Senin, 19 April 2021

India's Modi scorned over reckless rallies, religious gathering amid COVID-19 mayhem - CNA

NEW DELHI: Many Indians are pillorying Prime Minister Narendra Modi over his response to a scary surge in coronavirus cases, sickened by him addressing tens of thousands of people at state election rallies and letting Hindu devotees congregate for a festival.

Tags like #ResignModi and #SuperSpreaderModi have trended on Twitter in the past two days, as bodies piled up in mortuaries and crematoriums, and desperate cries for hospital beds, medical oxygen and coronavirus tests flooded social media.

READ: India struggles with record COVID-19 count and bed shortage; political rallies continue

Having swept to power in 2014 with the biggest single party majority in decades, Modi is unused to such public roasting.

He has diced with losing support before by springing unpopular reforms, notably after he decommissioned high denomination banknotes overnight in 2016, and last year, when his agricultural reforms provoked months of mass protests by angry farmers.

But this is different. The economy has struggled to recover following a months-long lockdown last year, yet for all the hardship suffered then, the second wave of the coronavirus epidemic is proving deadlier than the first.

READ: Week-long lockdown in Delhi as COVID-19 cases soar

India is currently recording more new cases of COVID-19 than any other country, and this week it is expected to rise above the high tide of the epidemic seen in the United States, when daily new cases peaked at nearly 300,000 in early January.

Deaths in India have risen to nearly 179,000.

Yet Modi and his ministers have campaigned heavily ahead of state elections in West Bengal, where opinion polls showed the prime minister's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was in a tight race with a regional party that rules the state.

India State Election
Supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party rally in support of their legislative assembly candidate ahead of the third phase of West Bengal state elections in Kolkata, India, Apr 5, 2021. (File photo: AP/Bikas Das)

"You hold rallies as people head to funerals," Akhilesh Jha, the data head of the federal Department of Science & Technology, wrote in Hindi on LinkedIn, in a rare public outburst by a government official.

"People will hold you accountable, you keep doing your rallies.

Several other government officials privately shared similar sentiments with Reuters.

The eight-phase voting in West Bengal ends on Apr 29.

Whatever happens there, Modi does not have to worry about a national vote until 2024, but presently it is hard to say when India's coronavirus epidemic will subside.

Patients suffering from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) get treatment at the casualty ward in Lo
Patients suffering from COVID-19 get treatment at the casualty ward in Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Hospital in New Delhi, India, Apr 15, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui)

READ: 2 to a bed in Delhi hospital as India's COVID-19

A government spokesman did not respond to queries on criticism of Modi. But Piyush Goyal, the minister for railways, commerce and industry, told Reuters television partner ANI that Modi was working for many hours a day to manage the crisis.

On Saturday, Modi requested religious leaders to only symbolically celebrate a festival known as Kumbh Mela, after tens of thousands of Hindu devotees gathered daily in close proximity to immerse themselves in the Ganges.

READ: Top seer at India religious mega-festival dies from COVID-19

But that was on the 17th day of the festival scheduled to run until the end of April, and it is yet to be officially called off despite authorities detecting hundreds of infections among participants who had poured in from across the country.

Though it is not a force in the state, the main national opposition Congress party on Sunday called off election rallies in Bengal. But the BJP has insisted on its candidates' "constitutional right" to campaign for at least 14 days.

COVID-19 cases in Bengal, meanwhile, have quadrupled since the start of April, and at least three election contestants have died.

"How many deaths does it take 'til he knows, that too many people have died?” Nirupama Menon Rao, a former foreign secretary, asked on Twitter.

India COVID-19 cases record Apr 18 2021 chart
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2021-04-19 11:45:52Z
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US says Russian build-up on Ukraine border is bigger than in 2014 - CNA

WASHINGTON: Moscow's military build-up on the border with Ukraine is even bigger than in 2014 when Russia invaded Crimea, a Pentagon spokesman said Monday (Apr 19), describing the deployment as "very seriously concerning".

While the European Union's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell cited a figure of 150,000 Russian soldiers on the Ukrainian border, before his own services scaled that figure back without explanation to 100,000, US Defense Department spokesman John Kirby declined to name a specific figure.

"It is the largest buildup we've seen certainly since 2014, which resulted in the violation of Ukrainian sovereignty and territorial integrity," Kirby told a news conference. "It is certainly bigger than the last one in 2014."

