Month: June 2021

  • Matthew Perry Calls Off Engagement With Fiancee Molly Hurwitz

    Matthew Perry Calls Off Engagement With Fiancee Molly Hurwitz

    Just a week after the F.R.I.E.N.D.S Reunion, Matthew Perry began trending. The actor and his fiancée Molly Hurwitz have called off their engagement, People reports. “Sometimes things just don’t work out and this is one of them,” People quoted the 51-year-old actor as saying. Matthew Perry wished Molly Hurwitz, 29, the best in life and added, “I wish Molly the best.” The couple began dating in 2018 and got engaged in November 2020. In an interview with the same news portal, confirming his engagement to Molly, Matthew Perry had said, “Luckily, I happened to be dating the greatest woman on the face of the planet at this time.”

    Matthew Perry was previously in a long term relationship with actress with actress Lizzy Caplan – they parted ways in 2012. Matthew Perry frequently shared pictures of Molly on his Instagram profile when they were together.

     

  • PM Modi speaks to Milkha Singh, wishes him speedy recovery

    New Delhi (TIP): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday spoke to former Indian sprinter Milkha Singh and inquired about his health, reported ANI.

    Modi wished the legendary athlete a speedy recovery and hoped he will be back soon to bless and inspire the athletes who are participating in the Tokyo Olympics.

    Singh who is Covid-19 positive was admitted to the ICU in Covid Hospital of the PGIMER here on Thursday due to dipping levels of oxygen.

    He has been kept under observation and is stable now. He was discharged from a private hospital earlier this week. Milkha Singh was on Sunday discharged from a private hospital where he was getting treatment for Covid-19 infection even as he continues to be on oxygen support. The 91-year-old was discharged in stable condition on the request of his family.

     

  • Govt books 300 million doses of new Indian jab

    Govt books 300 million doses of new Indian jab

    New Delhi (TIP): India made its first advance commitments for a coronavirus vaccine under development, announcing a Rs 1,500 crore deal with Hyderabad’s Biological E to stockpile 300 million doses of its candidate that has shown promising signs but is currently in the last stage of clinical trials.

    The commitment, announced by the Union health ministry on Thursday, June 3, represents the first time the government has placed an advance purchase order, which typically helps secure large volumes of doses, and has been a strategy used by countries that managed to procure doses early. “The arrangement with Biological-E is part of the wider endeavour of Government of India to encourage indigenous vaccine manufacturers by providing them support in research & development and also financial support,” the ministry said in a statement.

    The move comes a day after the Supreme Court pulled up the government for its vaccination policy and gave it two weeks to submit all files and notings that “reflect its thinking and the culmination” of its vaccination policy, which judges said appeared to be “arbitrary and irrational”.

    The criticism around the Covid-19 vaccination drive stems from an acute shortage of doses in the country, where under 19% of the 940 million eligible people have received at least one dose.

    The order that the government disclosed on Thursday will help India get guaranteed access to large doses of the vaccines made by Biological E once the dose is approved. The amount committed will go towards development as well as stockpiling of the doses in advance, which will help push large quantities as soon as clearances are secured. The vaccine is likely to be marketed as Corbevax, according to names previously disclosed by the company.

    The 300 million doses appeared to be the cumulative capacity that Biological E told the Centre it will be able to produce for the rest of 2021. Niti Aayog’s VK Paul on May 13 said the company’s 300 million doses was among the 2.16 billion doses of various vaccines that the government was expecting to be available between August and December. It was not immediately clear when the 300 million doses will begin to become available since Phase III trials were only approved in late April, and the developers – Biological E and its partner, Texas-based Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) – are yet to release data from the Phase 1/2 studies.

    Dr Peter Hotez, the dean of BCM’s National School of Tropical Medicine and one of the scientists involved in the development, said in an interview to an Indian TV channel last month that clinical trials have shown there will be cross-protection against a number of variants of concern. The vaccine is made using a tried-and-tested platform that is also used in the development of the Hepatitis B vaccine, which Biological E has past experience of making.

    In an interview to HT in January, BCM’s Maria Elena Bottazzi said that the vaccine could particularly help inoculate children. “A hepatitis vaccine platform will also help be reassuring for paediatrics use since mRNA and viral vectors have never been used in children,” she said.          Source: HT

  • Govt sets up expert panel to fix national minimum wage

    New Delhi (TIP): The government has constituted an expert group led by Prof Ajit Mishra, that will give recommendations on fixation of minimum wages and national floor minimum wage. “The Ministry of Labour & Employment issued an order and has constituted the Expert Group to provide technical inputs and recommendations on fixation of Minimum Wages and National Floor Minimum Wages,” a labour ministry statement said.

    Minimum wage is different for different categories of workers.

    National floor refers to the minimum level of wage that is applicable to all categories of workers across the country.

    The group has been constituted for a period of three years from the date of notification.

    To arrive at the wage rates, the group will look into the international best practices on the wages and evolve a scientific criteria and methodology for fixation of wages.

    The expert group is chaired by Prof Ajit Mishra, Director, Institute of Economic Growth.

    The members of the expert group include Prof Tarika Chakraborty, IIM Calcutta, Anushree Sinha, Senior Fellow, National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER), Vibha Bhalla, Joint Secretary, H Srinivas, Director General, V V Giri National Labour Institute (VVGNLI).

    DPS Negi, Senior Labour & Employment Advisor, Ministry of Labour & Employment is the Member Secretary.    Source: PTI

  • Kamala Harris calls PM Narendra Modi on US vaccines for India

    New Delhi (TIP): Days after External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar met key officials in the Biden administration in Washington DC, the US announced Thursday, June 3,  that it will distribute Covid-19 vaccines to India as part of its “strategy for global vaccine sharing”.

