Saturday, May 15, 2021

Achimoko Cloud Stay High on Tesla Stocks



Tesla (TSLA) stock fell 12 percent this week - its second-worst weekly performance in a year. But it does manage to settle above the significant value area seen by traders. Even if the price falls, a relatively vague technical indication indicates that Tesla is maintaining its long-term bullish trend.


"For Tesla, the trend is more in terms of the area shaded on this cloud or chart," said Katie Stockton, founder and managing partner of Fairland Strategies, during the Yahoo Finance Plus on Wednesday. She is referring to a component of the Ichimoku Cloud Indicator, which is used below to help determine potential support and resistance in the weekly candlestick chart.


The Achimoko cloud consists of two rows, the period A known and the period B, which are then shaded. Most traders focus on two cloud lines, although the indicator has a total of six components that were developed by Gucci Hosoda in the 1960s through tireless, manual backtesting.


"It's not really a black box, it's made in a way that's derived from mid-price points. So it's a bit more complicated to build. But a better picture." The signal is picked up from its window and placed on the chart. And its value is drawn, but then we can use it as a way to understand support and resistance. "


Stockton noted that the cloud's top secretion is well above current prices, and we should not expect Tesla to fall like a rock. "We don't really see it as a magnet, except that as it moves forward, it grows over time, and it shows that Tesla maintains its long-term growth."


Based on the chart, by the beginning of July, the cloud would have risen to its current price, which could have provided less than 500 500 support to the bottom of the cloud at that time. If the price goes down from there, the cloud will be seen as a potential resistance.


In the short term, Tesla needs to respect its 40-week moving average (purple in the chart), which closely tracks the 200-day moving average. There is another close level that Stockton wants to see honored by closing prices above two consecutive business days.


"There's a Fibonacci retracement around the level of 583 that we really want to see on a permanently closed basis. So here we are in this waiting and mood, let's get it back. But in the end, we We expect to be able to do that. It's a cloud-based support and guidance that is a long-term trend for Tesla.

Friday, May 14, 2021

Smuggling Gold from Dubai to India "by hiding gold in Teng" Failed



Indian Customs has foiled an attempt to smuggle gold from Dubai into packets of the popular drink 'Teng'.

According to Arab News, the Commissioner of Customs at Chennai Airport said in a statement that "after sifting the ingredients of the liquor, the customs officials discovered that it had been mixed with gold particles."

Authorities investigating the racket discovered that the recipient's address had been misused.

This is a new attempt by the smugglers to evade the heavy import duty on this precious metal by deceiving them in complex ways.

Earlier this year, authorities arrested two people at Chennai airport who were trying to smuggle gold under their wigs.

The couple was arrested after their bizarre hairstyles caught the attention of customs officials.

Two packets of gold paste weighing 700 grams were discovered from them.

Thursday, May 13, 2021

27 more Palestinians martyred in Israeli bombing of Gaza

Gaza / Occupied Jerusalem: Israeli terrorism continues in Occupied Palestine, including Gaza, and 27 more Palestinians were martyred on Eid, bringing the number of martyrs to 83.

According to Al Jazeera, Israeli warplanes also fired missiles at residential buildings, including a six-story building in Gaza. As Palestinians left their homes for Eid prayers on Thursday morning, Zionist warplanes roared in the sky and ruthless terrorists targeted unarmed people with their missiles.

According to Palestinian officials in Gaza, 83 people have been killed so far, including 17 children, while 480 people have been injured, many of them in critical condition and the number of martyrs is expected to rise. In addition, thousands of people have been displaced by the destruction of homes and buildings.

Palestinian doctors in Gaza have said that poisonous gas is also suspected to have been used by Israel in last night's attacks. Samples have been obtained from the bodies of the martyrs, which are being examined. Despite this, hundreds of Palestinians in sighs and sobs offered Eid prayers on the grounds of Al-Aqsa Mosque.

In retaliation, Hamas fired rockets at Israel, killing six Jews. There is also intense tension between Muslims and Jews inside Israel and clashes have broken out in some places, after which the occupying forces cracked down and arrested 374 Palestinian Muslims, while dozens of police officers were injured in the clashes.

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has signaled that he will call in troops to help police crack down on Palestinian protesters in the country. Netanyahu has also ordered the mobilization of Israeli forces on the Gaza border, which threatens to lead to another Israeli military offensive and bloodshed in Gaza.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Kublai Khan: The ruler of the Mongol dynasty who conquered China and annexed it to the world

 Kublai Khan, also known as Qibla Khan in the West, seized the Chinese throne in 1260 and ruled for 34 years. During this time he became known as a conqueror who was also interested in culture. But he also cared about his family's reputation, which was simply to attack and fight. He was the grandson of Genghis Khan, who was famous for killing a large number of his opponents instead of making peace efforts.




By the early thirteenth century, Genghis Khan's empire had become as large as the Eurasian continent had never seen before, nor has it ever seen before. However, Kublai Khan built the reputation of a subtle and thoughtful ruler who was slightly different from his grandfather's murderous reputation. But this did not happen suddenly.

