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Bengaluru violence ‘well planned’, says minister

 

Perpetrators will be dealt with an iron hand, says Ashoka

 

Bengaluru: Karnataka Revenue Minister R. Ashoka said on Wednesday that the violence that broke out in Bengaluru on Tuesday night was a “well planned act”, adding that the perpetrators would be dealt with an iron hand.

“The manner in which the riots were perpetrated shows that it was a well planned act and was intended to spread to other parts of the city,” he said.

Three people were killed in the police firing and scores other injured, including 50 policemen, in the violence that erupted on Tuesday night at DJ Halli in Pulakeshinagar locality over an alleged Facebook post on a ‘communally sensitive’ issue by a relative of Congress MLA Akhanda Srinivasa Murthy.

The Pulakeshinagar MLA’s house was vandalised by a huge mob on Tuesday night.

After visiting Murthy at Vidhana Soudha on Wednesday, Ashoka said: “It is clear from the intensity of vandalism that the intention was to attack and finish off Srinivasa Murthy.”Terming the attackers as “traitors”, Ashoka said the government will send across a strong message so that no one would ever dare to take law into their hands again.

“Whether Popular Front or SDPI is behind it, we will not bother. These people must be arrested. We will hunt them wherever they are holed up,” Ashoka said.

Meanwhile, Murthy, who faced the wrath of a violent mob, said that those who perpetuated the violence are not from his constituency, but outsiders.

Aggressive testing

 

The number of covid-19 cases just continue to surge and this month alone, almost six thousand have been added up to take the overall tally close to another grim milestone of 26000 mark. More than 100 people also lost battle with the deadly virus as the death toll increased from 379 by the end of the last month to around 490 in 11 days since. The increase in number is disturbing for the fact that there has been extended lockdown after Eid-ul-Adha in most parts of the Valley and one district of Jammu division. The lockdown in ordinary sense should have helped contain the virus spread but unfortunately the numbers are growing and lack of large-scale testing, tracing and isolation of the infected and their contacts seems to be the reason for it.

The low daily testing numbers are also reflected in low tests per million population. With J&K having around 1.2 crore population, the number of tests conducted so far is 740000. The Jammu and Kashmir have already started rapid antigen tests and there is reliance on it over more accurate RT-PCR as results come out within half an hour using this method. Technically, there could be more positive patients given the less accuracy of the test but it is still useful for the reason it provides confirmation which should be used to isolate the patients within a reasonable dispatch. Time and again the compulsion to ramp up testing has been emphasised, particularly when community transmission cannot be ruled out utterly. Countries like Italy which have succeeded in bending the graph went for aggressive testing. In the beginning, the numbers seemed to be frightening but the country like Italy used it skillfully to isolate the people and in the process contained the spread of the pestilence to a greater extend when compared to several other countries. Chennai’s case can be emulated as aggressive testing through fever clinics helped it halve the number of daily fresh cases and further reduction became possible in the last few days. There has been renewed commitment to trace contacts, including non-family members, since last month and it has helped in bringing down the numbers to far below that it used to be. The administration must ensure aggressive testing as well as forceful contact tracing. Of late the latter seems to be less on the agenda of the administration and this situation does not augur well for Jammu and Kashmir.

Only time will tell whether COVID-19 vaccine will work or not, say experts  


Afaq Bhat

Srinagar, Aug 11: Russia registering the first COVID-19 vaccine has made people hopeful about world becoming virus free soon, but the health organizations and experts don’t seem that convinced.
The WHO had last  week urged Russia to follow established guidelines and go “through all the stages” necessary to develop a safe vaccine.

Experts said they were concerned that not enough was known about Russia’s research.
“There seems to be rather little detail thus far on Russian (vaccine) candidates. The collateral damage from release of any vaccine that was less than safe and effective could exacerbate our current problems insurmountably,” the NDTV quoted Danny Altmann, a professor of Immunology at Imperial College London, as having said.
President of Doctors Association of Kashmir and flu expert Dr Nisar-ul-Hassan while talking to Precious Kashmir said, “No vaccine can be 100% effective and we don’t know how long would its immunity last?”
Dr Hassan said, “Since the day pandemic has broken out the virus has behaved erratically. No one can predict whether the vaccine will give protection or not. It’s too early to comment. But people need to bear one thing in mind that even if vaccine starts showing results they will have to maintain social distance, wear masks and take care of their hand hygiene. Only time will tell us whether vaccine will work or not.”
Another medico said, “Concerns which have been raised by the experts are genuine and cannot be ignored. But the vaccine which has been manufactured could be a glimmer of hope. If it works it will act as an anti-dode for COVID-19 and will provide much needed respite. But the prerequisite for the vaccine to be successful is that it should provide immunity. If it provides false security it can create havoc across the world.”
He said, “At present members of the medical fraternity are fighting the COVID-19 with bare hands. They don’t have any specific medicine or any guaranteed treatment to cure the COVID patients. The anti viral drugs and the plasma therapy are working on hit and trail basis. If the vaccine works it will be a big breakthrough and it will allow life to return to its normal. For a country like India, which has got huge population, the vaccine is the only solution and for things to come back on track sense of security has to prevail. The COVID-19 has made all of us insecure and we are living under fear. Everyone is hoping that the vaccine manufactured by Russia will work and our miseries will end.”