    President Joe Biden made the announcement and Vice President Kamala Harris called up Prime Minister Narendra Modi regarding Washington’s plans to make vaccines available to other countries, including India.

    Initial estimates suggest India will get about 2-3 million doses in the first tranche of doses via COVAX and directly from the US. This is a day’s dose for India – on Thursday, the country administered 2.62 million doses, according to a provisional official report. These included 24,04,166 first dose beneficiaries and 220,805 second dose beneficiaries.

    A US statement said that the administration will begin sharing the “first 25 million doses of COVID vaccines” with countries as part of the framework for sharing at least 80 million vaccines globally by the end of June.

    Biden said: “At least 75 per cent of these doses — nearly 19 million — will be shared through COVAX, including approximately 6 million doses for Latin America and the Caribbean, approximately 7 million for South and Southeast Asia, and approximately 5 million for Africa, working in coordination with the African Union and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.”

    “The remaining doses, just over 6 million, will be shared directly with countries experiencing surges, those in crisis, and other partners and neighbours, including Canada, Mexico, India, and the Republic of Korea,” he said.

    Biden said: “We are sharing these doses not to secure favours or extract concessions. We are sharing these vaccines to save lives and to lead the world in bringing an end to the pandemic, with the power of our example and with our values.”                 Source: Indian Express

  • India’s daily Covid cases, deaths fall to 132,364 and 2713; tally tops 28.5 mn

    India’s daily Covid cases, deaths fall to 132,364 and 2713; tally tops 28.5 mn

    New Delhi (TIP): India recorded 132,364 cases of the coronavirus disease in the last 24 hours, taking the nationwide infection tally to 28,574,350, according to the data from the Union ministry of health and family welfare (MoHFW), updated at 8am on Friday, June 4. Also, in the same period, 2713 people succumbed to Covid-19, taking the related death toll to 340,702, the data showed. This is for the first time after two days that India saw a marginal fall in its daily new cases of the viral disease. Since logging 127,510 fresh infections in the 24-hour period leading to June 1 — the lowest single-day rise in more than two months — the country reported 132,788 and 134,154 cases, respectively, in the next two days.

    The number of tests conducted on June 3 stood at 2,075,428, the government-run Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) tweeted on Friday morning. While this is a decline from 2,159,873 tests on June, total 357,433,846 tests have been conducted till now, ICMR’s figures showed.

    The decline in daily cases has coincided with containing measures taken by governments at the state and the Union Territory (UT) level. While this decline has prompted several state governments, like Delhi and Maharashtra, to announce measures to “unlock” or exit from lockdown or lockdown-like curbs, others have announced an extension in restrictions to further break the chain of transmission of the virus.

    However, as daily cases are still well above the 100,000-mark, the central government, on June 1, announced the cancellation of class 12th board exams of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). Within hours, the Council of Indian Certificate of Secondary Education (CISCE) announced the cancellation of its class 12th exams as well. Class 10th exams were scrapped in April when the second wave was at its peak.

    SII applies to manufacture Covid vaccine Sputnik V

    The Serum Institute of India (SII) has applied to the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) seeking permission to manufacture COVID-19 vaccine Sputnik V in the country, sources said on Thursday.

    The Pune-based firm has also sought approval for test analysis and examination. Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine is currently being manufactured in India by Dr Reddy’s Laboratories.

    “The Serum Institute of India (SII) put up an application to the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) on Wednesday seeking permission to manufacture the COVID-19 vaccine, Sputnik V, in India,” a source said.

  • Global Covid-19 Caseload Tops 172mn

    Washington (TIP): The overall global Covid-19 caseload has topped 172 million, while the deaths have surged to more than 3.69 million, according to the Johns Hopkins University.

    In its latest update on Friday, June 4,  morning, the University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) revealed that the current global caseload and death toll stood at 172,005,004 and 3,698,128, respectively.

    The US continues to be the worst-hit country with the world’s highest number of cases and deaths at 33,325,514 and 596,395, respectively, according to the CSSE.

    In terms of infections, India follows in the second place with 28,441,986 cases.

    The other worst countries with over 3 million cases are Brazil (16,803,472), France (5,755,554), Turkey (5,270,299), Russia (5,040,390), the UK (4,515,778), Italy (4,225,163), Argentina (3,884,447), Germany (3,701,692), Spain (3,687,762) and Colombia (3,488,046), the CSSE figures showed.

    In terms of deaths, Brazil comes second with 469,388 fatalities.

    Nations with a death toll of over 100,000 are India (337,989), Mexico (228,146), the UK (128,075), Italy (126,342), Russia (120,604) and France (109,990).

  • Surge testing expanded as more cases of Delta variant found in UK

    UK health authorities on Thursday added another region for surge testing following the identification of a “small number” of confirmed cases of the Delta variant of Covid-19 or the highly transmissible B1.617.2 mutation first identified in India. The National Health Service (NHS) Test and Trace system launched additional testing and genomic sequencing at Gamesley Ward in the High Peak area of England’s Derbyshire county, in partnership with the local authorities. All the confirmed cases in the area have been instructed to self-isolate, and their contacts have been identified, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said. “Everyone aged five and over who lives or works in this area is strongly encouraged to take a Covid-19 PCR test from today, whether they are showing symptoms or not,” DHSC said. “Enhanced contact tracing will be used for individuals testing positive with a variant of concern (VOC). This is where contact tracers look back over an extended period to determine the route of transmission,” it added.

    Any PCR positive test results will be sent for genomic sequencing at specialist laboratories to help officials identify Covid-19 cases with a variant of concern and prevent its further spread.

