Tuesday, November 30, 2021

'பேட்டரி' இல்லாமல் 1,500 பஸ்கள் முடக்கம்


'பேட்டரி' இல்லாமல் 1,500 பஸ்கள் முடக்கம்

Added : நவ 29, 2021 23:29

சென்னை : தமிழகத்தில் 'பேட்டரி' இல்லாமல், 1,500 பஸ்கள் நிறுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளன.

தமிழக அரசு போக்குவரத்து கழகங்கள் பெரும் நிதி நெருக்கடியில் சிக்கித் தவிக்கின்றன. இதனால், ஊழியர்கள், ஓய்வூதியர்களுக்கான பணப் பலன்களை வழங்குவதிலும், பஸ்களை பராமரிப்பிலும் பெரும் சிக்கல் நிலவுகிறது. குறிப்பாக, உதிரி பாகங்கள் வாங்க பணம் இல்லாததால், பழுதடைந்த பஸ்களில் இருந்து கழற்றி மாற்றும் நிலை உள்ளது.

ஆனால், காலாவதியான பேட்டரிகளை அதுபோல மாற்ற இயலவில்லை. ஒவ்வொரு பணிமனையிலும், ஒன்றிரண்டு பஸ்கள் என பேட்டரி இன்றி, தமிழகம் முழுதும் 1,500க்கும் மேற்பட்ட பஸ்கள் முடக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளன. இது போன்ற பிரச்னைகளை சரி செய்து, 100 சதவீத பஸ்களை இயக்க, பட்ஜெட்டில் நிதி ஒதுக்க வேண்டும் என, ஊழியர்கள் வலியுறுத்தி உள்ளனர்

சென்னை டூ- சிங்கப்பூர்; மீண்டும் விமான சேவை


சென்னை டூ- சிங்கப்பூர்; மீண்டும் விமான சேவை

Added : நவ 29, 2021 23:27

சென்னை : சென்னை - சிங்கப்பூர் இடையேயான விமான சேவை, ௨௦ மாதங்களுக்கு பின் மீண்டும் துவங்கியுள்ளது.

கொரோனா தொற்று பரவ துவங்கியதும், 2020 மார்ச் 25ல், சர்வதேச நாடுகளுக்கான விமான சேவைகள் ரத்து செய்யப்பட்டன. பின், அதே ஆண்டு மே 9 முதல், சில குறிப்பிட்ட நாடுகளுக்கு மட்டும், 'வந்தே பாரத்' திட்டத்தின் கீழ், மீட்பு விமானங்களும், சிறப்பு விமானங்களும் இயக்கப்பட்டு வருகின்றன.

இந்நிலையில், டிசம்பர் 15 முதல், அனைத்து சர்வதேச விமான சேவைகளும் இயங்க, மத்திய அரசு அனுமதி அளித்துள்ளது. அத்துடன், சிங்கப்பூர் - இந்தியா இடையேயான விமான சேவைக்கும் அனுமதி தரப்பட்டுள்ளது. இதையடுத்து, சென்னையிலிருந்து சிங்கப்பூருக்கு நேற்று முதல் தினசரி விமான சேவையை, சிங்கப்பூர் ஏர்லைன்ஸ் நிறுவனமும், இண்டிகோ ஏர்லைன்ஸ் நிறுவனமும் துவக்கி உள்ளன.

சிங்கப்பூர் ஏர்லைன்ஸ் விமானம், இரவு 10:00 மணிக்கு சிங்கப்பூரிலிருந்து சென்னை விமான நிலையம் வந்து சேரும். மீண்டும் இரவு 11:15 மணிக்கு சென்னையிலிருந்து புறப்பட்டு சிங்கப்பூர் செல்கிறது.இதேபோல, இண்டிகோ ஏர்லைன்ஸ் விமானம், சென்னை சர்வதேச விமான நிலையத்திலிருந்து, இரவு 9:45க்கு சிங்கப்பூருக்கு புறப்படுகிறது.

தற்போது, 20 மாதங்களுக்கு பின், சென்னை -- சிங்கப்பூர் - இடையே, நேரடி பயணியர் விமான சேவை மீண்டும் துவங்கி உள்ளது.இந்த விமானங்களில் பயணம் செய்யும் பயணியருக்கு, இரண்டு தவணை தடுப்பூசி செலுத்தியதற்கான சான்றிதழ் மற்றும் 48 மணி நேரத்திற்குள் எடுக்கப்பட்ட கொரோனா நெகடிவ் சான்றிதழ் அவசியம்.

Adhere to guidelines from WHO to the letter: V Irai Anbu



Adhere to guidelines from WHO to the letter: V Irai Anbu

Chief Secretary V Irai Anbu on Monday held detailed discussions with collectors, health officials, and police through a video-conference call from the Secretariat.

Published: 30th November 2021 06:58 AM 

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Chief Secretary V Irai Anbu on Monday held detailed discussions with collectors, health officials, and police through a video-conference call from the Secretariat. The chief secretary urged the collectors and other departments to strictly adhere to the guidelines issued by the World Health Organisation (WHO) with regard to Omicron. Since vaccination is the best weapon to counter the virus, the collectors were told to intensify measures for spreading awareness on vaccination.

Though Omicron is yet to be detected in Tamil Nadu, RT-PCR test is being done at international airports in the State on those coming from South Africa, European countries, Botswana, Hong Kong, China, Israel, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, Singapore, Brazil, Bangladesh, and Mauritius.