 

Russia claims 1st COVID-19 vaccine


Putin’s daughter inoculated

Moscow, Aug 11: Russia on Tuesday declared itself the first country to approve a coronavirus vaccine with President Vladimir Putin saying one of his daughters had been inoculated.

Dubbing the vaccine “Sputnik V” after the Soviet-era satellite that was the first launched into space, Russian officials said it provided safe, stable immunity and denounced Western attempts to undermine Moscow’s research.

Scientists in the West have raised concerns about the speed of development of Russian vaccines, suggesting that researchers might be cutting corners and coming under pressure from authorities to deliver.

The World Health Organization said any WHO stamp of approval on a COVID-19 vaccine candidate would require a rigorous safety data review.

“We are in close contact with the Russian health authorities and discussions are ongoing with respect to possible WHO pre-qualification of the vaccine,” said the UN agency’s spokesman Tarik Jasarevic in Geneva.

Putin had told a televised video conference call with government ministers, “This morning, for the first time in the world, a vaccine against the new coronavirus was registered.

“I know that it is quite effective, that it gives sustainable immunity,” he said.

The president said one of his daughters had been inoculated with the vaccine, developed by the Gamaleya research institute in coordination with the Russian defence ministry and other government bodies.

“In this sense she took part in the experiment,” Putin said, adding that she had a slight temperature after a second injection and “that’s all”.

The chief of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, which is financing and helping to coordinate the vaccine efforts, told reporters that Phase 3 trials on a large group of people would start on Wednesday.

 

Kirill Dmitriyev, who heads the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), said industrial production was expected from September and that 20 countries had made “preliminary applications for over one billion doses” of the vaccine.

He said that along with foreign partners Russia was ready to manufacture 500 million doses of vaccine per year in five countries.

Dmitriyev denounced “coordinated and carefully orchestrated media attacks” designed to “discredit” Russia’s vaccine.

“We should leave politics behind and enjoy this moment,” he said. “We are not forcing this vaccine on anyone.”

The pandemic has seen an unprecedented mobilisation of funding and research to rush through a vaccine that can protect billions of people worldwide.

Russia has been pushing hard to quickly develop a coronavirus vaccine and said earlier this month it hoped to launch mass production within weeks and turn out “several million” doses per month by next year.

 

The WHO had last week urged Russia to follow established guidelines and go “through all the stages” necessary to develop a safe vaccine.

Spokesman Christian Lindmeier told reporters at the time that the WHO had not been officially notified of any Russian vaccine on the verge of being deployed.

Experts said they were concerned that not enough was known about Russia’s research.

“There seems to be rather little detail thus far on Russian (vaccine) candidates,” said Danny Altmann, a professor of Immunology at Imperial College London.

“The collateral damage from release of any vaccine that was less than safe and effective could exacerbate our current problems insurmountably.”

The vaccine developed by Russia is a so-called viral vector vaccine, meaning it employs another virus to carry the DNA encoding of the needed immune response into cells.

 

Gamaleya’s vaccine is based on the adenovirus, a similar technology to the coronavirus vaccine prototype developed by China’s CanSino.

The state-run Gamaleya institute came under fire after researchers and its director injected themselves with the prototype several months ago, with specialists criticising the move as an unorthodox and rushed way of starting human trials.

Moscow has dismissed allegations from Britain, the United States and Canada that a hacking group linked to Russian intelligence services tried to steal information about a coronavirus vaccine from labs in the West.

With more than 897,000 confirmed infections, Russia’s coronavirus caseload is currently fourth in the world after the United States, Brazil and India.