    As part of the surge testing system, people are also being encouraged to use the free twice-weekly rapid tests, commonly known as lateral flow devices or LFDs, to be followed up with a PCR test.Several regions across the UK are now covered by the surge testing protocol, including many councils of London, as part of efforts to contain the spread of the Delta variant.

    It comes as official figures show that more than half of UK adults have now had both doses of a coronavirus vaccine.

    “Now let’s finish the job. When it’s your turn, get the jab,” UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Twitter in reference to the latest figures.

  • African nations acquire 53.5mn Covid vaccines

    African countries have acquired around 53.5 million Covid-19 vaccines so far, according to the continent’s health authorities.

    The Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) said on Thursday that 38.1 million Covid-19 doses have been administered till date, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Around 0.54 per cent of the population have received a full vaccine regimen, according to the Africa CDC.

    It said five member states that are Morocco, Egypt, Nigeria, Ethiopia and Zimbabwe have administered the most doses.

    As of Thursday, June 3, evening, the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in Africa has reached 4,867,727 as the death toll from the pandemic stood at 131,441, while 4,404,608 people across the continent have recovered from the disease, according to the agency.

    Chile to extend lockdown after Covid cases top 1.4mn

    Chile will extend lockdown measures in 16 cities, including the capital Santiago, due to the increase in Covid-19 infections, which have exceeded 1.4 million cases, Deputy Health Minister Paula Daza has said.

    Of the total number of cities that will enter into lockdown starting Saturday, five are in the country’s Metropolitan region, including Santiago, Daza said at a press conference on Thursday, Xinhua reported.

    The deputy minister of assistance networks, Alberto Dougnac, said 8,150 new cases of Covid-19 were detected in the last 24 hours, meaning a total of 1,403,101 people had tested positive for the virus since March 2020.

    Of the new daily cases of infection, 77 per cent had not started or completed their vaccination process, said Dougnac.

    In the same 24-hour period, 213 more people died of COVID-19, raising the pandemic death toll to 29,598.

    According to Health Minister Enrique Paris, Thursday marked four months since the country’s mass vaccination campaign began, and a decline in deaths has been “clearly” seen compared to when “we had no vaccinated people in Chile.”

  • US removes DPA ratings on AstraZeneca, Novavax, Sanofi vaccines

    Confident of the availability of Covid-19 vaccines in the country, the Biden Administration has removed Defense Production Act priority ratings on AstraZeneca, Novavax and Sanofi vaccines, a top US official said.

    The move would let companies take their own decision on whom they want to sell their vaccines.

    “We have secured enough vaccine supply for all Americans. This is a direct result of the president taking aggressive action, including through the use of the Defense Production Act, to mobilise the full force of US vaccine manufacturing and production,” White House Covid-19 response coordinator Jeff Zients told reporters during a virtual news conference.

    “Because of those actions and the success of US vaccine manufacturers, we are confident in our supply of our authorised vaccines. As a result, we’re removing the DPA priority ratings for AstraZeneca, Novavax, and Sanofi.

    While the manufacturers will continue to make these three vaccines, this action will allow US-based companies that supply these vaccine manufacturers to make their own decisions on which orders to fulfill first,” Zients said.

  • Rivals sew coalition deal to unseat Netanyahu

    Rivals sew coalition deal to unseat Netanyahu

    Jerusalem (TIP): Israel’s Opposition parties on Thursday set the wheels in motion for a potential national unity government after clinching a last-minute agreement to oust Benjamin Netanyahu, the longest-serving Prime Minister in the nation’s history.

    Yair Lapid, leader of the centrist Yesh Atid party, announced an eight-party coalition had been formed after tough political negotiations.

    Under a rotational arrangement, the head of the right-wing Yamina party, Naftali Bennett, 49, would serve as the Prime Minister first before handing over to Lapid. Lapid, 57, officially informed President Reuven Rivlin and Knesset (Parliament) Speaker Yariv Levin about the deal late Wednesday night, barely half an hour before the midnight deadline. The announcement came after a series of back-to-back meetings with the leaders of the anti-Netanyahu camp in the 120-member Knesset.

    “In accordance with Clause 13(b) of the Basic Law: The Government – I am honoured to inform you that I have succeeded in forming a government…MK (Member of Knesset) Naftali Bennett will serve as a PM first,” Lapid told Rivlin. Lapid will serve as Foreign Minister until the two men swap roles halfway through the term. There still needs to be a parliamentary vote before the government is sworn in.

    The President thanked Lapid saying, ‘We expect the Knesset will convene as soon as possible to ratify the government, as required.” The development, seen by some as historic as it includes an Arab party in the coalition, will break an ongoing political impasse that has seen Israel go through four polls yielding inconclusive results in less than two years. Lapid’s coalition is composed of Yesh Atid, Yamina, Kahol Lavan, New Hope, Labor, Yisrael Beiteinu, Meretz and United Arab List. PTI

  • No new nation on UK’s safe travel list

    LONDON (TIP): No new countries will be added to Britain’s green list for international travel when the number of quarantine-free destinations is updated later on June 3, The Sun reported. The newspaper, which did not name its sources, also said talks were ongoing to decide whether Portugal, a popular holiday destination for Britons, would remain open for travel.

    Airlines and travel companies have been hoping the green list will be expanded, and any failure to add more destinations will be a fresh blow for the tourism industry which had looked to June for a recovery to start.

    Britain permitted travel again on May 17 after more than four months of lockdown, but the reopening has to date been very limited, heaping pressure on airlines already weakened by 15 months of lockdowns. Portugal is currently the only popular European destination where Britons can go without needing to quarantine on their return, providing a lifeline for airlines like easyJet and Ryanair and travel companies like.

