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Kuwait’s new expat quota bill may force 8 lakh Indians to leave

Kuwait’s national assembly approved the draft Expat quota bill on Sunday, which spells terror for the 8 lakh Indians who live there. The Bill, according to which Indians should not exceed 15 percent of the population, is to be transferred to the respective committee so that a comprehensive plan is created.

Significantly, out of Kuwait’s 4.3 million population, 3 million are expats. Indians are the largest expat community in Kuwait, coming up to an estimated 1.45 million.

The anti-expat rhetoric has spiked since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic with lawmakers and government officials call for reducing the number of foreigners in Kuwait. This has come after the jobs have taken a massive hit due to the pandemic, after which the Kuwait government drafted this bill in an attempt to increase the job availability ratio for the natives of the country. According to a report, Kuwait Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al Khalid Al Sabah had recently proposed decreasing the number of expats living in the country from 70 percent to 30 per cent of the total population.

Meanwhile, the country’s COVID-19 cases are steadily rising, as the last recorded number of cases were 49,941, while the death toll has climbed to 368.

Pink glacial ice boosts climate change crisis

There is a “mysterious” appearance of pink ice on glaciers in the Alps. Scientists are investigating the pink glacial ice which is caused by algae that has a detrimental impact on the environment. It is likely to boost the climate change crisis.

Concerning the origin of the algae, “the pink snow observed on parts of the Presena glacier is likely caused by the same plant found in Greenland,” said Biagio Di Mauro from National Research Council, Italy.

The plant is called Ancylonema nordenskioeldii. It can also been seen in Greenland.

He says that the algae is not dangerous and occurs naturally during the spring and summer in both the middle latitudes and the Poles. He had studied the algae at the Morteratsch glacier in Switzerland.

He says that usually ice reflects back 80% of the sun’s radiations into the atmosphere. When algae is present, it darkens the ice causing it to absorb more heat and melt the ice. Increasing algae results in melting of ice rapidly.

He points out that hikers and ski lifts may have an impact on algae and he and his team are trying to quantify possible effects that causes the Earth to overheat.

There is fear that the crisis of climate change is only worsening.

 

Source: AFP

 

 

Meet Roshni Bhadouriya, the 15-year-old who cycled 24km to school everyday and got 98.5% in her SSLC

Roshni Bhadouriya, a girl from a small village called Ajnol in Madhya Pradesh, has scored the 8th rank in the state, having secured 98.5% in her class 10 exams after cycling 24 kilometres to school every day. This 15-year-old used to cycle from her village to the school that was situated in Mehgaon. Irrespective of heavy rains or scorching heat, this little girl used to attend school without fail. She had even stayed back in school during days when she wasn’t able to get back home due to rains.

Roshni had scored a perfect score in math while she had scored 96 in her favourite subject English. She has said that she spires to become an IAS. While speaking to the media, she had said, “I was always attentive in class and focused on writing exactly what I had learned. I am thrilled to get such high marks. I want to clear the IAS exam so my father and I have decided to opt for mathematics in Class 11.”

She is the second of three children of Purushottam Bhadouriya, who works as a farmer. He was beaming with joy after the results were declared, and said that while it was difficult for him to keep his children in school but even after all his hardships, the thought of discontinuing her education has never crossed his mind.

Iran’s underground nuclear facility damaged due to fire

Iran has confirmed that its underground nuclear facility Natanz was damaged due to a fire and said that it has caused a significant impact on its new centrifuge assembly centre. Initially, the authorities had downplayed the incident and claimed that it had only affected and “industrial shed”. It has now been confirmed that it had damaged the entire centrifuge assembly centre which had been opened in 2018.

It is suspected that Iran is using the coronavirus crisis to bolster its nuclear program. Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards Navy Chief said on Sunday that Tehran had built search underground missile cities and said that they existed in all provinces of Iran. Natanz is the centrepiece of Iran’s enrichment programme, which Tehran says is for peaceful purposes. Western intelligence agencies and the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog (IAEA) believe it had a coordinated, clandestine nuclear arms programme that it halted in 2003. Tehran denies ever seeking nuclear weapons.