Those who test negative in the RT-PCR test are advised to be in home quarantine for a week. After that, they have to undergo another RT-PCR test and continue to monitor their health for another week. If any passenger tests positive, further tests will be done to find out which variant it is. Whole genomic sequencing of samples taken from those arriving from other countries is also being carried out.

Passengers note!

Those who test negative in the RT-PCR test are advised to be in quarantine for a week. After that, they have to undergo another test and continue to monitor their health for another week

NEET-UG 2021 : Supreme Court Issues Notice On Plea Alleging Rigging Of OMR Sheets, Discrepancy In Final Results


NEET-UG 2021 : Supreme Court Issues Notice On Plea Alleging Rigging Of OMR Sheets, Discrepancy In Final Results

Shruti Kakkar29 Nov 2021 3:59 PM

The Supreme Court on Monday issued notice in a writ petition preferred by 6 NEET-UG candidates who allege rigging of their OMR sheets after the publication of the answer keys by the National Testing Agency.

Alleging widespread discrepancies in NTA's scoring process, the petitioners challenge their marks and ranks secured in the test which was conducted on September 12, 2021 by the National Testing Agency.

The matter was listed before the bench of Justices DY Chandrachud and AS Bopanna.

It has been argued that there was a huge difference between the marks which the petitioners had calculated based on the answer keys published by the NTA and the final marks declared by the NTA on November 1, 2021. One of the petitioners allege that his score as per the answer key was 584 but the final result showed 164. According to another petitioner, his score based on the answer key was 675 but the final result showed 52 marks. Another petitioner's final score was zero, though his estimate as per the answer key was 545 marks.

"It appears that to be massive rigging in the screening of the OMR sheet soon after the publication of the answer keys and consequent uploading of OMR sheet for self assessment and before the actual declaration of result and score card on NTA's website which has resulted in glaring discrepancy in the marks obtained by the petitioners," the petition states.

Referring to the comparative tabulation of marks, the petitioners have contended that it is "manifestly evident" that there has been a huge margin in the scores obtained by them.

It has further been averred that something is utterly wrong on NTA's part which needs to be addressed by instituting investigations against the authority.

Petitioners in their petition have referred to the news for leaking the question paper and criminal conspiracy to sabotage the fair process of exam in regards to which several FIR's were registered at different places in India.

The sum and substance of the initial investigation in these FIR's had established rampant use of unscrupulous means and unfair practices to manipulate the results for benefiting the rich and non merit candidates, the petitioners have stated.

In light of this background it has been stated in the petition that,

"There are malpractices and corrupt practices which are undergoing on at the levels which the innocent, deserving and meritorious petitioners cannot imagine which has resulted in arbitrariness and rejection of meritorious candidates and as such is violative of their rights under Article 14 of the Constitution of India."

The matter will be next heard on December 13, 2021.

Senior Advocate Manoj Swarup with Rajan Kumar Singh (AOR) and Rakesh kumar Singh Advocate appeared for the Petitioners

The petition is filed through Advocate on Record Ranjan Kumar Singh.

Case : WP(C) 1286/2021

Expert: Covishield, Covaxin may offer protection against Omicron


Expert: Covishield, Covaxin may offer protection against Omicron

Umesh.Isalkar@timesgroup.com

Pune:30.11.2021

Covishield and Covaxin jabs can prevent hospitalisation and death of patients infected with the new Botswana variant Omicron (B.1.1.529), novel coronavirus’s most mutated version as yet, a noted infectious diseases expert has said.

“Theoretically, it is possible that the new variant of concern (Omicron) may challenge vaccines’ efficacy. But, we know that our vaccines prevent hospitalization and death, and the same may be potent against the Omicron variant. People must take two doses of the vaccine — either Covishield or Covaxin — and adhere to Covid-19-appropriate behaviour, especially that of wearing a mask, to ward off infection from such variants,” said senior scientist Raman Gangakhedkar, former head of the epidemiology and communicable diseases division of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

Gangakhedkar is one of the 26 members of the WHO team appointed to examine the origins of pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2 that cause pandemics. “There is not enough data yet to understand Omicron’s ability to evade vaccine or a natural infection-induced immune response. Hence, we should continue to enhance coverage in vaccine rollout, so that hospitalisation does not increase. Unvaccinated people must take two doses of the vaccine and those who have taken one dose must take the second dose at the earliest,” Gangakhedkar said.

The second dose boosts not only virus-specific antibodies but also the T cells (T-lymphocytes), which are memory cells and part of the broader immune response against the virus, Gangakhedkar said, advising strict adherence to the two-dose regime.

Disease-causing properties of this variant, like transmissibility, potential to cause severity and immune evasion either from vaccination or previous infection with other variants, are unclear as yet.

“More studies are needed to delineate whether previous exposure to the Delta strain or currently available vaccines will shield us against severe illness due to Omicron,” infectious diseases expert Sanjay Pujari, a member of the National Covid Task Force, told TOI. India’s advantage lies in the knowledge that a majority of the population has encountered the virus and acquired immunity, senior clinical epidemiologist Amitav Banerjee said.

Omicron: wary world slams doors shut


Omicron: wary world slams doors shut

New cases in Portugal and Scotland may point towards local spread of the variant, fear officials

30/11/2021

Warning bells: People waiting to be transported to a quarantine facility after arriving at an airport in Japan. AFP

Associated Press Brussels

Taking an act-now-ask-questions-later approach, countries around the world slammed their doors shut again to try to keep the new Omicron variant at bay on Monday as more cases of the mutant coronavirus emerged and scientists raced to figure out just how dangerous it might be.