    – Reuters

  • 12 Australian media companies $8,42,000 for gag order breach in Pell sex assault case

    Melbourne (TIP): An Australian court on Friday ordered a dozen media firms to pay a total of A$1.1 million ($842,270) in fines for breaching a suppression order on reporting the conviction of former Vatican treasurer George Pell for child sexual assault. The 12 media outlets, mostly owned by Nine Entertainment Co and Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, pleaded guilty in February to breaching the gag order on reporting on the trial and conviction of the cardinal, after the state agreed to drop all charges against journalists and editors. Supreme Court of Victoria Justice John Dixon convicted the media firms saying they had “frustrated the suppression order as they diminished its purpose or efficacy by reporting information contrary to the terms of the order”. Pell’s conviction for abusing two choirboys was overturned in April last year after he was jailed for more than a year.

    – Reuters

  • Hong Kong cracks down on Tiananmen commemorations, arrests vigil organiser

    Hong Kong cracks down on Tiananmen commemorations, arrests vigil organiser

    Hong Kong (TIP): Hong Kong police arrested on June 4 an organiser of annual vigils for the victims of China’s 1989 Tiananmen crackdown on pro-democracy protesters, in what activists see as suppression of one of the city’s most powerful symbols of democratic hope. The arrest of Chow Hang Tung, vice-chairwoman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, comes as thousands of police are expected to patrol the city’s streets to prevent people from gathering.

    The heightened vigilance from authorities was a marked departure from Hong Kong’s cherished freedoms of speech and assembly, bringing the global financial hub closer in line with mainland China’s strict controls on society, activists say.

    The annual June 4 vigil in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park, the world’s largest, is widely seen as a symbol of the former British colony’s democratic aspirations and desire to preserve its different way of life from mainland China.

    “She only wanted to go to Victoria Park, light a candle and commemorate,” Chiu Yan Loy, Executive Member of the Alliance, told Reuters, adding he believed the arrest was meant to strike fear into those planning to attend the vigil.

    Senior superintendent Terry Law confirmed police arrested a 36-year-old member of the Alliance and a 20-year-old food delivery man for promoting an unauthorised assembly. It did not name the arrestees as per its usual practice. Chow told Reuters this week before her arrest that June 4 was a test for Hong Kong “of whether we can defend our bottom line of morality.” “As long as they haven’t said candles are illegal, we will light a candle,” she said.

    The Alliance’s chairman Lee Cheuk-yan is in jail for an illegal assembly.

    Police have banned the vigil for the second year in a row, citing the coronavirus. It did not say whether commemorating Tiananmen would breach a sweeping national security law China imposed in 2020 to bring its most restive city onto an authoritarian path.

    City leader Carrie Lam has not commented on commemorations, saying only that citizens must respect the law, as well as the Communist Party (CCP), which this year celebrates its 100th anniversary. June 4 commemorations are banned in mainland China.

    Last year, thousands in Hong Kong defied the ban, gathering in the park and lining up on sidewalks with lit candles across the city, in what was largely a solemn event, bar a brief scuffle with police in one district.

    “It is a battle against oblivion,” exiled activist Sunny Cheung told Reuters by text, adding the vigil “defines” Hong Kong as “the only beacon of liberty and truth under the CCP’s governance.”

    “LIGHT A CIGARETTE”

    Many plan to light candles again in their neighbourhood, if safe to do so. Some churches will be open for prayers.

    Jailed activist Jimmy Sham said via his Facebook page he planned to “light a cigarette at 8 pm.”

    “We do not see the hope of democracy and freedom in a leader, a group, or a ceremony. Every one of us is the hope of democracy and freedom.”

    Activists Figo Chan and Leung Kwok-hung, known as Long Hair, both also in prison, plan to fast on Friday, Chan’s Facebook page said.

    Prominent activist Joshua Wong was given a 10-month prison sentence last month after pleading guilty to participating in last year’s vigil, while three others got four-to-six-month sentences. Reuters

  • South Korean designer creates ‘Third Eye’ for ‘smartphone zombies’

    Seoul (TIP): A South Korean industrial designer has come up with a satirical solution for “smartphone zombies” who can’t take their eyes away from their screen long enough to stop themselves walking into a wall or other obstacle.

    Paeng Min-wook, 28, has developed a robotic eyeball he has dubbed “The Third Eye”, which obsessive mobile phone users can strap to their foreheads so they can browse injury-free on the go.

    The device, part of an artwork Paeng has called “Phono Sapiens”, opens its translucent eyelid whenever it senses the user’s head has been lowered to look at a smartphone. When the user comes within one to two metres of an obstacle, the device beeps to warn of the impending danger.

    “This is the look of future mankind with three eyes,” Paeng, a postgraduate in innovation design engineering at the Royal College of Art and Imperial College, told Reuters as he demonstrated use of The Third Eye around Seoul.

    “As we cannot take our eyes off from smartphones, the extra eye will be needed in future.”

    Paeng’s invention uses a gyro sensor to measure the oblique angle of the user’s neck and an ultrasonic sensor to calculate the distance between the robotic eye and any obstacles. Both sensors are linked to an open-source single-board microcontroller, with battery pack.

    Paeng’s demonstration of the device in Seoul this week garnered attention from passersby.

    “I thought he looked like an alien with an eye on his forehead,” Seoul resident, Lee Ok-jo, said. “These days many young people can get into accidents while using their mobile phone. This would be good for them.”

    Paeng plans to develop a camera module for the Third Eye and a linked mobile phone application, but he has no plans to commercialise his invention – a stance that he might consider changing given potential demand.