There has been a lot of pointing fingers in this issue, since the United States and Israel are suspected to be behind this as Iran had recently issued an arrest warrant against US President Donald Trump. The suspicion comes after a recent computer virus that was expected to be developed by the United States and Israel had attacked the server of Natanz.

While the US has refrained from commenting on this, Israel’s defence minister had said on Sunday that it was not ‘necessarily’ behind every incident in Iran.

China’s bubonic plague alert sparks worldwide alarm

China has issued a nationwide bubonic plague alert following a case in the Northern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of the country.  Level 3 alert has been issued, which also calls for prevention and control of the same. The alert forbids the hunting and eating of animals that could carry plague and asks the public to report any suspected cases of plague or fever with no clear causes and to report any sick or dead marmots.

This comes after the Chinese news agency Xinhua had reported two cases of bubonic plague in the Khovd Province of Mongolia in Bayan Nur. Two brothers had reportedly contracted this disease after consuming the meat of marmot.

Bubonic plague is a disease that could have a pandemic level effect if contracted and spread. It is a relatively rare disease in today’s world, but it is prevalent in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Madagascar, and Peru. It is caused by coming into contact with fleas, which have bitten rodents. This plague causes swelling of lymph nodes and could have a fatality rate of 30-60 %.

This sparked controversy worldwide because a similar plague had wiped out nearly half of Europe’s population in the Middle Ages. It was even dubbed ‘black death’, because it causes the blackening of fingernails, which is the first symptom of the disease. This was one of the worst pandemics in human history that claimed millions of lives in the 14th and 15th centuries.

Chinese authorities alert about Bubonic Plague

The authorities of Bayannur, a city in China issued a level III warning of plague prevention and control.

“At present, there is a risk of a human plague epidemic spreading in this city. The public should improve its self-protection awareness and ability, and report abnormal health conditions promptly,” the local health authority said.

A bubonic plague is suspected to have emerged in China.

The bubonic plague comes after researchers in China announced another potential pandemic caused by an influenza virus in pigs.

The World Health Organization (WHO) states that a bubonic plague is a bacterial disease that is spread by fleas living on wild rodents such as marmots. If it is not identified and treated in time, an adult can die in less than 24 hours.

A 27-year-old resident and his 17-year-old brother are confirmed cases of the bubonic plague. They are currently under treatment in two different hospitals. It is said that the brothers had consumed marmot meat. Others are suggested not to consume marmot meat.

Those who had come in contact with the brothers have been isolated and are being treated at local hospitals.

The local health authority announced that the warning period will continue until the end of 2020.

 

Source: PTI

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi attended none of the meetings of Parliamentary Committee on Defence

Congress MP from Wayanad who is also a member of the Parliamentary Committee on Defence has not attended even a single sitting of committee which was constituted in September 2019 after the BJP led NDA came to power in May 2019.

The committee has so far held 11 sittings, the last one being March 12 of this year and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has attended none of the sittings.

It is important to note that Rahul Gandhi based his 2019 election campaign on the Rafale deal alleging corruption. However, the Supreme Court gave a clean chit to the Modi government in November 2019. Since the crushing defeat of his party in the elections and the verdict of the Supreme Court, the Congress leader has stayed away from mentioning Rafale deal.

The Parliamentary Committee on Defence comprising of members from different political parties discusses matters related to procurement policy, defence research and development, defence public sector undertakings, demands for grants, welfare for ex-servicemen and other important matters. They also discuss bills, review annual reports of the department and other important matters. The tenure of the committee is 1 year. In essence, the committees function as mini parliament holding the executive accountable. It is expected of an elected MP who is part of the committee to perform these jobs.