Japan announced it would bar entry of all foreign visitors, joining Israel in doing so just days after the variant was identified by researchers in South Africa. Morocco banned all incoming flights. Other countries, including the U.S. and European Union members, have moved to prohibit travellers arriving from southern Africa.

Travellers infected with the new version have turned up in a widening circle of countries over the past few days, including Spain, and cases in Portugal and Scotland have raised fears that the variant may already be spreading locally.

“Many of us might think we are done with COVID-19. It’s not done with us,” warned Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization.

The infections have underscored the difficulty in keeping the virus in check in a globalised world of jet travel and open borders. Yet, many countries are trying to do just that, against the urging of the WHO, which noted that border closings often have limited effect and can wreak havoc on lives and livelihoods. Some argued that such restrictions could provide valuable time to analyse the new variant.

“This time the world showed it is learning,” said EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, singling out South African President Cyril Ramaphosa for praise.

“South Africa’s analytic work and transparency and sharing its results was indispensable in allowing a swift global response. It no doubt saved many lives.”

Late last week, Ms. von der Leyen successfully pushed the 27-nation EU to agree to ban flights from seven southern African nations, similar to what many other countries are doing.

Cases had already been reported in EU nations Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands before Portuguese authorities identified 13 Omicron infections among members of the Belenenses professional football team. Authorities reported one member had recently travelled to South Africa.

Spain also reported its first confirmed case of the variant. It was detected in a traveller who returned on Sunday from South Africa after making a stopover in Amsterdam. And after Scotland reported its first six cases, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon warned that “there might already be some community transmission of this variant”.

Taking no chances, Japan, which has yet to detect any Omicron cases, reimposed border controls that it had eased earlier this month. “We are taking the step as an emergency precaution to prevent a worst-case scenario in Japan,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said. The new measures begin on Tuesday.

26k students bought PINs for medical and allied courses


26k students bought PINs for medical and allied courses

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:30.11.2021

The Admission Committee for Professional Undergraduate Medical Educational Courses (ACPUGMEC) on Monday said it has completed the registration process for state quota in medical, dental, homeopathy and Ayurveda courses for the academic year 2021-22.

The committee has also completed the registration process for self-financed Ayurveda and homeopathy courses for 15% All India Quota, it said. A total of 26,186 candidates have purchased the personal identification number (PIN), according to a media statement. Of these 5,453 are from the open category.

All candidates qualifying NEET (UG) - 2019 are eligible for All India Quota and other quotas under the state governments/institutes, irrespective of the medium of the examination, subject to other eligibility criteria.

The admission committee started online registrations for medical, dental, homeopathic and Ayurveda seats from November 17.

There are 30 medical colleges in the state with 5,550 MBBS seats, 12 dental colleges with 1,255 seats, 2,242 seats in 33 Ayurveda colleges and 36 colleges having a total capacity of 3,710 seats. In all there are 12,707 seats for which the Admission Committee for Professional Under Graduate Medical Educational Courses (ACPUGMEC) will undertake the admission process this year.

Clarity on Omicron awaited: WHO


Clarity on Omicron awaited: WHO

30/11/2021

Staff Reporter HYDERABAD

The constant flow of information about Omicron has left people wondering about the efficacy of vaccines against the new variant of concern, the rate of transmission, concerns about a third wave of coronavirus and severity of infection caused by the variant, among other aspects.

On Sunday, the World Health Organisation (WHO) communicated all that is currently known about its transmissibility, severity, effectiveness of test and vaccines and treatment required. For a majority of the aspects, however, WHO stated that clarity is yet to be gained. In their communication titled ‘Update on Omicron’, WHO said it is not yet clear whether Omicron is more transmissible and causes more severe disease compared to infections with other variants, including Delta. To gain better understanding of Omicron, WHO is coordinating with researchers from across the world.

Not a cause for panic: Biden

Not a cause for panic: Biden

30/11/2021

 Agence France-Presse Washington

President Joe Biden on Monday told Americans not to “panic” over the new COVID-19 variant Omicron and said he does not foresee new lockdowns or extending travel restrictions for now.

The variant “is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic”, Mr. Biden said.

He stressed that the United States was in a good position to control Omicron’s spread without having to resort to lockdowns or more travel bans beyond restrictions already imposed on eight southern African countries.

“We have more tools today to fight the variant than we’ve ever had before,” he said, adding that his chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci expects current vaccines to work against the new variant, with boosters enhancing protection.

Agence France-Presse London


30/11/2021

Agence France-Presse London

All adults in Britain will now be eligible for a third COVID-19 jab, the Government said on Monday, as concern mounted about the spread of the Omicron variant. The move, backed by a scientific advisory body and Health Secretary Sajid Javid, comes as Ministers scramble to react swiftly to the new variant.

Until now, only adults aged 40 and above were eligible for a booster dose six months after their last. But that time-frame will now be halved to three months, alongside the programme’s expansion to all over-18s, with priority given to older people.

“These measures will protect more people, more quickly and make us better protected as a nation,” Mr. Javid told MPs. He noted it was “a huge step up” for the vaccination scheme, which was launched last December, almost doubling the number of people eligible for a booster.

Positive samples of foreign travellers to be tested for Omicron


Positive samples of foreign travellers to be tested for Omicron

Directorate of Public Health designates 12 laboratories to do the test

30/11/2021

Health Minister Ma. Subramanian and Health Secretary J. Radhakrishnan at a genome sequencing lab.B. JOTHI RAMALINGAM

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

The samples collected from all foreign travellers who test positive for COVID-19 shall be subjected to genomic sequencing, the Directorate of Public Health has said.