Looking at Genghis Khan's wars and extensive Mongol conquests, it is understandable how the rulers changed the alliance in medieval Eurasia to create a new path of change. In the middle of the 13th century, the Mongols, along with the Chinese Song dynasty, formed a successful alliance against their mutual enemy, Jorchen.

But when they defeated the Jorchen people, they also turned against Song. Genghis Khan died in 1227 and after various successors, it was the turn of his grandson Kublai Khan to carry on the mission of conquests.

In the middle of the century, most of China was controlled by the Mongols, and between 1268 and 1273, the commanding general of Kublai, who was not a Mongol but a Chinese, founded the Sang dynasty in the modern central Chinese province of Hubei Had besieged and conquered it. As the city fell into the hands of the Song Dynasty, so did the last chance for the ethnic Song Dynasty to survive.

Ethnicly, the Chinese term is used because by that time another family had formed a government in China, which was actually formed by the Mongols.

After holding the throne for more than a decade in 1271, Kublai Khan formally declared the rule of the Yuan dynasty. Unusually, he kept the title Great Khan (Azeem Khan), which, albeit nominally, maintained his influence over other families in Eurasia.

This was the first time a country was ruled by a family that was not traditionally from the Chinese mainland, and it was not the last. From 1644 to 1912, the Chinese were ruled by the Monchos, who ruled as the Chung dynasty. However, Kublai Khan took a complex balance to maintain his power.

They divided China into different groups, in which the Mongols were often superior to the Chinese, but not in every field. Many of his advisers were Chinese, and they kept the structure of the Chinese bureaucracy very much the same as it was during the Song dynasty.

The empire was also different because it was part of a vast empire that stretched to the Middle East and its influence was evident in its cultural activities. So there were also works of art in Persia with designs of Chinese dragons.

The Mongol Empire improved the postal system between its various parts and also significantly improved the making of carpets or rugs. In the early 1270s, the famous European tourist Kublai Khan came to the capital and he was the famous Venetian tourist Marco Polo.

The capital was then known as Shendo, which in the West was called Zamado, and is now called Beijing. Marco Polo was stunned to see Kublai Khan's palace and its gardens. He praised her as follows:

"You should know that this is the largest palace ever (in the world), so vast, so luxurious and so beautiful that no man on earth can design anything beyond it."

The Kublai family was certainly aware of the need to balance each other's different cultural traditions. But Kublai Khan's instincts did not allow him to sit still. The Mongols themselves believed in Tantric Buddhism. But Islam also flourished in the empire during this period and the governors of many provinces were Muslims.

Traditional local religious beliefs, known as Daoism, were also allowed to be propagated. It all seems cosmopolitan or universal. However, sometimes very harsh decisions were announced. On one occasion, the slaughter of animals in an Islamic manner was banned and there were crackdowns on daoism.

However, Kublai Khan's reign was significantly more tolerant than that of modern empires. But even then, it was a conquered empire, not a collaborative one. And the idea of ​​discipline was always at the forefront of Kublai Khan's mind.

The universal nature of the empire was real, but it must not be romanticized, as we sometimes do with such societies. In the end, like all such structures, this classification was violently controlled.

It was clear that this time the Mongols were ruling over a vast empire with its own arts and systems of governance. It also faced resistance because many Chinese were unhappy with the Mongol rule.

Although the Mongol rulers adopted the Chinese style of governing and some of their values ​​and methods. As a result, art forms such as drama flourished in China. Plays were often based on themes of injustice, with ultimate rewards and punishments. Many of these dramas can also be seen as critical of the Mongols by the Chinese public.

Many of the dramas also feature vengeful characters taking revenge, such as in Chinese playwright Kuan Han Chung's The Injustice to Tao. This is the story of a woman who was wrongly hanged. Much of the drama is anti-Mongol, and it reflects the anger of the literate elite who felt they had been deprived of power and thought it was their right to rule.

The court, for example, refused to use the official system of examinations, which closed a door of traditional progress for the scholarly bureaucrat class. Obviously, it was very dangerous for any playwright to speak openly against the ruling family, so instead they started using the stories of the ancient historical period as metaphors and references. Chinese writers have done the same in many other periods of political oppression.

It is also ironic that the hatred created by the social changes of the Mongol dynasty has given China the best drama. Many plays by Quan Han Chung and others are still performed today.

Another thing that was invented during the Yuan dynasty was the paper currency. Unfortunately, the same thing happened with this currency that happened to many who came after it. The government printed a lot of notes but did nothing to protect them, which led to inflation. In the middle of the twentieth century, China's nationalist government suffered a similar financial catastrophe.

A similar situation arose with the strategy of Kublai Khan's conquests. He wanted the empire to be bigger and wider. They also attacked what is now called Vietnam and Myanmar.

The failed invasion of Japan in 1271 and 1284 is part of that desire. Legend has it that the ships that went to attack Japan were destroyed by the strong winds sent by God. However, it is possible that the technique used to build the boats was not given much consideration and an attempt was made to finish the work in a hurry, with the result being the same.

The failure to conquer Japan not only cost a lot of money but also damaged the reputation of the empire. The burden of subsequent wars and the death of his favorite wife also broke Kublai Khan from within. In his last years, he seemed to have given up his desire to live. As a result, they stopped caring, ate more, became obese and suffered from joint pain.

