in
the country.”
The ministry said it is inspect-
ing drug-manufacturing units that
were at risk of making non-stan-
dard, adulterated or spurious
drugs, but did not name any
company.
India is known as the “phar-
macy of the world” and its phar-
maceuticals exports have more
than doubled over the past
decade to US$24.5 billion ($33
billion) in the past fiscal year.
But some health experts say
India’s drug regulations are lax,
especially at the level of states
where thousands of factories oper-
ate.
The government in October
suspended all of Maiden’s produc-
tion, based in Haryana, for viola-
tion of manufacturing standards.
But India’s main drugs officer
told the World Health Organisa-
tion (WHO) this month that tests
of samples from the same batches
of syrups that Maiden sent to
Gambia were compliant with gov-
ernment specifications.
Maiden, too, has said its drugs
were fine.
WHO said the laboratories con-
tracted by it in Ghana and
Switzerland found excessive levels
of ethyleneglycol and diethyleneg-
lycol contaminants in the Maiden
syrups.
A Gambian parliamentary com-
mittee last week said Maiden was
responsible for the deaths of at
least 70 children who died from
acute kidney injury, and called on
the government to take legal ac-
tion.
The Uzbek health ministry said
it dismissed seven employees for
negligence for not analysing the
deaths in a timely manner and not
taking the necessary measures.
It also took disciplinary mea-
sures against some “specialists”,
without specifying what role they
had.
The ministry is pulling out
Dok-1 Maks syrups from pharma-
cies.
Reuters
Uzbek deaths linked to India-made syrup
INDIA
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December 30, 2022
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