"I'm not going to get into specific numbers or troop formations in terms of the Russian buildup," he said.

"We do continue to see that buildup, (it's), as it was before, very seriously concerning to us," Kirby said.

"We don't believe that this buildup is conducive to security and stability along the border with Ukraine and certainly not in occupied Crimea."

"We certainly heard the Russians proclaim that this is all about training," he added. "It's not completely clear to us that that's exactly the purpose."

A Ukrainian soldier was killed and another wounded on Sunday in clashes with separatists in the east of the country, where such confrontations have increased amid renewed tensions with Moscow.

Ukraine fears that the Kremlin, widely regarded as the military and political godfather of pro-Russian separatists in the eastern region of Donbass, is looking for a pretext to attack.

Moscow has said it is "not threatening anyone" while also denouncing what it calls Ukrainian "provocations".

The war in Donbass has claimed more than 13,000 lives, and nearly 1.5 million people have been displaced since it started seven years ago in the wake of Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula.

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2021-04-19 23:46:34Z
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India struggles with record COVID-19 count and bed shortage; political rallies continue - CNA

BENGALURU: India's daily COVID-19 cases jumped by a record 273,810 on Monday (Apr 19) as the health system crumbled under the weight of patients, bringing total infections closer to that of the United States, the world's worst hit country.

India's hospitals are struggling with a shortage of hospital beds and oxygen supplies as infections pass the 15 million mark, second only to the United States. The country's deaths from COVID-19 rose by a record 1,619 to reach a total of 178,769.

Despite soaring infections, politicians continued to hold mass rallies across the country for state elections.

Social media was flooded with people complaining about the lack of beds, oxygen cylinders and drugs, and citizen groups circulating helpline numbers and volunteering support.

READ: Week-long lockdown in Delhi as COVID-19 cases soar

READ: Hong Kong bans flights from India, Pakistan and the Philippines over mutant COVID-19 strain

Criticism has mounted over how Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration has handled India's second wave of the pandemic, with religious festivals and election rallies being attended by thousands.

Leaders including Home Minister Amit Shah are set to hold further road shows and public meetings on Monday.

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi - who has also addressed election rallies in recent weeks - said on Sunday he was suspending all his public rallies in West Bengal, which is in the middle of polls.

India's capital New Delhi on Sunday urged the federal government to provide more hospital beds to tackle the health crisis. Several major market associations in the city, which is among the country's worst hit, have announced that they will keep their markets closed until Apr 25.

READ: 2 to a bed in Delhi hospital as India's COVID-19

Hong Kong late on Sunday said the Asian financial hub will suspend flights from India, Pakistan and the Philippines from Apr 20 for two weeks due to imported infections.

As of Monday, India had administered nearly 123.9 million vaccine doses, which is the most in the world after the United States and China, though it ranks much lower in per capita vaccination.

India COVID-19 cases record Apr 18 2021 chart

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2021-04-19 06:42:01Z
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Japan's hard-hit regions may slide back to COVID-19 state of emergency - CNA

TOKYO: A recent surge in COVID-19 cases could see major parts of Japan slide back into states of emergency with authorities in Tokyo and Osaka looking at renewed curbs to stop the spread.

The new wave of infections complicates preparations for the Tokyo Olympic Games, which are due to start in July having already been postponed due to the global coronavirus outbreak last year.

Japan this month put Osaka, Tokyo, and eight other prefectures under "quasi-states of emergency" aimed at controlling the spread of COVID-19 with shorter business hours for restaurants and bars and stronger calls for teleworking.

But those measures have done little to reverse the trend so far, with Osaka reporting a record 1,220 cases on Sunday (Apr 18), two weeks after those restrictions took effect as a mutant strain fuelled the spread.

"The fruits of these measures should be appearing now," Osaka Governor Hirofumi Yoshimura told reporters in comments carried online.

"Medical services are also in a dire state, and we've decided that we need a state of emergency. We need stronger measures such as those that would stop the movement of people," he said, adding that Japan's third-most populous prefecture would make the formal request to the government on Tuesday.

READ: Tokyo Olympics chief commits to Games as COVID-19 infections surge; fresh calls to postpone or cancel

READ: Japan PM to 'consider all possibilities' including fresh lockdown amid fears of new COVID-19 strain

In a TV Asahi poll published on Monday, just over half of respondents said they believed the "quasi-emergency" restrictions were ineffective.