    “It is so cool and interesting,” said 23-year-old Shin Jae-ik. “We can easily bump into each other on street while using smartphones. I may not need it now, but I’d like to buy it when they sell it later.” Reuters

  • Australia finds highly infectious Delta variant in Melbourne virus outbreak

    Sydney (TIP): Australia’s Victoria state authorities said on June 4 they had detected the highly infectious Delta Covid-19 virus variant for the first time in the latest outbreak in Melbourne, stoking concerns of a major spike in cases. The Delta variant, which has been classified by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as among the four Covid-19 variants of concern due to evidence that they spread more easily, likely caused the latest devastating outbreak in India.

    “It is a variant of significant concern,” Victoria state Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton told reporters in Melbourne.

    “The fact that it is a variant different to other cases it means it is not related, in terms of transmission, with these cases.” Sutton said the new variant had not been linked to any sequenced COVID-19 infections across Australia from hotel quarantine or elsewhere.

    “It is a concern that it is not linked to other cases but we are chasing down all those primary case contacts … and looking into where it might have been acquired,” Sutton said.

    The Delta variant was detected in two members in a family who travelled to neighbouring New South Wales (NSW) two weeks ago while likely infectious and visited several popular tourist locations in the state’s south.

    Sutton said it was “within the bounds of possibility” that the cases could have contracted the Delta variant in NSW but that more tests would be needed.

    NSW, Australia’s most populous state, has not reported any locally acquired cases in a month. Victoria, Australia’s second-most populous state, is battling to contain its latest outbreak – 64 cases since May 24 – after more than three months of no cases, placing tough restrictions on movement of people and shutting down large parts of its economy. The government has linked all the cases to a single traveller released from quarantine after testing negative. Melbourne is into a second week of hard lockdown after it was extended for another week until June 10, but some curbs elsewhere were eased in the state from Thursday night. Reuters

  • ‘Dead end’: German cardinal offers to quit over church abuse

    ‘Dead end’: German cardinal offers to quit over church abuse

    Berlin (TIP): A leading German cardinal and confidante of Pope Francis, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, offered to resign as archbishop on June 4 over the Catholic Church’s mishandling of clergy sexual abuse cases, declaring in an extraordinary public gesture that the church had arrived at “a dead end”.

    The archdiocese of Munich and Freising published Marx’s resignation letter to the pope online, in multiple languages, and the cardinal said Francis had given him permission to make it public.  “It is important to me to share the responsibility for the catastrophe of the sexual abuse by Church officials over the past decades,” the 67-year-old Marx wrote in the letter. But he also issued a challenge of sorts for his fellow bishops to use the opportunity of the scandal to save the church and reform it.

    There was no immediate comment from the Vatican, where Marx sits on powerful financial and political bodies.

    Marx, who led the German Bishops’ Conference from 2014 until 2020, wrote that investigations during the last decade showed there had been “a lot of personal failures and administrative mistakes but also institutional or systemic’ failure”.

    In 2018, a church-commissioned report concluded that at least 3,677 people were abused by clergy in Germany between 1946 and 2014. More than half of the victims were 13 or younger when the abuse took place, and nearly a third of them were altar boys, according to the report.

    Earlier this year, another report came out about the church officials’ handling of alleged sexual abuse in the country’s western Cologne diocese. The archbishop of Hamburg, a former Cologne church official who was faulted in that report, offered his resignation to the pope and was granted a “time out” of unspecified length.

    Marx wrote in his letter that his offer could also be seen as “a personal signal for a new beginning, for a new awakening of the Church, not only in Germany”.

    “I would like to show that not the ministry is in the foreground but the mission of the Gospel,” he added.

    Marx’s offer to resign was an extraordinary gesture and laid bare the credibility crisis that the sexual abuse scandal created in Germany, as it has in other countries. To try to recover that credibility, Marx has spearheaded a process of reform and debate with the powerful German laity to address the structural problems that contributed to abuse being allowed to fester unchecked for decades.

    But the so-called “Synodal Path” has sparked fierce resistance inside Germany and out, primarily from conservative bishops and priests opposed to opening any debate on issues such as celibacy, women’s role in the church and homosexuality.

    Resistance has also come from the Vatican and bishops outside Germany, including culture warriors in the United States who have broken with church protocol to pen essays critical of the reform process under way in Germany.

    In his letter, Marx made no mention of his status as a member of Francis’ kitchen cabinet, a group of cardinal advisers who have been meeting regularly to draft a new reform of the Vatican hierarchy and who advise the pontiff on other matters.

    Marx’s offer to resign shocked Vatican watchers, who noted his closeness with the pope and important roles in the Vatican. In addition to his position as one of Francis’ top advisers, he heads the Council for the Economy, the board of religious and laypeople who helps oversee the Vatican’s finances.

    Theologian Massimo Faggioli of Villanova University said he was saddened by Marx’s offer to resign.

    “But his decision sets the bar for many other church leaders in the Catholic Church today,” Faggioli tweeted. — AP

  • Don’t support Oli ’s unconstitutional acts: Nepal Oppn to state bodies

    Kathmandu (TIP): Nepal’s Opposition alliance on Sunday urged all state institutions not to support Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli government’s “unconstitutional” and “anti-democratic” activities and expressed hope that the Supreme Court’s verdict on the petitions against the dissolution of the lower house of Parliament would come in its favour, according to a media report. A Constitutional Bench of the Nepal Supreme Court on Friday heard 30 petitions against the dissolution of the lower house of Parliament and fixed Sunday as the next date of hearing.