Kublai Khan died in 1294 at the age of 78. However, his Yuan dynasty ruled China for another 100 years until 1368. And it set a new precedent.

Kublai Khan's declaration of himself as the Emperor of China brought a new interpretation of the Chinese state. This ideology was based on the establishment of common institutions and cultural principles rather than ethnicity. Of course, not all Chinese think so, and in fact not all Mongols acknowledge it. But it is certain that a large part of Inner Asia was brought to China because of Kublai Khan's expansionism. And it opened a new path.

When the Yuan Dynasty was defeated, it was replaced by the Ming Dynasty, whose first rulers actually valued the Mongols. And when the Ming Dynasty was defeated by the Qing Dynasty in the mid-17th century, there was an example of a situation in which a non-ethnic Chinese nomadic family from the north was involved in agriculture and culture. The strong Chinese Empire was controlled.

The Chung dynasty was also divided in such a way that the cultural methods of the ruling class were preferred to the Manchu methods rather than the Mongols, ie, rule by Chinese principles as the Chinese emperor.

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Anti-Putin Alexei Navalny's doctor goes missing in Siberian jungle



The head of a hospital treating Alexei Navalny, an anti-government social worker in Russia, has been missing for three days in a Siberian forest.

This area of ​​the Omsk region is very swampy and difficult to reach, but helicopters and drones are being used for this search operation.

Dr. Alexander Morakhavsky, 49, was out hunting on Friday and his car was later found. Alexei Navalny was first treated in Omsk and later transferred to Berlin. Western experts believe he was poisoned. Two senior doctors at the Omsk hospital, aged 55 and 63, died that year.

The hospital, headed by Dr. Alexander Morakhavsky, said last year that it had found no signs of poison in Alexei Navalny's body. Last year, Alexei Navalny fainted and almost died.

The Russian government has repeatedly denied allegations that Russian state agents tried to assassinate Alexei Navalny. However, tests in three Western countries revealed that he had Russian neuro-agent Novi Chowk in his body.

Police, a team from the Ministry of Natural Disasters, and volunteers are searching for Dr. Alexander Morakhavsky. The forest is located about 2200 km east of Moscow.

Dr. Alexander Morakhavsky's car was found in the village of Paspiev. Dr. Alexander Morakhavsky is currently the Minister of Health of the Omsk region.

Who is Alexei Navalny, Putin's critic?

Alexei Navalny, Russia's anti-corruption campaigner, has long been a prominent figure in opposition to President Vladimir Putin. Criticism of the Russian president continues despite attempts to assassinate him and imprisonment.

The 44-year-old blogger has millions of Russian followers on social media and tens of thousands of people came out in support of him at anti-government rallies in January 2021.

He says Putin's United Russia party is a gang of "thugs and thieves" and has accused the president of "sucking Russia's blood" through a "feudal state" while prolonging his rule in the Kremlin.

He accused authorities of trying to assassinate him in August 2020 with a nerve-wracking poison. He has led nationwide protests against the authorities, but has failed to effectively challenge Putin at the ballot box.

He was barred from running in the 2018 presidential election after being convicted of embezzlement by a Russian court.

Navalny vehemently denied the allegations, saying his legal problems were a response to the Kremlin's harsh criticism of him. The same sentence would later lead to his imprisonment.

Monday, May 10, 2021

20 die in Israeli strikes on Gaza

 OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: The Israel’s army and Hamas were engaged in air strikes and barrage of rocket fire on Gaza on Monday amid spiralling violence sparked by unrest at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound.



Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the current confrontation in the Gaza Strip could last for “some time” as US Secretary of State Blinken called on all sides to de-escalate situation.

Meanwhile, Israel’s Army Radio announced Tel Aviv had opened bomb shelters in, Jaffa. Also the Palestinian government called for UN intervention to stop Israeli aggression on Gaza Strip as situation turned volatile. Adding to the sense of chaos, a huge fire engulfed trees in the compound that houses the mosque, Islam’s third holiest site, and the Temple Mount sacred to Jews.

At least 20 people were killed in Gaza, among them a senior Hamas commander, and 65 people were injured, local authorities said. But it was not immediately clear whether they all died in Israeli strikes or from a misfired Hamas rocket.

The Gaza health ministry said nine Palestinians, including three children, were killed "in a series of strikes in northern Gaza". "We have started, and I repeat started, to attack military targets in Gaza," Israeli army spokesman Jonathan Conricus told reporters.

He said Israeli forces had targeted "a Hamas military operative," while Hamas sources in Gaza confirmed to AFP that one of their commanders, Mohammed Fayyad, had been killed. Conricus said he could "neither confirm nor deny" that its strikes caused all the nine fatalities, adding it may have been an "internal matter". Tensions in Jerusalem have flared since Israeli riot police clashed with Palestinian worshippers on the last Friday of Ramazan in the city's worst disturbances since 2017.

Nightly unrest since then at the Al-Aqsa compound has left hundreds of Palestinians wounded, drawn calls for de-escalation from the international community and sharp rebukes from across the Muslim world.

Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, on Monday warned Israel to withdraw all its forces from the mosque compound and the east Jerusalem district of Sheikh Jarrah, where looming evictions of Palestinian families have fuelled angry protests.

Sirens wailed across Jerusalem just after the 1500 GMT deadline set by Hamas as people in Jerusalem, including lawmakers in the Knesset legislature, evacuated into bunkers, amid warnings over loudspeaker in Hebrew and English.

The Israeli army said seven rockets were fired from the coastal strip into Israel, two of which were intercepted by Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile defence system and three of which fell onto vacant lands.

A spokesman for Hamas armed wing the Qassam Brigades said that "a volley of rockets was fired towards the enemy in occupied Jerusalem in response to its crimes and aggression on the holy city and repression of its residents in Sheikh Jarrah and the Al-Aqsa mosque".

"This is a message that the enemy must understand well: if you respond we will respond, and if you escalate we will escalate." One Gaza rocket impacted at Beit Shemesh south of Jerusalem, but there were no immediate reports of casualties.

A house in Beit Nekofa, about 10 kilometres west of central Jerusalem, was also damaged by rocket fire, AFP TV reported. The Israeli army said on Twitter that, separate to the rockets, "as a result of an anti-tank missile fired from Gaza, an Israeli civilian in a nearby vehicle was lightly injured" in the Gaza border area. Fears of further chaos in the Old City had temporarily eased when Israeli organisers of a march to celebrate the Jewish state's 1967 capture of east Jerusalem cancelled the event.

But then came the Hamas warning, followed by the rockets. "An alarm has just been sounded in Jerusalem. Police forces have begun evacuating hundreds of people" gathered at the Wailing Wall to safer locations, police said, later adding that the evacuation was completed.

Militants in Gaza have recently also deployed incendiary balloons that have sparked dozens of fires in Israeli territory. In Monday's Al-Aqsa clashes, as during the previous nights since Friday, Palestinians hurled rocks at Israeli officers in riot gear who fired rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas.

The Palestinian Red Crescent put the toll from Monday´s clashes at 331 injured, including more than 200 who were hospitalised, five of them in critical condition. The Israeli police reported nine injuries in their ranks.

Despite mounting international condemnation, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu voiced support for the Israeli police's "just struggle", praising the "steadfastness that the Israeli police and our security forces are currently displaying".

Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas condemned what he called Israe's "barbaric aggression." Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that Hamas had crossed a "red line" by directing missiles towards Jerusalem on Monday and that the Jewish state would "respond with force".

"We are engaged in a fight on many fronts. Jerusalem, Gaza and other places in Israel. The terrorist organisations in Gaza crossed a red line on the night of Jerusalem Day, by firing rockets towards Jerusalem," Netanyahu said.

"We will respond with force. We will not tolerate attacks on our territory, our capital, our citizens and our soldiers. Those who attack us will pay a heavy price," he added. Meanwhile, the US State Department has expressed concern over the violence in Jerusalem and Kabul and has called on Israel and the Palestinian Authority to take immediate steps to end escalating tensions.

Speaking with The News, the Urdu Spokesperson of the State Department Zed Tarar stressed on Israel and Palestinian authorities to patiently diffuse tensions rather than sparking emotional sentiments.

Expressing the grief over the loss of human lives in recent Kabul blast, Zed Tarar clarified that the American forces have been withdrawing from Afghanistan but the United States (US) would not leave Afghanistan alone. The US spokesman said the United States would keep working with its allies for peace as well as support for Afghan forces and the people in future.

Referring to the rapidly spreading coronavirus pandemic in South Asia, Zed Tarar said that the US was determined to assist not only India but also Pakistan to tackle the pandemic.

The Urdu Spokesperson of the State Department Zed Tarar mentioned that Pakistan received 1.2 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine delivered by COVAX programme. He further added that the second batch of the coronavirus vaccines will be supplied to Pakistan through COVAX soon.

COVAX programme aims to deliver at least 2 billion vaccine doses by the end of 2021 to cover 20% of the most vulnerable people in poor and middle-income countries.

“The US is deeply concerned by the severe COVID wave in Pakistan and outbreak in India”, stated Zed Tarar, adding that they are working around the clock to deploy more supplies and support to our friends and partners as they bravely battle this pandemic

Zed Tarar hinted that vaccine plant could be set up in South Asia, but that the raw material challenges existed for developing the vaccine. He explained that US President Joe Biden had already announced $2 billion to make the world safer through vaccination program and that economic activity would be difficult to restore until vaccinations were completed.

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Blast kills dozens near school in Afghan capital Kabul

 At least 150 people, many of them young women, were injured in the attack in a Shia neighbourhood of the city.



The death toll from an explosion near a school in a Shia district of west Kabul has risen to 58, Afghan officials said on Sunday, with doctors struggling to provide medical care to at least 150 people who were injured.

The bombing on Saturday evening shook the city’s neighbourhood of Dasht-e-Barchi. The community, a religious minority in Afghanistan, has been targeted in the past by Islamic State.

An eyewitness told Reuters news agency all but seven or eight of the victims were schoolgirls going home after finishing their studies.

Bodies were still being collected from morgues as the first burials were conducted in the west of the city. Some families were still searching for missing relatives on Sunday, gathering outside hospitals to read names posted on the walls, and checking morgues.

Kabul has been on alert since Washington announced plans last month to pull out all US troops by September 11, with Afghan officials saying the Taliban has stepped up its attacks across the country.

No group has claimed responsibility for Saturday’s blast.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani issued a statement condemning the attack, blaming the Taliban even as the group denied it. He offered no proof.

“The Taliban, by escalating their illegitimate war and violence, have once again shown that they are not only reluctant to resolve the current crisis peacefully and fundamentally, but by complicating the situation,” Ghani said.

The Taliban condemned the attack, apparently aimed at civilians, and denied any responsibility.

It took place in a neighbourhood that has frequently been attacked by ISIL (ISIS) fighters over the years.

Al Jazeera’s Filio Kontrafouri, reporting from Kabul, said the attack happened about 5:30pm Kabul time (13:00 GMT).

“This is the time when students were finishing their classes, and were heading home, and we are talking about hundreds of students attending schools at that time,” she said.

She said witnesses reported three explosions that happened back to back, and “they were talking about girls who were panicking, who started running around, crying, calling for their mothers as others were trying to transfer as many as they could to hospital”.

“The entire city is numb after this attack.”

The school is a joint high school for girls and boys, who study in three shifts, the second of which is for female students, Najiba Arian, spokeswoman for the education ministry, told Reuters.

‘Despicable act of terrorism’

The European Union mission in Afghanistan condemned what it said was an “horrendous attack”.

“[This] … is a despicable act of terrorism,” the mission said on Twitter.

“Targeting primarily students in a girls’ school makes this an attack on the future of Afghanistan. On young people determined to improve their country.”

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) expressed its “deep revulsion” at the blast.

In May last year, a group of gunmen attacked a hospital in the Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood in a brazen daylight raid that left 25 people killed, including 16 mothers of newborn babies.

The hospital was supported by Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres, or MSF), the international medical charity, which later pulled out of the project.

No group claimed that attack, but President Ghani blamed the Taliban and ISIL.

On October 24, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a tuition centre in the same district, killing 18 people including students in an attack that also went unclaimed.

Saturday’s attack comes days after the remaining 2,500 to 3,500 American troops officially began leaving the country.

They will be gone by September 11 at the latest. The pullout comes amid a resurgent Taliban, which controls or holds sway over half of Afghanistan.

Under an agreement signed by the Taliban and the US last year, Washington was to pull out troops in exchange for Taliban security guarantees and for the group to start peace talks with the Afghan government. Talks began last year but have since stalled.

Taliban attacks on foreign forces have largely ceased, but they continue to target government forces. A number of journalists, activists and academics have also been killed in attacks blamed on the Taliban, which denies involvement.

The top US military officer said on Sunday that Afghan government forces face an uncertain future and potentially some “bad possible outcomes” against Taliban fighters as the withdrawal accelerates in the coming weeks.


Saturday, May 8, 2021

India records more than 4,000 COVID-19 deaths in a day



India recorded more than 4,000 coronavirus deaths in a day for the first time as more states imposed lockdowns in a desperate bid to halt the devastating new COVID-19 surge.

The 4,187 new deaths took India’s overall toll to 238,270 since the pandemic started. It added another 401,078 new cases in 24 hours taking its caseload to nearly 21.9 million – second only to the United States.

Health experts, who have expressed doubts about the official death toll, say the new wave may not hit a peak until the end of May, and there have been mounting calls for tough nationwide measures.

Morgues and crematoriums have struggled to handle the number of dead, and makeshift funeral pyres burn in parks and car parks.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been criticised for his handling of an acute oxygen shortage, though the government says it is doing all it can.

Tamil Nadu state Chief Minister MK Stalin said in a letter to Modi late on Friday that Tamil Nadu’s medical oxygen demand could double in the next two weeks.

“The availability of oxygen in Tamil Nadu is very, very critical,” Stalin said, adding 13 patients died in a hospital on the outskirts of Chennai because of the lack of oxygen.

Rahul Gandhi, leader of the opposition Congress Party, called on Modi to order a national lockdown or the spread could be “devastating” for India and other countries.

The government, stung by criticism of its handling of the crisis, has largely left individual state administrations to handle pandemic clampdowns.

While major cities such as New Delhi and Mumbai have been boosted by extra supplies of oxygen – much of it from abroad – and new hospital beds opened up, the southern states of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Kerala all ordered lockdowns to counter an explosion in COVID cases.

Lockdown in Bengaluru

Karnataka ordered a statewide two-week lockdown from Monday in a bid to halt the spread of the virus. The state added more than 48,000 cases in a day with Bengaluru, home to many Indian and global information technology giants, bearing the brunt.

One doctor in Bangalore said he has had to reject patients “left, right and centre” as his hospital struggled to find more oxygen.

“The problem is the demand is so high that we need constant oxygen,” said Dr Sanjay Gururaj, medical director at Shanti Hospital and Research Center.

The hospital is sending a truck twice a day to oxygen plants on the outskirts of the city to bring back 12 jumbo oxygen cylinders.

“In normal times, this would have lasted over two weeks – now, it lasts just over a day,” he added.

The city of nine million people, which saw 1,907 coronavirus deaths in April, has recorded more than 950 in just the first seven days of May.

A lack of oxygen and critical care beds is being blamed for the dramatic rise in the death rate.

‘Magnitude of cases’

Neighbouring Kerala, which is adding about 40,000 cases a day, started a nine-day lockdown from Saturday. Tamil Nadu, which includes the major city of Chennai, will start a 10-day lockdown from Monday.

With daily cases crossing 40,000, the state is aggressively boosting resources, including converting hundreds of industrial oxygen cylinders into medical oxygen, said Dr Amar Fetle, the state’s officer for COVID-19.

“The magnitude of cases from last year to now is vastly different,” he said, adding increasing numbers have meant more hospitalisations and more strain on healthcare systems with hospitals running nearly full.

Coronavirus cases and deaths have also shot up in West Bengal state since last week’s election, which was marked by huge rallies organised by Modi and his archrival, state Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

The main city, Kolkata, also has a critical shortage of oxygen and beds.

The Hindu nationalist government imposed a three-month nationwide lockdown last year that helped halt the spread of the first major wave, but also caused huge economic damage.

There are fears the new surge could undermine the recovery in Asia’s third-largest economy. The growing death toll has added to pressure for the government to act, however.

Opposition leader Gandhi said in his letter to the prime minister “your government’s lack of a clear and coherent COVID and vaccination strategy … has placed India in a highly dangerous position.”

Modi had “to understand India’s responsibility in a globalised and interconnected world” as “home to one out of every six human beings on the planet”.

“Allowing the uncontrollable spread of this virus in our country will be devastating, not only for our people, but for the rest of the world.”

The government did not immediately respond.


Friday, May 7, 2021

As Supply Exceeds Demand, Texas Changes How It Distributes COVID-19 Vaccines


 


As supply of COVID-19 vaccines continues to exceed demand, Texas is shifting how it distributes doses to providers.

So far, the Texas Department of State Health Services has been allocating a certain number of vaccines to providers on a weekly basis. Now, providers can place vaccine orders as needed, and the department will fill them as they come in.

“This is a big step in vaccine distribution,” Imelda Garcia, DSHS associate commissioner for laboratory and infectious disease services, said in a press release. “The ability to ship vaccine to pharmacies, doctors’ offices, and other providers as they need it will go a long way to making sure it is available when and where Texans want to be vaccinated.”

As demand has dwindled, many providers in the state have started offering vaccines without people having to sign up for an appointment or get on a waitlist. About 37% of eligible Texans are fully vaccinated, and more than half of eligible Texans have gotten at least one dose.

To get more people vaccinated, DSHS says convenience is key. The department says it’s working with providers and community organizations to make vaccination “as easy as possible.”

Now that there’s so much supply, DSHS says, providers no longer need to use every dose in the week that they get it, but they should store it properly so it stays effective as long as possible.

“DSHS is also encouraging providers to vaccinate anyone who wants to be vaccinated, even if that means opening a new vial for that person without knowing whether all doses will be used,” the press release said.


Maldives in shock after explosion wounds Speaker Mohamed Nasheed

 Prominent political figure and former president undergoes surgery for wounds sustained after bomb exploded as he was about to enter his car.


Mohamed Nasheed, the former Maldives president and current speaker of parliament, remains in hospital after a bomb attack that left him with serious shrapnel wounds and the Indian Ocean archipelago in shock.

The 53-year-old had just left his house in the capital, Male, and was about to get into his car late on Thursday when a bomb attached to a motorbike exploded. Residents said the blast was heard across the city.

Nasheed sustained several wounds in the blast and was taken to hospital for treatment, including surgery. Home Minister Imran Abdulla told local media Nasheed’s injuries were not life-threatening. One of Nasheed’s bodyguards was also taken to hospital.

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih went to the hospital where Nasheed, a close ally, is being treated and called an emergency meeting following the attack.

Solih said on Friday the explosion was “an attack on democracy” and the Maldives’ tourism-dependent economy, and announced that Australian federal police investigators will arrive on Saturday to assist an investigation.

Neither the president nor police have given further details on the attack and no one has claimed responsibility.

“Nasheed escaped an assassination attempt,” a Maldivian government official told AFP news agency. “He is injured, but his condition is stable.”

Images on social media showed a destroyed motorbike at the scene of the attack, which was cordoned off by armed police units and security forces.

Meanwhile, many Maldivian officials and citizens took to social media to condemn the attack and wish Nasheed a speedy recovery.

Neighbouring India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar also expressed deep concern at the attack and said Nasheed “will never be intimidated”.

“This is very significant, not just in terms of scale but also in terms of target,” Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Program and senior associate for South Asia at the Wilson Center, told Al Jazeera.

“The fact that you have a former president who is still a very prominent political figure and a very prominent democratic leader in a region that is now marked by strongmen and hardline nationalists … is quite a big deal,” Kugelman said.

Thursday, May 6, 2021

China suspends economic dialogue with Australia as ties worsen

 Disputes over technology and the coronavirus pandemic have eroded relations between the two countries in recent years.



China has “indefinitely” suspended all activity under a China-Australia Strategic Economic Dialogue, its state economic planner said in the latest setback for their strained relations.

“Recently, some Australian Commonwealth Government officials launched a series of measures to disrupt the normal exchanges and cooperation between China and Australia out of Cold War mindset and ideological discrimination,” China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said in a short statement on Thursday about the decision.

The commission did not say what specific measures prompted the action.

The Australian dollar fell sharply on the news and was as low as 0.7701 to the United States dollar from $0.7747 on Wednesday.

Bilateral ties were strained in 2018 when Australia became the first country to publicly ban Chinese technology giant Huawei from its 5G network. Relations worsened last year when Australia called for an independent investigation into the origins of the novel coronavirus, prompting trade reprisals from China.

Australia’s trade minister, Dan Tehan, did not immediately respond to a request by the Reuters news agency for comment on China’s decision.

The last meeting under the mechanism, intended as a framework for economic cooperation, was in Beijing in 2017, when Australia’s trade minister signed an agreement on cooperation on Belt and Road projects in third-party countries.

Australia has, however, declined to sign agreements on direct participation in China’s flagship foreign policy initiative.

In April, Canberra cancelled two Belt and Road deals struck by its state of Victoria, prompting the Chinese embassy to warn that already tense bilateral ties were bound to worsen.

Veto power

Reuters reported this week that Australia was reviewing the 99-year lease of a port in its north to a Chinese firm, according to a government source.

Australia’s federal parliament was granted veto power over foreign deals by states in December amid the deepening diplomatic dispute with China, which has imposed a series of trade sanctions on Australian exports ranging from wine to coal.

In the 12 months to March, Australia exported 149 billion Australian dollars ($115.04bn) worth of goods to China, excluding services, of which iron ore was by far the largest product.

A trader said he expected the latest strains would not have a significant effect on the iron ore trade.

“We believe the iron ore trading relationship between Australia and China will remain ring-fenced in relation to current political tensions between the two nations,” said Atilla Widnell, the managing director at Singapore-based Navigate Commodities Ptd Ltd.

“This is a co-dependent relationship whereby either party cannot survive without the other.”


Wednesday, May 5, 2021

World’s oldest person pulls out of torch relay for Tokyo Olympics

 118-year-old Kane Tanaka cited COVID-19 concerns for cancellation as officials mull further lockdown extension.



The world’s oldest person, a 118-year-old Japanese woman, has decided not to take part in the torch relay for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics because of concerns about the coronavirus, an official at her nursing home said on Wednesday, casting more shadows over an event, which is already facing significant hurdles including a possible lockdown extension.

Kane Tanaka, who is named in the Guinness World Records, was slated to be one of the relay participants in Fukuoka in southern Japan, which will start on May 11, the official said.

“We received an email from her family which said she wanted to withdraw from the relay as she and her family were concerned about spreading the virus at the nursing home,” they said.

The Olympic torch relay, which kicked off in March, has been undermined by the surge in coronavirus in Japan, which has led to restrictions being imposed in main cities including Tokyo and Osaka.

Six people who helped with the torch relay were diagnosed with COVID-19, the Tokyo 2020 organisers said on Sunday, bringing the total number of cases involved in the event to eight.

Some celebrities who were due to take part have withdrawn from the relay due to safety reasons.

The government is considering an extension to the state of emergency measures first announced last month, the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper reported on Wednesday.

According to the report, officials were leaning towards an extension of the measures in Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto and Hyogo prefectures beyond May 11.

Persistent doubts

Osaka reported 884 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, according to public broadcaster NHK, and hospital capacity for seriously ill patients has reportedly exceeded 99 percent.

With the continuing surge in cases, Osaka Governor Yoshimura Hirofumi cast doubt on Tuesday that a state of emergency in the western prefecture could be ended.

Daily cases also remain high in Tokyo with 609 infections reported on Tuesday. At least 65 of the patients are said to be in a serious condition.

Extending the measures, which were imposed on April 25, is likely to further fan doubts about whether the Games, scheduled to begin on July 23, can still go ahead as planned.

The games have already been delayed by a year as a result of the pandemic.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will meet senior government ministers on Wednesday to discuss an extension, the Yomiuri reported without citing its sources.

It did not detail how long an extension might be but the governor of Osaka Prefecture said an extension of three weeks to a month may be necessary, according to other domestic media.

Calls by the Reuters news agency to Suga’s office were not answered. Japan’s government buildings and financial markets were closed on Wednesday for the annual Golden Week holidays.

Under the state of emergency in Tokyo and other urban areas, the government has required restaurants, bars, and karaoke parlours serving alcohol to shut.

Large department stores and cinemas have also been closed and spectators banned from big sporting events.

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Mexico City metro overpass collapses onto road, killing 23

 

70 more injured; car left dangling


MEXICO CITY – An elevated section of the Mexico City metro collapsed and sent a subway car plunging toward a busy boulevard late Monday, killing at least 23 people and injuring about 70, city officials said. Rescuers searched a car left dangling from the overpass for hours for anyone who might be trapped.