The tests will be done at 12 designated government RT-PCR laboratories that are equipped with the World Health Organisation-recommended Thermo TaqPath RT-PCR testing kits to identify the new variant, Omicron, designated as B.1.1.529. According to the Directorate’s notice issued on Monday, most diagnostic tests could detect the variant.

The variant exhibits a deletion of certain spike protein positions, similar to the Alpha variant. The laboratories have been instructed to prioritise such specimens for sequencing to confirm the presence of Omicron. A proxy test for the variant, known as Thermo Fischer TaqPath Assay, could be used, pending genome sequencing confirmation, the notice said.

The government laboratories identified for the assay include the State Public Health laboratory; the King Institute of Preventive Medicine; Madras Medical College; Kilpauk and Stanley Medical Colleges in Chennai; Coimbatore Medical College; and ESI Medical College, Coimbatore; and the Government Medical Colleges in Tiruchi, Salem, Madurai, Thoothukudi and Kanniyakumari. Eight categories of samples have been identified for testing.

The samples of the following segments should be subjected to genome-sequencing, if they have tested positive for COVID-19. They are international travellers since October 15; reinfected persons; those infected after vaccination; those who are part of community clusters or an unusual transmission event; those who are part of family clusters; children testing positive; and young adults with severe lung involvement or an unexpected disease or severe illness.

Under the new guidelines, all positive samples referred from government and private RT-PCR laboratories should be sent to the State Public Health Laboratory in the city for genomic sequencing. The Deputy Director of Health Services in the districts should coordinate the process through their epidemiologists and microbiologists.

The protocol should be followed for all inbound international travellers with symptoms of influenza-like illness.

The samples will be screened for S gene dropout using the Thermo TaqPath kit by the government RT-PCR laboratories, Director of Public Health T.S. Selvavinayagam has said.

The Health Department will appoint assistant project officers at the four international airports in the State to oversee the sample collection, Health Minister Ma. Subramanian has said.

“On Wednesday, senior health officials will accompany me to Madurai where we will inspect the airport. Later, we will travel to Tiruchi and Coimbatore. We will also apprise the officials of the procedures to be followed on arrival of passengers. Along with Health Secretary J. Radhakrishnan, I will be supervising how the instructions are carried out,” the Minister said, after inspecting the genome sequencing unit on the Directorate of Medical Services premises here on Monday.

According to him, 95% of the COVID-19 samples tested at the sequencing unit had returned positive for the Delta variant.

At a review meeting, Chief Secretary V. Irai Anbu asked officials to follow the WHO guidelines for tackling the new variant and directed the Collectors to drive home the point among people that vaccination was the only defence against the severity of the disease.

Bodies of 2 COVID-19 victims found in mortuary after a year


Bodies of 2 COVID-19 victims found in mortuary after a year

Their families were told that bodies had been cremated

30/11/2021

Special Correspondent Bengaluru

In a shocking incident, the decomposed bodies of two COVID-19 patients, who died during the first wave in 2020, were found in the mortuary of the ESIC Model Hospital in Rajajinagar here.

The bodies were found on Friday evening when the housekeeping staff went there for cleaning.

The families of the victims, who were earlier told that the bodies had been cremated, are stunned at the turn of events.

Sources in the hospital said the bodies were identified as that of Durga S., 40, a resident of Chamarajpet, and Muniraju, 35, a resident of KP Agrahara in Bengaluru, with the help of tags. They were admitted to the ESIC Model hospital for COVID-19 treatment in July 2020. After their death, their bodies were shifted to the mortuary to be handed over to the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) for cremation.

As per COVID-19 protocols then, the civic body had the responsibility of cremating the bodies of the victims and the bodies were not given to the families.

Sources in the hospital said the two bodies were “forgotten” in the mortuary as the hospital authorities were under the impression that the BBMP personnel had taken away the bodies.

V. Vijayanath, Head of the Department of Forensic Medicine at ESI Hospital, refused to comment.

Protest held

However, Hospital Dean and Director Jithendra Kumar said he had ordered an internal enquiry. “The bodies were handed over to the police. The families of both deceased were called to the Rajajinagar police station on Monday to hand over the bodies,” he said.

The negligence has evoked sharp criticism. A group of organisations staged a protest in front of the hospital on Monday.

"How could they not notice the bodies? This is shocking,” a family member of Muniraju said.

Omicron poses very high global risk: WHO


Omicron poses very high global risk: WHO

It urges nations to boost health systems

30/11/2021

Medical staff wait for people at a vaccination centre in Rome on Monday.APAP

Reuters Geneva

The heavily mutated Omicron coronavirus variant is likely to spread internationally and poses a very high risk of infection surges that could have “severe consequences” in some places, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Monday.

No Omicron-linked deaths had yet been reported, though further research was needed to assess its potential to escape protection against immunity induced by vaccines and previous infections, it added.

In anticipation of increased case numbers as the variant, first reported last week in South Africa, spreads, the UN agency urged its 194 member states to accelerate vaccination of high-priority groups and ensure plans were in place to maintain health services.

“Omicron has an unprecedented number of spike mutations, some of which are concerning for their potential impact on the trajectory of the pandemic,” it said.

“The overall global risk related to the new variant ... is assessed as very high.”

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General, sounded the alarm at the start of an assembly of Health Ministers that is expected to launch negotiations on an international agreement on preventing future pandemics.

“The emergence of the highly mutated Omicron variant underlines just how perilous and precarious our situation is,” he said.

Monday, November 29, 2021

5 Apps to Customise YOUR ANDROID PHONE



TECHTONIC

5 Apps to Customise YOUR ANDROID PHONE

29.11.2021

All Android handsets run a customised version of the stock user interface. That said, you always have the choice to install a third-party ‘launcher’ from the Play Store to customise the home screen, its appearance, the way apps are launched, or just switch to a minimalistic UI. Ashutosh Desai recommends five Android launchers you should check out.

NOVA LAUNCHER | This app lets you choose how many apps can be fitted on the homescreen by adjusting the grid size, icon style, size, font, and more. You also get a ‘scrollable dock’, so you can have app shortcuts within your thumb’s reach without adding more homescreen pages. A backup option in Nova Launcher lets you save your customisations to a memory card or a preferred location. With this config file, you will be able to port your settings to a new phone easily.

Nova Launcher also has a paid version that unlocks features like the ability to hide apps, create folders within the app drawer and assign swipe actions for certain apps.

APEX LAUNCHER | Apex offers a similar set of features like the ability to customise the homescreen grid and adjust animation speed. However, its user interface is more intuitive. On first launch, it launches a wizard to help you set up basic features where you can choose how you prefer to browse the app drawer (horizontal or vertical), select the number of apps that should appear on the screen, and change UI transitions.

Apex Launcher also lets you create styles for app folders to help you differentiate them by colour. Its free version also includes the option to lock apps with a PIN or pattern. You also get a backup/restore option, so you don’t lose your Apex Launcher preferences.

MICROSOFT LAUNCHER | Instead of the usual Google apps and services, this launcher brings the Microsoft suite of products up front. If you are an Android phone owner who relies on Microsoft’s range of productivity apps — Outlook, OneDrive, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Teams, etc — then you should give this launcher a whirl. You can even opt for a daily wallpaper, courtesy Bing.

If you sign in with your Microsoft ID then this launcher will sync with your calendar, email and documents to your phone. Even if you do not want to sign in, you can use the launcher while enjoying the benefits of being connected to select Microsoft services.

SQUARE HOME | Microsoft’s Windows Phone was discontinued but its user interface lives on. Square Home mimics the simple tiled Metro UI: You get one homescreen with shortcuts to frequently-used apps. They appear as large resizeable blocks that are easy to access and read. This makes it suitable for folk who find the Android UI cluttered or confusing.

Each tile can be configured to respond differently to a single tap or long-press, and display notifications like a ‘live tile’. Other options include colour themes, assign actions to the stock home keys, and more.

LAWNCHAIR 2 | Lawnchair 2 sports a clean, near-stock Android appearance but also packs in a number of features. You can use third-party icon packs from the Play Store, pick default colour accents, customise the app drawer — adjust opacity, icon size, column count, etc — and hide apps from plain view.

You can configure the dock to start web searches and access basic info like weather, time, battery status with a quick glance. It also includes gesture support, with the option to install plug-ins to create new shortcuts.

Note: You can always revert to the original launcher. Open Settings > App Management (or Apps) > Default Apps. Select “Home app” and choose the launcher you want to use. Removing a third-party launcher is as easy as uninstalling an app from the Play Store.

Jio joins Voda Idea & Airtel in raising tariffs


Jio joins Voda Idea & Airtel in raising tariffs

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:29.11.2021

Consumer tariffs for over 90% of mobile customers in India will go up with Reliance Jio, the country’s largest operator, joining rivals Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea in increasing rates.

The upward revision in consumer tariffs is happening after a period of nearly two years and comes as companies now prepare for the launch of 5G services, which will see massive investments into network, spectrum and new technologies.

Jio announced a hike of up to 21% in tariffs, a little lower to the changes made by its rivals and maintaining price competitiveness of its plans. Its entry plan will now cost Rs 91 against Rs 75 previously, but will still be Rs 8 cheaper than the price of Airtel and Vodafone.

“These plans will provide the best value in the industry (and) uphold the Jio promise of providing the best-quality service at the lowest price globally,” the company said while announcing that price revisions effective December 1.

The price hikes by telecom companies come nearly two months after the government had handed out a bailout-cum-revival package to the industry, aimed at improving financials and business fundamentals.

Airtel was the first to announce the change when on November 22 it spoke about raising tariffs across almost all the pre-paid price packs. Airtel had said the measure will help it improve profitability per customer, which is known as average revenue per user (ARPU) in telecom industry parlance.

“Airtel has always maintained that the mobile ARPU needs to be at Rs 200 and ultimately at Rs 300, so as to provide a reasonable return on capital that allows for a financially-healthy business model. We also believe that this level of ARPU will enable the substantial investments required in networks and spectrum,” the company had said.

Airtel’s ARPU was at Rs 153 in the second quarter, while Jio had an ARPU of Rs 144 in the same period, and Vodafone Idea Rs 109.

NEET-UG 2021 : Supreme Court Issues Notice On Plea Alleging Rigging Of OMR Sheets, Discrepancy In Final Results

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KGMU resident docs take out candle march in protest


KGMU resident docs take out candle march in protest

29.11.2021

Lucknow:

The members of Resident Doctors Association of King George’s Medical University on Sunday took out a candle march and announced to hold a demonstration on Monday, which may impact the OPD services. The RDA demanded to to conduct NEET counselling for admission to postgraduate courses at the earliest. RDA President, Dr Kaveri Dande said, “The delay in admissions has delayed appointment of fresh residents, resulting in huge workload on the senior residents. The protest is a part of the all India agitation call given by the Federation of Resident Doctors Association.” TNN

Omicron spreads as cases detected in Netherlands, Denmark, Australia



Omicron spreads as cases detected in Netherlands, Denmark, Australia

13 Flyers Test Positive For Variant, Say Dutch Authorities; Austria Reports 1 Suspected Case

London/Amsterdam:29.11.2021

The Omicron coronavirus variant kept spreading around the world on Sunday, with 13 cases found in the Netherlands and two each in Denmark and Australia even as more countries imposed travel restriction to try to seal themselves off.

Dutch health authorities said the 13 cases of the variant were found among people on two flights that arrived in Amsterdam from South Africa on Friday. Authorities had tested all of the more than 600 passengers on those two flights and had found 61 coronavirus cases, going on to test those for the new variant. “It is not unlikely more cases will appear in the Netherlands,” health minister Hugo de Jonge told a news conference in Rotterdam. “This could possibly be the tip of the iceberg.” The discovery of Omicron, dubbed a “variant of concern” last week by the WHO, has caused worry around the world that it could resist vaccinations and prolong the nearly two-year Covid-19 pandemic. First discovered in South Africa, it has now been detected in Britain, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium, Botswana, Israel, Australia and Hong Kong. Omicron is potentially more contagious than previous variants, although it is unclear whether it causes more or less severe Covid-19 compared to other strains. In new cases detected on Sunday, Denmark said it had registered two cases in travellers from South Africa, while officials in Australia said two passengers who arrived in Sydney from southern Africa had tested positive for the variant.

The top US infectious disease official, Anthony Fauci, said Americans should be prepared to fight the spread of the new variant, but that it was not yet clear what measure such as mandates or lockdowns would be needed. He has said the variant is likely already in the country, although no cases have been confirmed.

In Britain, where two linked cases of Omicron identified on Saturday were connected to travel to southern Africa, the government announced measures to try to contain the spread, including stricter testing rules for people arriving in the country and requiring mask wearing in some settings. British health minister Sajid Javid said on Sunday he expected to receive advice imminently on whether the government can broaden a programme of providing booster shots to fully vaccinated people, to try to weaken the impact of the variant.

Although epidemiologists say travel curbs may be too late to stop Omicron from circulating, many countries - including the United States, Brazil, Canada, European Union nations, Australia, Japan, South Korea and Thailand - have announced bans or restrictions on travel from South Africa and other southern African nations.

More countries imposed such curbs on Sunday, including Indonesia and Saudi Arabia. The South African government has denounced the travel measures as unfair and potentially harmful to its economy, saying it is being punished for its scientific ability to identify coronavirus variants early. The WHO Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, also criticised some of the travel bans targeting African countries as divisive, and urged countries to follow science and international health regulations in their decision-making. "With the Omicron variant now detected in several regions of the world, putting in place travel bans that target Africa attacks global solidarity," she said in a statement. AGENCIES

SHOW TO GO ON: Israel will host the Miss Universe pageant in the Red Sea resort town of Eilat (above) on December 12 despite imposing travel curbs to try to stave off the Omicron variant, tourism minister Yoel Razvozov said on Sunday. He added the contestants and other participants would be granted waivers while possibly undergoing PCR testing every 48 hours

Israel shuts borders to foreigners, use phone-tracking tech to contain spread

Israel on Saturday said it would ban the entry of all foreigners into the country, making it the first country to shut its borders completely in response to a new and potentially more contagious coronavirus variant, and said it would use counter-terrorism phonetracking technology in order to contain the spread of the Omicron variant. PM Naftali Bennett said in a statement that the ban would last 14 days. Officials hope that within that period there will be more information on how effective Covid-19 vaccines are against Omicron. “Our working hypotheses are that the variant is already in nearly every country,” interior minister Ayelet Shaked said, “and that the vaccine is effective, although we don’t yet know to what degree.” Israelis entering the country, including those who are vaccinated, will be required to quarantine, Bennett said. The ban will come into effect at midnight between Sunday and Monday. A travel ban on foreigners coming from most African states was imposed on Friday. The Shin Bet counter-terrorism agency's phone-tracking technology will be used to locate carriers of the new variant in order to curb its transmission to others, Bennett said. Used on and off since March 2020, the surveillance technology matched virus carriers’ locations against other mobile phones nearby to determine with whom they had come into contact. Israel has so far confirmed one case of Omicron, with seven suspected cases. REUTERS

SA doc: Patients with Omicron have ‘very mild’ symptoms so far


SA doc: Patients with Omicron have ‘very mild’ symptoms so far

29.11.2021

A South African doctor who was one of the first to suspect a different coronavirus strain among patients said on Sunday that symptoms of the Omicron variant were so far mild and could be treated at home.

Dr Angelique Coetzee, a private practitioner and chair of South African Medical Association, said that on November 18 she noticed seven patients at her clinic who had symptoms different from the Delta variant, albeit “very mild”. Coetzee said a patient reported at her clinic being “extremely fatigued” for two days with body aches and headache. “Symptoms at that stage was very much related to normal viral infection. And because we haven’t seen Covid-19 for the past eight to 10 weeks, we decided to test,” she said, adding that the patient and his family turned out to be positive. On the same day, more patients came in with similar symptoms. Since then, she’s seen two to three patients a day. “We have seen a lot of Delta patient... And this doesn’t fit in the clinical picture,” she said, adding she alerted South Africa’s National Institute of Communicable Diseases on the same day. “Most of them are seeing very, very mild symptoms and none of them so far have admitted patients to surgeries. We have been able to treat these patients conservatively at home,” she said.