    PTI

  • Nepal reports first death from black fungus, 10 others infected

    Kathmandu (TIP): Nepal has reported its first death from black fungus, while 10 others have been detected to be suffering from the deadly infection in various districts across the country, according to a media report on June 3. A 65-year-old man died of black fungus, which is also known as mucormycosis, in Seti Zonal hospital in Kailali district, The Himalayan Times reported. He was admitted to the hospital on May 31 and was diagnosed with black fungus on Wednesday. He died on Thursday. However, his Covid-19 report was negative, Dilip Kumar Shrestha, Information Officer of the hospital, said. The Ministry of Health and Population on Thursday confirmed 10 cases of black fungus from Nepalgunj, Birgunj and Kathmandu districts, the report said. Out of the cases infected with black fungus, eight have contacted the authorities, while the rest are yet to approach, Dr Krishna Prasad Poudel, spokesperson in the ministry, was quoted as saying in the report. Mucormycosis is a very rare but serious infection, the most likely cause of which is mucor mould (mucormycetes) that lives throughout the environment. The infection mainly affects people with low immunity due to some pre-existing health condition such as diabetes or cancer. Meanwhile, the country extended the lockdown in the Kathmandu Valley till June 14 due to the spike in Covid-19 cases. Nepal recorded 5,316 new cases and 101 deaths related to Covid-19 on Wednesday. Nepal’s number of Covid-19 infections has reached 571,111, while the number of deaths stand at 7,386. — PTI

  • Pakistan govt to convert Havelis of Raj Kapoor and Dilip Kumar into museums

    Pakistan govt to convert Havelis of Raj Kapoor and Dilip Kumar into museums

     peshawar (TIP): The ancestral homes in Peshawar of Bollywood legends Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor are now owned by the Pakistan’s local government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, and will be converted into museums.

    According to Pakistani media, ownership of both properties has been transferred to the director of KP’s archaeology and museum department, the Peshawar deputy commissioner announced. Raj Kapoor’s home was constructed by Deewan Basheswarnath, the actor’s grandfather, between 1918-1922. He was a police officer in British India. Though from today’s Faisalabad in Pakistan, he remained posted in Peshawar for quite some time.

    Prithviraj Kapoor, Basheswarnath’s son, was one of Hindi cinema’s first big stars. After making a name for himself in local plays, he moved on to Mumbai in the late 1920s for greener pastures.

    Raj Kapoor was born on 14 December 1924 in the same house. Shakeel Waheedullah, head of the Cultural Heritage Council of Peshawar, said the family of the legendary actor returned to the house a few times before partition to sell it.

    Dilip Kumar was born Muhammed Yusuf Khan in 1911. His house was built by his father, who was a fruit merchant. Waheedullah said that financial losses forced his father to migrate to Mumbai, where the family looked to accomplish more. Kumar’s father sold his house in Peshawar in 1930 for a sum of Rs. 5,000. Since then, it has been sold various times and is currently being used as a warehouse.

    Last year, the veteran actor had expressed his gratitude in a tweet to a Pakistani journalist, asking his fans in Pakistan to send him pictures of his ancestral home.

    His tweet said: “Thank you for sharing this. Requesting all in #Peshawar to share photos of my ancestral house.” The KP Archaeology and Museums Director Abdul Samad said that the government would start restoration and rehabilitation of both badly damaged properties, before turning them into museums. He added that the directorate would also contact members of both families regarding the restoration work.

    “In the past, only announcements were made, but no practical steps were taken but the current government took possession of the houses after completing all legal procedures,” Samad told the News. He added that the next step is to restore the two houses to their original condition and convert them into museums for which funds are available.

    According to the government, Dilip Kumar’s house was valued at Rs8.56 million in Pakistani currency while Raj Kapoor’s home was valued at Rs10.5 million.

    But Haji Lal Mohammad, the owner of Dilip Kumar’s ancestral house, had refused to sell the house for Rs 8 million. He had demanded a minimum value of Rs 250 million for the property. Similarly, the owner of Raj Kapoor’s ancestral mansion had also refused to sell the house for Rs 10 million fixed by the local administration. Ali Qadir had demanded Rs. 2 billion for the historic mansion. — IANS

    Myanmar military court sentences two journalists to jail Bangkok (TIP): A military court in Myanmar has sentenced two journalists to two years in prison for their reporting, a move that has been decried by rights groups as the latest assault on the free press since the country’s coup.

    Aung Kyaw, 31, a reporter for the Democratic Voice of Burma, and Zaw Zaw, 38, a freelance reporter for the online news agency Mizzima, were convicted on June 3 by the court in Myeik, a city in southern Myanmar.

    The two had been charged under a recently revised provision in the penal code with spreading misinformation that could incite unrest, a charge that critics say criminalises free speech.

    The convictions are the latest moves against journalists since Myanmar’s military overthrew the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in a February coup. According to Myanmar’s Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, about 90 journalists have been arrested since the takeover, with more than half still in detention, and 33 still in hiding. The coup sparked massive civilian protests against military rule that have been met with a brutal crackdown that has left hundreds dead.

    The Democratic Voice of Burma and Mizzima are among five local media outlets that were banned in March from broadcasting or publishing after their licenses were cancelled. Like many other banned media outlets, both have continued operating.

    A statement issued by the Democratic Voice of Burma said Aung Kyaw was arrested March 1 for reporting about anti-junta demonstrations in Myeik.

    A statement from Mizzima said Zaw Zaw was detained about two months ago at his home while covering events for them in Myeik and Dawei, also in southern Myanmar.

    The news agency said it “categorically opposes the two-year prison sentence handed to Zaw Zaw and calls for the immediate release of all journalists unjustly detained by the ruling junta, including Zaw Zaw and another four detained Mizzima journalists”.

    “Mizzima firmly believes that journalism and the right to freedom of expression is not a crime and that Mizzima and all independent Myanmar media outlets should be allowed to freely function in Myanmar,” the statement said. Family members of both reporters were not allowed to attend their hearing at the military court, but were allowed to talk to them by phone for a few minutes after being sentenced. During their call, Aung Kyaw told his wife to tell the media that he would not appeal because he no longer believed in the law under military rule. AP

  • Indian-origin journalist Tejinder Singh passes away; Pentagon condoles

    Indian-origin journalist Tejinder Singh passes away; Pentagon condoles

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Indian-originTejinder Singh, a veteran White House correspondent and founder and editor of the India America Today newswire, has passed away in the US, the publication has announced.