Tokyo is also considering a state-of-emergency request, Governor Yuriko Koike told reporters late on Sunday, in a step backwards as Japan scrambles to bring the pandemic under control ahead of the Summer Olympics.

"Taking pre-emptive action is crucial right now," Koike said. Tokyo reported 543 new cases on Sunday, the 18th straight day of seven-day increases.

Asked about possible requests from Osaka and Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato, the government's top spokesman, said any such calls would need to be considered "swiftly."

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2021-04-19 05:03:45Z
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Malaysian netizens angry with report of royal vaccinations, govt's flailing response to Covid-19 - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR - The hashtags #kerajaangagal (failed government) along with #Agong (King) trended on Twitter over the weekend as Malaysians expressed online anger over the government's perceived mishandling of issues ranging from the Covid-19 crisis to alleged furtive vaccination of the country's ruler.

The anger boiled over following a  report by the Asia Sentinel news site saying that the King, Sultan Abdullah Ahmad Shah, was vaccinated during his recent visit to the United Arab Emirates  with the Sinopharm vaccine, which has not been approved for use in Malaysia, and brought back 2,000 doses for his family and friends.

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2021-04-19 08:39:27Z
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Minggu, 18 April 2021

Kidnapped French girl, 8, rescued in Switzerland - CNA

NANCY, France: An eight-year-old girl was rescued in Switzerland on Sunday (Apr 18), five days after being kidnapped from her grandmother's French home in a "military" style operation with the alleged involvement of her mother.

After a massive search, investigators found the girl, Mia, and her mother Lola Montemaggi in a squat inside an abandoned factory in the Swiss municipality of Sainte-Croix, French prosecutors said.

The 28-year-old mother was arrested along with five men accused of helping her.

All five have been charged for the abduction of a minor, and four of them are being held in custody, said the prosecutor's office in Nancy, northeastern France.

Three of the men posed as child welfare officials - even using forged identifications - to convince Mia's maternal grandmother to hand her over at their home in the village of Poulieres near France's border with Switzerland on Tuesday.

No violence was used in the abduction, but the public prosecutor of Nancy, Francois Perain, said it was like a "military operation," with the "extremely well-prepared" kidnappers even giving it a code name: "Operation Lima".

They had walkie-talkies, camping gear, fake licence plates, and a budget of €3,000 to cover expenses, the prosecutor said.

The kidnappers were not known to police but were described as part of the same "community of ideas".

"They are against the state and mobilised against what they call a health dictatorship," the prosecutor said, adding that for them "children in care are unfairly taken from their parents".

'A HUGE RELIEF'

After the kidnapping, three of the men and her mother walked over the French-Swiss border, taking turns with the child.

Then a man nicknamed Romeo picked up Mia and her mother in a Porsche and drove them to a Swiss hotel.

They then spent a night with a woman who was a "sympathiser of the movement" before arriving in Sainte-Croix.

The abandoned Swiss factory where she was found
The abandoned Swiss factory where she was found. (Photo: AFP/Fabrice Coffrini)

Five people linked to the kidnapping, aged 23 to 60, were arrested in France from Wednesday to Friday.

Mia is safe and in good health, and a psychologist and social worker would take care of her before she is handed back to her grandmother, the prosecutor said.

But with the story becoming big news in France, intense media pressure meant they would not immediately be reunited in Poulieres, investigators said.

The mother Lola Montemaggi did not resist arrest when Swiss investigators arrived at the abandoned factory in two vans, though Mia screamed, witnesses told an AFP photographer.

Montemaggi was taken into Swiss police custody and was expected to soon be the subject of a European arrest warrant for her extradition to France.

Nearly 200 police officers were mobilised in the search effort.

For her paternal grandparents, her rescue "is a huge relief", they said through their lawyer.

"It is the end of nights of anguish and fear for the life of our little girl, in particular because of the extremist commitments of the kidnappers," they added.

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2021-04-18 21:11:15Z
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Prince Philip's funeral - The Independent

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  1. Prince Philip's funeral  The Independent
  2. Prince Harry 'may delay return to LA to stay for Queen's birthday this week'  Daily Mail
  3. Kate Middleton helped bring Prince Harry and William together  Geo News
  4. The Queen alone: how Prince Philip’s death will change the monarchy  The Guardian
  5. Queen Elizabeth seen wiping tears away after Prince Philip funeral  Fox News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-04-18 05:26:16Z
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