Those efforts were suspended early Tuesday, however, because of safety concerns for those working near the precariously dangling car. A crane was brought in to help shore it up.

“We don’t know if they are alive,” Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said of the people possibly trapped inside the car following one of the deadliest accidents in the city’s subway system, which is among the busiest in the world.

Earlier Sheinbaum said someone had been pulled alive from a car that was trapped on the road below. She said 49 of the injured were hospitalized, and that seven were in serious condition and undergoing surgery.

“There are unfortunately children among the dead,” Sheinbaum said, without specifying how many.

The overpass was about 5 meters (16 feet) above the road in the borough of Tlahuac, but the train ran above a concrete median strip, which apparently lessened the casualties among motorists on the road below.

“A support beam gave way” just as the train passed over it, Sheinbaum said.

The Mexico City Metro has had at least two serious accidents since its inauguration half a century ago. In March of last year, a collision between two trains at the Tacubaya station left one passenger dead and injured 41 people. In 2015, a train that did not stop on time crashed into another at the Oceania station, injuring 12.

Hundreds of police officers and firefighters cordoned off the scene Tuesday as desperate friends and relatives of people believed to be on the train gathered outside the security perimeter. Despite the fact that the coronavirus situation remains serious in Mexico City, they crowded together as they waited for news.

Adrián Loa Martínez, 46, said that his mother called him to tell him that his half-brother and sister-in-law were driving when the overpass collapsed and that beam fell onto their car.

He said that his sister-in-law was rescued and sent to a hospital, but that his half-brother José Juan Galindo was crushed and he feared he was dead. “He is down there now,” he told journalists pointing toward the site.

Gisela Rioja Castro, 43, was looking for her husband, 42-year-old Miguel Ángel Espinoza. She said that her husband always take that train after finishing work at a store, but he never got home and had stopped answering his phone. When she heard what has happened, she immediately feared the worst but has gotten no information from the authorities.

“Nobody knows anything,” she said.

The collapse occurred on the newest of the Mexico City subway’s lines, Line 12, which stretches far into the city’s south side. Like many of the city’s dozen subway lines, it runs underground through more central areas of the city of 9 million, but then runs on elevated concrete structures on the city’s outskirts.

The collapse could represent a major blow for Mexican Foreign Relations Secretary Marcelo Ebrard, who was Mexico City's mayor from 2006 to 2012, when Line 12 was built. Allegations about poor design and construction on the subway line emerged soon after Ebrard left office as mayor. The line had to be partly closed in 2013 so tracks could be repaired.

Ebrard wrote on Twitter: “What happened today on the Metro is a terrible tragedy.”

“Of course, the causes should be investigated and those responsible should be identified,” he wrote. “I repeat that I am entirely at the disposition of authorities to contribute in whatever way is necessary.”

It was not clear whether a 7.1-magnitude earthquake in 2017 could have affected the subway line.

Monday, May 3, 2021

At least 26 killed in Bangladesh boat crash

 Five people, including three children, injured in the accident, which happened when a speedboat collided with a cargo vessel.



At least 26 people have been killed after a speedboat packed with passengers collided with a vessel transporting sand in the latest maritime disaster to hit Bangladesh.

Police said on Monday the speedboat carrying about 36 passengers from the town of Mawa slammed into the other vessel on the Padma River near the rural town of Shibchar.

“We have so far recovered 26 bodies, including a woman. We have also rescued five injured people, including three children,” police official Amir Hossain said.

Hossain said the bow of the passenger boat was destroyed when the speedboat smashed into the side of the transport vessel and quickly sank.

The speedboat was carrying passengers in violation of government restrictions during a nationwide coronavirus lockdown, said Rahima Khatun, a top government official in the area.

Divers and local people retrieved 26 bodies from the water and were searching for those still missing.

Witness Abdur Rahman said there was a loud noise when the boats collided and the vessels then overturned.

“When we rushed to the spot we found the speedboat torn into two pieces. Hundreds of villagers immediately started conducting rescue work before they were joined by police and the fire brigade,” he said.

Slow ferry transport

Bangladesh is building the country’s largest road and railway bridge near the spot where the accident happened, and police said officers were immediately at the scene.

Construction work has slowed ferry transport on the river, prompting many to make the journey on the less-safe speedboats, which take only about 15 minutes to make the crossing in contrast to up to two hours on ferries.

Khatun said the driver of the speedboat would be investigated as he appeared to have hit the transport vessel, which was moored at the time.

“A probe has been ordered into the accident,” he said.

Maritime accidents are common in Bangladesh, a delta nation crisscrossed by hundreds of rivers.

Authorities blame poor maintenance, lax safety standards at shipyards, and overcrowding for many of the accidents.

Vessels transporting sand sit low in the water and can be hard to see in choppy conditions, particularly when light is poor.

In early April, more than 30 people died when a ferry packed with 50 passengers hurrying home from the central city of Narayanganj ahead of the impending coronavirus lockdown collided with a larger cargo vessel.

In June last year, a ferry sank in the capital Dhaka after it was hit from behind by another ferry, killing at least 32 people.

In February 2015, at least 78 people died when an overcrowded ship collided with a cargo ship.


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