The absence of Rahul Gandhi in the sittings of Parliamentary Committees has been a habit. The Congress leader was part of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs during the 16th Lok Sabha (2014-2019). Of the 86 sittings, he attended only 9. In 2014-2015 and 2018-2019, he attended none of its meetings during which the committee met for 30 times. He attended 5 out of 23 sittings in 2017-18, 3 out of 17 in 2016-17 and only one out of 16 in 2015-16.

Looters disrupt peace of Bagan’s temples in Myanmar

Ancient temple in Bagan after sunset , Myanmar. (Bule Sky Studio)

A squad of police guard the sacred site of Bagan in Myanmar, rich in monuments and temples. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, looters are snatching relics from temples deserted by visitors and tourists. 

Around 100 officers are spread across Bagan and they sweep torches over the monuments to search for intruders.

In early June, 12 different temples were looted. Robbers had swiped plenty of relics such as copper, stupas, ancient coins and jade jewellery.

The 35th Battalion regional police squad have been deployed to boost local tourism police and firefighters, ranging across the site by jeep, motorbike and foot. “It’s not easy to patrol as the area is so big,” one police officer says

As of now, the squad have resisted intruders at most of the temples.

The region is known for its stupas, temples, murals and sculptures and was finally added to the prestigious UNESCO world heritage list in 2019.

But the pandemic has halted social and economic activity which has impacted the livelihoods of those who depend on tourism for their income.

The region was visited by more than half a million people last year. However it dropped to 130,000 this year until tourists spots were closed.

Our security forces are patrolling day and night,” Police Lieutenant Colonel Sein Win tells AFP.

“We have it under control for the moment, but it’s a challenge.”

“The Bagan temples will not tolerate it. The robbers will be dealt with,” says Souvenir seller Wyne Yee, who greatly depends on the tourism industry.

 

Source: AFP

Uddhav Thackerey govt in Maharashtra says No to Ayurveda and Yes to Unaani

While the Maharashtra government on Friday (July 3), threatened to take action against Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali for claiming that their Coronil tablets prove to be effective in treating corona patients, its municipal corporations are aggressively promoting the use of ‘unani kadha’ to protect against the virus.

Municipal Commissioner Aziz Sheikh said that efforts are underway to make use of unani kadha in fighting the spread of corona virus.

The Dhule Municipal Corporation is doling out unani kadha to boost the immunity of frontline workers and to the residents of the city. The Municipal Coporation along with the district administration and Khatun Education Society’s Al Ameen Unani Medical College in Malegaon distributed unani kadha at the district court premises. Several dignitaries like Justice A.H. Syed, District Judge J.A. Sheikh, Secretary of District Legal Services Authority Dr. G.U. Dongre participated and endorsed the unani kadha as an immunity booster against the virus.It assured that it will be made available in other institutions and administrative bodies as well.

This action comes in the wake of Maharashtra government warning Patanjali of action under Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act, 1954. It however said that Patanjali can advertise Coronil as immunity booster.

Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali launched a new pill called Coronil which it claims it can cure coronavirus infection within a 14-day course of taking the medicine. He added that the medicine was tested in a placebo-controlled clinical trial with COVID-19 patients on a randomized testing basis. The Ayush Ministry came out in response to this, saying that Coronil is not to be marketed or advertised until all of the claims put forth by the Patanjali Group were proven to be credible. Patanjali claims of having licensed Coronil as a treatment for COVID-19 infections, to which the ministry has refuted requesting Uttarakhand Government’s licensing authority to furnish proper product approval details.

Police in Coimbatore pay homage to dead Peacock draping it in national flag

A peacock that died after getting electrocuted was given homage by honouring it with a national flag and a salute.

The peacock was found dead in Singanalllur SIHS colony road in front of a transformer. The people in the neighbourhood informed the police who had come and recovered the body of the dead peacock.

The police saluted the bird and wrapped her in tricolour and was later handed it over to the Madukkarai Forest Department.

What does the flag code say?

According to Section 5 of the Flag Code, the National Flag of India cannot be used as drapery in any form whatsoever except in the funeral of State/Military/Central Paramilitary force personnel. However, in this case, it seems like the police have done it in good faith.