 

61 Srinagar schools have single teacher or no teacher, reveals UDISE report

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Gul Owais
Srinagar, Aug 12: The report by the UDISE has painted a grim picture of the education sector in Srinagar, the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir as 61 primary and upper primary schools in the district are either having a single teacher or no teacher at all.

According to the details available with ‘The Precious Kashmir’, the Unified District Information System for Education (UDISE Plus) report furnished on 31st January this year reads that 29 primary schools in the district are having only teachers while 27 such schools are functioning without any teacher.
The data further reveals that one primary with upper primary school in Srinagar is functional with having a single teacher only while four such schools in the district have no teachers.
The department as per the figures available has clearly thrown the guidelines to winds, which state that a minimum of two teachers should be posted at primary schools and the number of teachers be increased in case the enrolment is high in the school.

According to the data, the figure mentioned in the document contains the data of certified schools only.
As per the data, there are 1000 certified schools upto higher secondary levels in Srinagar district and are having the total strength of 12, 755 teachers.
Meanwhile, a prominent educationist of J&K Prof Bashir Ahmad Dar said this is the very frustrating situation. “When there is no teacher in the school then it means the educational institute doesn’t exist anymore,” he said, adding that the institute can’t be called school when there is no teacher.
However, he said the figure regarding the number of students in the schools needs to be checked also, adding that under Sarwa Shikhsha Abhiyaan, it was decided to ensure minimum two teachers in primary schools and also the teachers will be posted accordingly if the number of students enrolled will be high.
Meanwhile, Director Education Kashmir, Muhammad Younis Malik couldn’t be contacted for the comments as he didn’t receive the repeated phone calls from this reporter.

COVID-19 kills 9 more, J&K Toll 492

Precious Kashmir News
Srinagar, Aug 11: Jammu and Kashmir on Tuesday reported nine more COVID-19 deaths since overnight, taking the fatality count due to the virus to 492.
Official sources told GNS that among them two casualties were reported from Jammu and seven from Kashmir.
The victims from Jammu, they said, include a 57-year-old man from Patel Bazar Pacca Danga and a 62-year-old man from Resham Ghar Jammu.
Regarding the septuagenarian, they said, he was brought dead to the casualty section of GMC Jammu at 9 p.m. on Monday night.
As regards the 62-year-old, they said, he was admitted to GMC on August 9 and was diagnosed as a case of “hypertension, type2diabetes mellitus, severe anaemia, ureamic, encephalopathy and respiratory distress,” a doctor a GMC told GNS. he said that the sexagenarian reported covid-19 positive on August 10 and was shifted to isolation ward in the evening and remaineded on oxygen throughout.
“He died at 7 a.m. today,” the doctor added.
In Kashmir, among the deaths, two each were reported from Baramulla and Anantnag districts besides one each from Kupwara, Srinagar and Ganderbal.
One of the Baramulla victims, they said, was a 65-year-old from Mirgund Pattan and died at SMHS hospital. Admitted on August 5, sources said, “She was suffering from T2DM and bilateral pneumonia.”
The other death includes that of a 25-year-old man from SKIMS Soura.
Regarding victim from Srinagar, they said a 60-year-old man from Alistag Srinagar died at SMHS Hospital. He was admitted with pneumonia and had tested positive for Covid-19 subsequently, they said.
Regarding Kupwara casualty, they said, the victim was a 46-year-old man from Kral Gund Kupwara and was suffering from diabetes, community acquired pneumonia. “He was admitted today and died later,” they added.

With these deaths, officials said, 492 people have died due to the virus in Jammu and Kashmir so far. Among them, they said, 455 were from the Valley while 37 others from Jammu division.
Srinagar district with 157 deaths tops the list followed by Baramulla (84), Budgam (36), Anantnag (35), Kulgam (32), Pulwama (32), Kupwara (28), Shopian (24), Jammu (26), Bandipora (18), Ganderbal (8), two each in Rajouri, Doda and Udhampur besides one each in Ramban, Samba, Poonch, and Kathua.

J&K records 564 fresh cases, tally at 25931

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Nadeem Nadu

Srinagar, Aug 11: Jammu and Kashmir reported 564 new COVID-19 cases including 46 armed forces personnel, taking the overall tally to 25931, officials said on Tuesday.

With 88 travelers among them, 133 cases were reported from Jammu division and 431 from Kashmir division, the official sources added.

Giving district-wise break-up, officials sources told GNS that Srinagar reported 90 cases, Baramulla 53, Pulwama 37, Kulgam 23, Shopian 2, Anantnag 42, Budgam 39, Kupwara 33, