Monday, November 29, 2021

Amid rapid Omicron spread, India ups travel surveillance


Amid rapid Omicron spread, India ups travel surveillance

Flyers From ‘At Risk’ Nations Must Quarantine

29.11.2021

With the proposed resumption of international flights on December 15 under review, the government issued fresh guidelines on Sunday, mandating RT-PCR test on arrival for all passengers from Covid at-risk countries. While those testing positive will be isolated and their samples sent for genomic testing, those testing negative will have to home-quarantine for a week and test on the eighth day.

As of November 26, the list of at-risk countries include European nations, the UK, South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, Botswana, China, Mauritius, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel. Flyers also have to declare their travel details for the past 14 days.

The Centre has asked states and UTs to focus on containment, surveillance and increased vaccination.

The new norms came on a day when the new variant surfaced in the Netherlands, Denmark, and Australia and more countries tightened travel restrictions. Israel barred entry to foreigners and approved controversial phone-tracking of contacts. Indonesia and Saudi Arabia too imposed curbs. While South Africa questioned the “act first, ask questions later” approach of the global community, calling it a blow to its economy, the European Union said it needed to buy time. AGENCIES


6x more transmissible than Delta: Experts

Based on preliminary analysis, experts suggest Omicron has six times higher potential to spread (R value) than the Delta variant. The 32 spike mutations suggest it could evade tests and be more transmissible, said Dr Vinod Scaria of the Institute of Genomics & Integrative Biology. Experts fear it may not respond to monoclonal antibody therapy.

Saturday, November 27, 2021

'நீட்' கலந்தாய்வு தாமதத்துக்கு கண்டனம் டாக்டர்கள் இன்று முதல் வேலைநிறுத்தம்


'நீட்' கலந்தாய்வு தாமதத்துக்கு கண்டனம் டாக்டர்கள் இன்று முதல் வேலைநிறுத்தம்

Added : நவ 26, 2021 22:17

புதுடில்லி:முதுநிலை மருத்துவப் பட்டப் படிப்பில் ஓ.பி.சி., எனப்படும் இதர பிற்படுத்தப்பட்ட பிரிவினருக்கு 27 சதவீதமும், பொருளாதாரத்தில் பின்தங்கியோருக்கு 10 சதவீதமும் இட ஒதுக்கீடு வழங்க அரசாணை பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

பொருளாதாரத்தில் பின்தங்கியோருக்கான இட ஒதுக்கீடு பெறுவதற்கான வரு வாய் உச்ச வரம்பு, ஆண்டுக்கு 8 லட்சம் ரூபாயாக நிர்ணயிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. இது தொடர்பான வழக்கை விசாரித்த உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் 'எந்த அடிப்படையில் இந்த உச்ச வரம்பு நிர்ணயிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது' என, ஏற்கனவே கேள்வி எழுப்பி இருந்தது.

இந்த வழக்கு நீதிபதிகள் டி.ஒய்.சந்திரசூட், சூர்யகாந்த், விக்ரம் நாத் அமர்வில் விசாரணைக்கு வந்தது. அப்போது மத்திய அரசு சார்பில் ஆஜரான சொலிசிட்டர் ஜெனரல் துஷார் மேத்தா கூறியதாவது:வருவாய் உச்ச வரம்பு நிர்ணயம் தொடர்பாக மறு ஆய்வு செய்ய புதிய குழு அமைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. பதிலளிக்க நான்கு வாரங்கள் அவகாசம் அளிக்க வேண்டும். அதுவரை முதுகலை மருத்துவ மாணவர் சேர்க்கைக்கான கலந்தாய்வை ஒத்தி வைக்க அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும். இவ்வாறு அவர் கூறினார்.இதை ஏற்ற நீதிபதிகள், வழக்கு விசாரணையை ஜனவரிக்கு ஒத்தி வைத்தனர்.

இது டாக்டர்கள் மத்தியில் சலசலப்பை ஏற்படுத்தியது.முதுநிலை மருத்துவப் படிப்புக்கான கலந்தாய்வு மற்றும் சேர்க்கை நடைமுறைகளை விரைவாக நடத்தி முடிக்கும்படி மத்திய அரசு மற்றும் உச்ச நீதிமன்றத்திடம், இந்திய டாக்டர்கள் சங்க கூட்டமைப்பு கோரிக்கை விடுத்து உள்ளது.

இது குறித்து இந்திய டாக்டர்கள் சங்க கூட்டமைப்பு வெளியிட்டுள்ள அறிக்கை:கொரோனா தொற்று பரவல் துவங்கியதில் இருந்து டாக்டர்கள் கடுமையான பணிச்சுமைக்கு ஆளாகி உள்ளனர். இது அவர்களை உடல் மற்றும் மன அளவில் ஏற்கனவே சோர்வுஅடைய செய்து உள்ளது.முதுநிலை மருத்துவப் படிப்புக்கான, 'நீட்' தேர்வில் தேர்ச்சி பெற்ற எம்.பி.பி.எஸ்., டாக்டர்கள், உயர் படிப்பில் சேர காத்திருக்கின்றனர்.

உச்ச நீதிமன்ற விசாரணை ஒத்திவைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதால், அவர்கள் மன உளைச்சலுக்கு ஆளாகி உள்ளனர். கலந்தாய்வு உடனடியாக நடத்தப்பட வேண்டும்.இதற்கு தீர்வு கிடைக்கும் வரை நாடு முழுதும் உள்ள புற நோயாளிகள் பிரிவில் பணியாற்றும் டாக்டர்கள், இன்று முதல் வேலை நிறுத்தத்தில் ஈடுபட முடிவு செய்யப்பட்டு உள்ளது. இவ்வாறு அதில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

‘No work, no pay’, but 80k ST staff defy ultimatum

‘No work, no pay’, but 80k ST staff defy ultimatum

Somit Sen & Bhavika Jain TNN

Mumbai: 27.11.2021

More than 80,000 Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC) workers refused to heed the two-day ultimatum given by government to resume duties by Friday. While this crippled the road lifeline of the state, the government has warned of withdrawing its decision on ‘huge salary hikes’ if the strike continued indefinitely.

The MSRTC management warned that if drivers, conductors and other staff do not return to depots by the weekend, they may lose their one month’s (November) salary.

As many as 11,589 workers have heeded the call of transport minister and MSRTC chairman Anil Parab and joined duties, so the bus corporation could restart operations at 37 depots across the state. The remaining 213 depots continue to be shut, inconveniencing lakhs of commuters.

On Friday night, more employees were suspended, taking the total to 3,215, while 1,226 daily wage workers were dismissed.

Close to 81,000 workers are still protesting and are unwilling to accept the huge salary hikes (upto 41% hike on basic) announced by Parab this week. They are firm on their demand of MSRTC being merged with the state government.

“A Supreme Court order says ‘No work, no pay’. Employees should return to work and not force the government to take coercive steps against them,” Parab said.

He met union representatives on Friday and made it clear to them that while their demands will be considered, indiscipline by workers will not be tolerated.

“We have been told that after the pay hike some anomaly in the grade system has been created, All these issues will be sorted out, but first employees should return to work,” said Parab. The unions have demanded the Seventh Pay Commission for employees and the agreement with state government should be for 10 years, instead of four years.

He said nearly 500 daily wage workers have been terminated on Friday for not showing up. “Despite taking the financial burden of the salary hike, if the employees will continue with the strike, why should the government take the burden-,”said Parab.

Several students were inconvenienced due to unavailability of buses when many schools are reopening across the state.

“Even if there is threat of suspension or dismissal, we will not join duties till we are declared as state government employees,” said a driver from Mumbai. He refused to comment on hardships of commuters.

Flyers look forward to eased int’l travel as bars are lifted

Flyers look forward to eased int’l travel as bars are lifted

Subhro.Niyogi@timesgroup.com

Kolkata:27.11.2021

An increase in frequency of flights to Dubai, Bangkok and Dhaka; resumption of flights to Abu Dhabi, Kathmandu and Paro; improved connectivity in flights to Europe and the US and a slash in international fares that have gone through the roof: these are among the offers that flyers from Kolkata can look forward to following the aviation ministry’s decision to allow scheduled international flights from December 15.

Scheduled international flights were suspended on March 22, 2020. The only international flights that have been operating to and from India are those under air bubble agreements signed between India and 31 countries. But these flights had severe capacity constraints as frequency was less than that before Covid times. Also, these flights did not allow passengers to undertake onward travel.

Though some capacity restriction has been announced on flights to countries that have been categorised as “risky”, like the UK and Bangladesh, Kolkata airport director C Pattabhi expects several carriers that are currently operating bubble flights to increase frequency from January and a few others, which had stayed away, to again link Kolkata. “We now have three-four international flights a day. That number should go up to 10-12 in January and then, steadily improve as the situation normalizes across the globe. It will be great to see the international wing of the terminal abuzz again,” he said.

The travel trade community feels Emirates, FlyDubai and Qatar to be among the first airlines to increase frequency from three times-a-week to Dubai and two times-a-week to Doha at present to a daily service some time in January. Travel agents also expect IndiGo to hike its frequency to Dubai and reintroduce flights to Bangkok, and Air India to increase frequency to Bangkok and reintroduce flights to Dubai. Both Dubai and Bangkok are high-demand sectors from Kolkata that were constrained due to the limitations on flight.

“There are indications of SpiceJet restarting flights to Bangkok,” said an industry source.

Etihad is expected to return to Kolkata and connect the city to Abu Dhabi.

The big difference though will be in the long-haul routes, such as Europe and the US, where economy fares have touched business class rates. “As scheduled operations resume, frequencies will increase and airlines can carry onward traffic, like before. This will bring down fares drastically,” said travel agent Anil Punjabi.

Though Dhaka figures on the list of countries with Covid risk, and therefore, has a limitation on flights to operate at 75% capacity, travel agents feel that will not prevent several carriers from adding frequencies or resuming operations. Kathmandu and Paro, two other airports in south Asia that had flight connections from Kolkata, could also get reconnected.

However, Singapore Airlines, which is scheduled to start daily flights to the city state from November 29, may be in jeopardy as the 75% capacity limitation could affect the flight’s viability. Ditto with the once-a-week Air India flight to London that operates on Sundays. “Since safety is paramount, there will be such restrictions along the way as international travel opens up,” an aviation industry official said.

Students to get easy access to information with new LU app


Students to get easy access to information with new LU app

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Lucknow:27.11.2021

The Lucknow University on Friday launched a mobile-based application to make it easier for students to browse the university’s website, fill examination forms, view the timetable and get latest updates and information.

Governor Anandiben Patel launched the mobile application, besides a number of other facilities on the campus, during the convocation ceremony of the university on Friday.

At least 17 open-air gyms have been set up in both LU hostels for girls and boys on the old and new campuses with the help of the grant given by the Rashtriya Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan.

Besides, three boys’ and two girls’ toilets, constructed with the help of the deputy chief ministers’ MLA fund, were also inaugurated.

A tribal museum, residences for class four employees and a new lift at the fourstoreyed education department building were the other facilities inaugurated by the Governor.

The new NSS office was inaugurated and renamed as ‘Sewa Bhawan’.

New variant not here yet, checks up


New variant not here yet, checks up

Sushmi.Dey@timesgroup.com

New Delhi: 27.11.2021

No case of the new variant B.1.1.529 has been detected in India so far, health ministry sources said.

However, Hong Kong and Israel have been added to the existing list of “countries at risk”. Travellers from these countries will have to undergo additional checks and scrutiny, including post-arrival tests. Several other countries, including the UK, South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, Botswana, China, Mauritius, New Zealand, Zimbabwe and Singapore have already been categorised “countries at risk”.

The health ministry has urged states to ramp up surveillance and testing, particularly among international travellers and their contacts.

The Wmet on Friday to assess the new variant and to discuss whether to designate it as ‘variant of interest’ or ‘variant of concern’.

While many countries have tightened their borders due to the fear that the new variant could be the worst Covid-19 strain identified yet, with major public health implications, the UN health agency cautioned nations against hastily imposing travel restrictions.

WHO said it would take several weeks to determine the variant's transmissibility and effectiveness of vaccines and therapeutics against it.


Dharwad cases rise to 182

Authorities in Sattur of Karnataka’s Dharwad district closed schools and colleges on Friday and sanitised places within a 500-metre radius of SDM College of Medical Sciences as 116 students and faculty members tested positive for Covid, taking the number of infections to 182.

The outbreak was detected when 66 students reported positive on Tuesday and Wednesday, barely a week after 300 freshers and seniors attended a college event, reports Basavaraj Kattimani.

Deputy commissioner Nitesh Patil said the college management has been directed to close the outpatient department till Sunday.

New Covid Variant Triggers Global Alarm


New Covid Variant Triggers Global Alarm

Cases Found In SA, Botswana, Belgium, HK & Israel; At Least 10 Countries Limit Travel

27.11.2021 

TOI Ahamedabad

European countries on Friday joined Singapore, Israel and others in restricting travel from southern Africa in a frantic effort to keep a newly identified, and apparently significantly evolved, variant of the coronavirus from crossing into their borders. In the past, governments have taken days, weeks or months to issue travel restrictions in response to new variants. This time, restrictions came within hours of South Africa’s announcement — at least 10 countries around the world had announced measures before South African scientists had finished a meeting with WHO experts about the variant on Friday. There is no proof yet that the variant could diminish the protective power of the vaccines, but uncertainty on that question was one factor in the speed of countries’ move toward restrictions.

The new variant, initially called B.1.1.529, has a “very unusual constellation of mutations,” according to Tulio de Oliveira, director of the Kwa-Zulu-Natal Research and Innovation Sequencing Platform. On the protein that helps to create an entry point for the coronavirus to infect human cells, the new variant has 10 mutations, many more than the dangerous Delta variant, professor de Oliveira said. Still, even epidemiologists who have been the most outspoken in urging protection from the virus urged calm on Friday, noting that little is known about the variant and that several seemingly threatening variants have come and gone in recent months. “Substantively NOTHING is known about the new variant,” Roberto Burioni, a leading Italian virologist, wrote on Twitter, adding that people should not panic.

Stocks tumbled around the world on Friday as the news of the variant spooked markets, prompted Britain, France, Italy and others to bar flights and impose restrictions, and terrified many Europeans already exhausted by news of breakthrough infections, surging cases ahead of another imperiled holiday season and rallies by vaccine skeptics. So far only a few dozen cases of the new variant have been identified in South Africa, Botswana, Belgium, Hong Kong and Israel. But the case in Israel was a person who had recently arrived from Malawi, according to the state broadcaster, Kan. And Belgium’s case was detected in a young, unvaccinated woman who had recently returned from travel abroad, but not to South Africa or neighbouring countries, Belgian researchers said. Countries in Europe, once again the epicenter of the pandemic, wasted no time and were among the first to announce travel bans. Britain announced its restriction on Thursday, and put it into force on Friday. “More data is needed but we’re taking precautions now,” Sajid Javid, the British health secretary, said on Twitter.

The discovery of the variant by South African authorities this week comes as the virus was already galloping across the continent in a deadly fourth wave, especially in Eastern Europe where vaccination levels are low and restrictions have been loose. Italy’s decision on Friday to block travel from South Africa and the region showed that even a country that has generally been ahead of the wave, vaccinating much of its population and introducing early, and then progressively stricter, health passes to keep infections low, is not taking any chances.

The history of the pandemic has shown that blocking flights has not been a panacea in stopping the virus, and especially variants that spread with increasing ease. But this time, countries acted much earlier and more restrictions seemed likely. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the EU’s executive arm, said in a Twitter post on Friday morning that it would also propose restricting air travel to European countries from southern Africa.

In a statement posted on Friday on a government website, South Africa said it would urge Britain to reconsider its travel restrictions, saying “even the WHO is yet to advise on the next steps.” But that complaint came before a flurry of other bans from other countries. In the past two days, scientists in South Africa — which has a sophisticated detection system — discovered the variant after observing an increase in infections in South Africa’s economic hub surrounding Johannesburg. “This variant did surprise us — it has a big jump in evolution, many more mutations than we expected, especially after a very severe third wave of Delta,” professor de Oliveira said. NYT

COVID SCARE IN SHANGHAI: Hundreds of flights were cancelled, some schools shut and tour groups suspended on Friday after three coronavirus cases were reported in Shanghai, as China continues its strict zero-Covid policy. The three positive persons are friends who travelled to the nearby city of Suzhou together last week, Shanghai health authorities said on Thursday, adding that all had been fully vaccinated

WHO meets to designate new variant

The WHO on Friday cautioned countries against hastily imposing travel restrictions linked to the new B.1.1.529 variant of Covid-19, saying they should take a “risk-based and scientific approach”. A closed-door experts’ meeting from Geneva, convened by WHO, began at midday (1100 GMT) to assess the new variant and to designate it as either a variant of interest or a variant of concern, spokesperson Christian Lindmeier said. It would take several weeks to determine the variant’s transmissibility and the effectiveness of vaccines and therapeutics against it, he said, noting that 100 sequences of the variant have been reported so far. People should continue to wear masks whenever possible, avoid large gatherings, ventilate rooms and maintain hand hygiene, Lindmeier added. REUTERS

NEWS TODAY 2.5.2024