    Singh founded India America Today, an independent media organization and news provider based in Washington, DC.

    “India America Today is deeply grieved to announce the passing of our Founder and Editor @tejindersingh. He launched IAT in 2012, and we will continue to carry on the work that he started. RIP Editor,” the publication said on Twitter on May 29.

    Pentagon Press Secretary John F Kirby condoled his death at a press briefing on Tuesday, June 1.

    “We here at the Pentagon would like to take a moment to express our condolences and sympathies for the passing of Mr. Tejinder Singh, who many of you know was the founder and editor of India America Today,” he said.

    “He was a Pentagon Correspondent since 2011, and I dealt with him from this podium, I’ve dealt with him when I was at the State Department podium, and the one word, I mean, the word one that comes to mind when you think of Tejinder is a gentleman.

    “He was a real gentleman, good reporter, damn good reporter. Asked tough questions and produced good stuff, but he was a heck of a man… a gentleman as I said. And we’re going to miss him, we’re all going to miss him, and I know you guys feel the same way,” Kirby said.

    He was the Vice-President (Print) for the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA-DC) 2011-12.

     

  • Indian-origin Student Gets 10-Year UAE Golden Visa

    Indian-origin Student Gets 10-Year UAE Golden Visa

    DUBAI (TIP): An Indian-origin student has received the UAE’s coveted 10-year Golden Visa, which is mostly reserved for prominent global personalities, for her merit and excellent academic credentials, according to a media report.

    Tasneem Aslam from Kerala received the Golden Visa in the exceptional student category and is allowed to stay in the country till 2031, media reported.

    The UAE government in 2019 implemented a new system for long-term residence visas, enabling foreigners to live, work and study in the UAE without the need of a national sponsor.

    These golden visas are issued for five or 10 years and will be renewed automatically.

    “This is one of the best moments in my life. I feel privileged to achieve this and I am thankful to Almighty Allah. My parents ‘support has been enormous, and Insha Allah I hope to sponsor them in near future,” Tasneem told the media.

    Tasneem studied Islamic Sharia from Al Qasimia University in Sharjah and topped her class, which consisted of pupils from 72 nationalities, with a grade point average (GPA) of 3.94 on 4.

    Typically, the 10-year golden visa is targeted at wealthy individuals keen to offer the UAE significant investment in exchange for an opportunity to reside within the country.

    Besides entrepreneurs, individuals with specialized talent like doctors, researchers, scientists and artists can also apply for the visa.

    Exceptional high school and university students are eligible for a 5-year residency visa in the UAE.

    Recently, Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt also received the Golden Visa.

     

     

  • Indian-origin economist Kalpana Kochhar joining Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

    Indian-origin economist Kalpana Kochhar joining Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Noted Indian-origin economist Kalpana Kochhar, who heads the Human Resources Department of the IMF, is retiring next month after serving for over three decades with the organization to join the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    Kochhar, who served in various senior positions during her three decades at the International Monetary Fund, will retire on July 30, and will join as Director of Development Policy and Finance, at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the IMF announced on Wednesday.

    “In her 33 years at the Fund, Kalpana provided a shining example of strong leadership and dedication to the Fund’s mission. She brought a keen intellect and remarkable passion to her work and always focused her efforts on helping those we serve. Her work helped to shape the Fund and, while we wish her very best in her new role, she will be sorely missed,” IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said.

    As Director of Human Resources, Kochhar oversaw the IMF’s HR policies and the recruitment and retention of more than 4,000 IMF employees from nearly 150 countries based in Washington, DC, and in overseas offices.

    In the past five years, she led the successful review and modernization of the IMF’s compensation and benefits program, as well as the successful implementation of a large and complex human capital management IT system which helped to simplify, streamline and modernize HR at the Fund.

    “From start to finish, Kalpana provided the management team and the Executive Board with sound advice and displayed excellent judgment in all HR-related matters,” Georgieva said.

    “Throughout her career, Kalpana has pioneered change in the institution, particularly on gender and emerging market issues, while always exhibiting a positive and caring management style,” she added.

    Georgieva said Kochar’s caring spirit was especially evident during the current health crisis.

    “This caring spirit was especially evident during the current health crisis when, spurred on by her compassion, HRD worked hard to effect policy and other interventions to ensure that staff continued to feel a sense of belonging and connectedness. She leaves a distinguished legacy, and opened an admirable pathway for others to follow,” Georgieva said.

    As Deputy Director in the Asia and Pacific Department (APD), she was responsible for setting up and executing the IMF’s strategy for Asia, including guiding analytical work and policy advice to a number of Asian countries to help promote economic growth, financial stability, and gender equality.

    As Deputy Director in the Strategy, Policy, and Review Department (SPR), she led research and policy formulation on gender equity, income inequality, jobs and growth, and structural reforms.

    In SPR, she also oversaw a comprehensive review of the IMF’s surveillance policy and practices aimed at enhancing engagement with the member countries.

    Before these roles, Kochhar was Assistant Director and Senior Personnel Manager in the Research Department. In between her Fund positions, Kochhar was seconded to the World Bank on a two-year stint as Chief Economist for the South Asia Region, lending her vast knowledge and experience on Asia to the Bank’s work in the region.

    There, she pioneered work on trade and financial integration in South Asia and established a high-level advisory group of economists and foreign policy specialists from the region to assist the Bank in these areas, a media release said.

    Kochhar started at the IMF as an Economist in 1988. Over the years, she built on her expertise in Asian regional matters with desk economist positions in Sri Lanka and the Philippines, and by leading work on Korea and Malaysia during the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s.

    Prior to joining the Fund, she was an Assistant Professor at George Washington University in Washington DC.

    Kochhar is also an accomplished author, and her research on Asia, gender, and a variety of development issues has appeared in numerous IMF working papers, Staff Discussion Notes, books, blogs, and publications including the widely circulated Finance and Development magazine, IMF said in a media release.

  • Indian-origin boy, a Yoga prodigy, wins UK PM award

    Indian-origin boy, a Yoga prodigy, wins UK PM award

    LONDON (TIP): An 11-year-old Indian-origin boy from southeast England, who has led daily Yoga classes for 40 children across 14 countries during the coronavirus lockdown, on Tuesday, June 1, received UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s daily Points of Light award.

    Ishwar Sharma, from Sevenoaks in Kent, started taking up Yoga when he was three years old after seeing his father practice daily and is a three-time World Yoga Champion. His autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has propelled him to help children through Yoga, particularly those with special needs like himself.

    “You have brought the joy of Yoga to hundreds of children globally during lockdown. I was particularly inspired to hear how you have helped children with special needs enjoy the activity you enjoy and excel at,” Johnson said in a personal letter to Sharma. The schoolboy’s free online classes were already proving a success before the start of the coronavirus pandemic but expanded even further in recent months.

    His virtual sessions were seen as even more vital as he is passionate about promoting both the mental and physical health benefits of practicing Yoga.

    “I am honored and humbled by this recognition. There have been unprecedented mental health issues amongst children due to the pandemic. I feel it is a recognition for Yoga as a discipline, which helps in balancing mental and physical health,” said Sharma.

    “This award has motivated me to continue my endeavor to spread the message of Yoga all over the world. I do hope that Yoga and meditation will be included in the national school curriculum in the future,” he said.

    Ishwar Sharma is the 1,646th person to receive the UK Prime Minister’s daily Points of Light award, which was first launched in April 2014 to recognize outstanding individuals making a difference where they live.

    Each day, an inspiring person is selected to receive the award to celebrate their remarkable achievements, including hundreds of volunteers who have been recognized for how they have served their communities through the pandemic. The UK Prime Minister makes daily announcements of the winners to celebrate, encourage and promote volunteering and the value that it brings to the country. The public is encouraged to write to 10 Downing Street with their suggestions for deserving candidates.

  • TRUMP SHUTS DOWN HIS BLOG AFTER A MONTH BECAUSE SO MANY PEOPLE WERE MAKING FUN OF IT

    TRUMP SHUTS DOWN HIS BLOG AFTER A MONTH BECAUSE SO MANY PEOPLE WERE MAKING FUN OF IT

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Back in March, after Donald Trump was banned from Facebook and Twitter for inciting an insurrection, his spokesperson Jason Miller appeared on Fox News and declared the following: “We’re going to see President Trump returning to social media in probably about two or three months here with his own platform…this is something that I think will be the hottest ticket in social media, it’s going to completely redefine the game, and everybody is going to be waiting and watching to see what exactly President Trump does. But it will be his own platform…. I can’t go much further than what I was able to just share, but I can say that it will be big once he starts. There have been a lot of high-power meetings he’s been having at Mar-a-Lago with some teams of folks who have been coming in, and…it’s not just one company that’s approached the president, there have been numerous companies. But I think the president does know what direction he wants to head here, and this new platform is going to be big and everyone wants him, he’s gonna bring millions and millions, tens of millions of people to this new platform.”

    With a big pitch like that, you might have expected the ex-president to unveil a social network that at least appeared to be more robust than a simple blog on his website but in fact, that’s exactly what Trump’s “return to social media” “with his own platform” entailed. It was called “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump,” and the reason we’re speaking of it in the past tense is because just a month after launching, the ex-president’s blog, where followers could find typically unhinged statements on his burgeoning legal problems, has been shut down. And not just shut down but scrubbed of old posts, depriving supporters of an archive to scroll through during particularly tough times, when they want to be reminded that “almost 75 million” people voted for him (yet he still lost the election).

    Why the sudden departure? While it’s a difficult time for many a media company, according to The Washington Post, Trump closed up shop because so many people were, appropriately, making fun of it. Also, it had almost no readers:

    Trump rolled out the blog last month after being absent from social media since January, but his effort to regain some of the attention he received with his headline-grabbing tweets largely failed. An adviser told The Washington Post’s Josh Dawsey that the former president wanted to open a new “platform” and didn’t like that this platform was being mocked and had so few readers. The individual spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk frankly about Trump’s plans.

    According to Washington Post analysis published last month, posts “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump,” as of mid-May, had been shared to Facebook “on average fewer than 2,000 times a day—a staggering drop from last year, when his Facebook page fielded tens of millions of comments, shares and other interactions every week.” In other words, his blog was a “stone-cold loser,” which you might have thought would translate to hate-clicks but apparently didn’t even do that.

    Of course, ask Miller and this is simply a strategic repositioning and Trump is soon going to be huge again on the internet, or something. In a sad, bullshit statement, he told CNBC: “It was just auxiliary to the broader efforts we have and are working on. Hoping to have more information on the broader efforts soon, but I do not have a precise awareness of timing.”

    As HuffPost noted in its eulogy, “‘From the Desk of Donald J. Trump’ was preceded in death” by many of its siblings: “Trump Airlines, Trump beverages, Trump: The Game, numerous Trump casinos, Trump magazine, Trump Mortgage, Trump Steaks, a Trump travel website, Trump telecom, Trump University, and Trump Vodka.”

    (Source: Vanity Fair)