Coetzee, who is also on the ministerial advisory committee on vaccines, said so far patients have not reported loss of smell or taste and there has been no major drop in oxygen levels with the new variant. Her experience so far has been that the variant is affecting people who are 40 or younger. Almost half of the patients with Omicron symptoms that she treated were not vaccinated.

 REUTERS

Dr Angelique Coetzee said a patient reported being ‘extremely fatigued’ with body aches & headache. So far, patients have not reported loss of smell or taste and there has been no major drop in oxygen levels

Omicron: Sound Alert Not Alarm


Omicron: Sound Alert Not Alarm

Too little is known as of now to presume this variant will be worse than Delta

K Srinath Reddy

29.11.2021

Covid virus variant B.1.1.529 had the shortest wait time for acquiring a Greek name, from the time of its first reported arrival into the world. Initially identified in Botswana and later confirmed by South Africa, it has been labelled as a variant of concern (VOC) by the World Health Organisation which named it Omicron. By November 26, it was also reported from Hong Kong, Belgium and Israel. By the next day, Omicron was detected in more countries, including two cases in the UK which had announced a ban on flights from African countries.

Several other countries too have banned flights from Africa and Hong Kong. It is not clear whether the ban will be extended to more countries that now have Omicron infected persons, such as the UK itself. It is also unclear how effective travel bans are, given the experience with the Alpha and Delta variants which slipped through such restrictions. The South African health minister has protested that his country is being unjustly penalised for efficiency in testing and honesty in reporting The heightened concern is linked to the large number of new mutations that Omicron has acquired, especially in the spike protein which the virus uses to enter the human cells. It was reported that these provide Omicron a greater ability, than the currently dominant Delta variant, to bind to the human ACE 2 receptor which opens the door to the interior of the cells. After entry, the virus uses human genetic material to make many copies of itself. They can then infect other humans, to continue the chain of transmission. Through these mutations, Omicron appears to have acquired features that give it greater infectivity.

Is the new variant to be feared more than the Delta variant? Will it dethrone Delta in a militant march around the world? Apart from higher infectivity, will it have greater virulence than Delta or other variants? Will it evade the immunity provided by currently available vaccines? Will it bypass the immunity acquired through natural infection with the ancestral virus or any of the variants that emerged later, including Delta?

While these are legitimate concerns, it is too early to definitively answer any of these questions. Data are still being gathered from the populations of different countries to assess infectivity and virulence and laboratory studies are being conducted to evaluate the ability of the variant to evade previously acquired immunity, whether from vaccines or natural infection. Statements from scientists are currently strewn with phrases like ‘may’, ‘could’ and ‘possibly’ as they await definitive evidence. However, many sections of the media and politicians of several countries have already assumed the worst and proclaim Omicron as the most dangerous coronavirus yet to emerge since Covid debuted in Wuhan.

It was breathlessly reported that two persons in adjoining rooms were infected, as proof that Omicron spreads via aerosols, while it is by now well accepted that the Covid virus had both aerosol and droplet modes of transmission all through the pandemic.

It is possible but not necessary that a variant which possesses more spike protein mutations will have spreading and staying powers that can conquer the world. The Beta variant, first reported from South Africa, was greatly feared because of mutations that gave it greater prowess of immune escape.

However, that variant has not spread wide to become the global threat it was feared to be. Neither did Lambda or Delta Plus variants, which too failed to displace the Delta. While Omicron might achieve greater success than other competitors to Delta, it still needs to demonstrate that its bite is as bad or worse than its bark.

Will the variant make all of the currently available vaccines useless for our defence? The most widely used Covid vaccines in the world, made on either mRNA or virus vector platforms, have exclusively targeted the spike protein antigen. It is likely that the virus has evolved numerous new spike protein mutations to evade the immune response they evoke. However, reduced efficacy does not mean absent immunity. It is possible that a considerable degree of protection against severe disease and death may still be offered by the vaccines.

Other vaccines, directed against multiple viral antigens through the use of an inactivated virus, may not be stymied by spike protein mutations. A broader band of immunity, produced by them, may help to capture and quell the masquerading mutant. We still need data to test these possibilities.

The debate on variants should not be confined to vaccines alone. We must recognise that masks effectively protect against transmission of the virus, including all its variant forms. Ventilation too helps in reducing transmission. Crowding is fraught with danger of a super-spreader effect. We can go on tweaking vaccines as new variants emerge but, unless we exhibit discipline to curb transmission in a sustained manner for several months at a stretch, the virus will find enough human bodies where it can experiment with new mutations.

It is time we stop periodically celebrating the presumed arrival of herd immunity and get down to the task of closing the channels of transmission, even as we work on developing vaccines and drugs against variants. Apart from entry point screening, which will only be partially successful because of negative RT-PCR tests early after infection, we should strengthen follow-up of entering travellers and trace contacts of those diagnosed even later.

The new mantra should be MVVT (masks, ventilation, vaccines and testing) rather than LTBP (lockdowns, travel bans and panic).

The writer, a cardiologist and epidemiologist, is President, Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI). Views are personal


It is possible but not necessary that a variant which possesses more spike protein mutations conquers the world. The Beta variant was greatly feared because of mutations that gave it greater prowess of immune escape. However, it has not become the global threat it was feared to be

Govt docs to go on strike from today


Govt docs to go on strike from today

Ahmedabad:29.11.2021

The pending issues of the teaching staff at government-run medical colleges have not been resolved in the stipulated time, so the doctors have called for a strike from Monday. About 10,000 doctors associated with various organizations will participate in the strike, senior doctors said.

At BJ Medical College, doctors will gather outside the college and start the protest at 9.30am, said organizers. “We had tried to urge the authorities to revoke the order of November 22 — which is the polar opposite of the resolution of May 16 when the government of the day had accepted our valid points,” said a Gujarat Medical Teachers Association (GMTA) member from Ahmedabad.

The staff will submit a memorandum to their respective deans, said the organizers. TNN

TN on high alert over new Covid-19 variant


TN on high alert over new Covid-19 variant

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:29.11.2021

The state health department on Sunday advised all district collectors and major airports to be on high alert regarding Omicron, the new variant of Covid-19. Health secretary J Radhakrishnan has advised all collectors to keep track of people entering into their districts from foreign countries, particularly from atrisk countries and enhance surveillance.

The new variant (B.1.1.529), first reported in South Africa earlier this month, has a large number of mutations associated with higher transmissibility than the Delta variant. Cases have been detected in Belgium, Hong Kong, Israel and some European nations. But till date, none from Tamil Nadu has tested positive for this variant. “In case another major surge of Covid-19 takes place driven by Omicron in the region, consequences will be tough and we have to take all measures to prevent its entry into our state as like Delta this may pose overwhelming demands on healthcare systems, and may lead to increased morbidity and mortality. The impact on vulnerable populations would be enormous,” Radhakrishnan wrote to collectors.

Reports of breakthrough or re-infections from populations expected to have a high level of immunity (due to prior infections or high vaccination coverage) could indicate the presence of a variant able to evade the immune response.

Samples collected from such clusters should be sent to the state health lab in Chennai’s Teynampet on a priority basis to help in epidemiological studies. Despite uncertainties over Omicron’s immune escape potential, Radhakrishnan said it is legitimate to say available vaccines may offer some level of protection against hospitalisation and death.

Travellers from 11 other countries including England, Brazil, Bangladesh, New Zealand, Mauritius, Zimbabwe, Singapore, Israel, Botswana and China should have covid negative certificate while entering the state.

No bank account means no lessons for Irular student


No bank account means no lessons for Irular student

Komal Gautham@timesgroup.com

Chennai:29.11.2021

The rain and the floods couldn’t deter Rakesh* (name changed), a Class IX student from going to school. But he didn’t know there was another obstacle: a bank account. The boy who hails from an Irular tribal hamlet in Kannima Nagar in Thiruporur, Chengalpet district, hasn’t been allowed to attend classes in the government school located close by, as he did not have a savings bank account.

All tribal students under pre-matric scholarship scheme get ₹8000 per year and that money is credited to their personal savings bank account.

His mother, Rekha* said they were uneducated and also unemployed due to covid and the floods. “ Most of us don’t have identity proof. With great difficulty I opened the bank account for my elder son and daughter. However, for the third child, I was told to have a minimum balance of ₹1,000. It is impossible for us to save ₹1,000. But the bank officials said we can’t withdraw the scholarship money without having a bank account for my child. Now I have taken up a job and am waiting for my salary to open my son’s account,” she said. She added that when she went to the school after it opened a month ago, the teacher there told her to come back only after the bank account had been opened.

Many in the hamlet have dropped out due to several factors including lack of roads leading to their hamlets and the distance from the school. “However, no child was so far stopped from studying because of a bank account,” said S Mohana, one of the village heads. She added that many of them faced this problem this month.

When TOI spoke to the headmaster of Government Higher Secondary School, Nemmeli, she said the allegation is not true. “Yes, we do insist on them opening a bank account. But we have not stopped any child,” she said. The teacher who had stopped the child from attending classes could not be contacted.

Deepa Umashankar, of Wings to Hope, an NGO that works exclusively with these tribes, said no student can be stopped from attending classes.

A senior education department officer told TOI he would look into the issue and ensure the child is allowed to attend classes. “No one can be stopped from attending school. We will set this right,” he said.

Eye on variant, India updates its norms for int’l passengers


Eye on variant, India updates its norms for int’l passengers

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:28.11.2021

All international passengers, except those under five years of age, flying into India from Covid atrisk countries must undergo RT-PCR test on arrival, starting from 12.01am (IST) of December 1, 2021.

This will include those transiting from these places too. Those testing negative must home quarantine for seven days and then re-test on the eighth day.

Those testing positive will be admitted to seperate isolation facility and their sample sent for genomic testing and would be discharged if found not infected with the Omicron variant. Those found infected with this new variant will be kept in “strict isolation” and treated till they test negative.

Union health ministry on Sunday issued a new protocol for international arrivals in the wake of a new variant found in southern Africa, Hong Kong, and some other countries to prevent its spread here.

This adds to the existing norms like a negative report from a RT-PCR test done within 72 hours of flying into India and filing a self-declaration form. They must also add details of their travel in the last 14 days from the time of arrival.

To be sure, the government will keep updating the list of at-risk countries as the situation evolves.

Five per cent of the passengers flying in from not-atrisk countries will also be tested on arrival on a random basis. “The cost of testing of such passengers would be borne by the aviation ministry,” the order says. Their samples will also be sent for genomic testing and they will be treated as per “standard protocol.”

Children unde five years of age continue to be exempt from both pre- and post-arrival test if they are asymptomatic. “Contacts” of positive cases from at-risk countries -- their co-passengers seated in the same row and three rows in front and behind their row and identified cabin crew -- will be kept under institutional or home quarantine, under strict monitoring of the state government concerned.

As of November 26, the health ministry’s list of atrisk countries include: countries in Europe including the UK, South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, Botswana, China, Mauritius, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Israel.

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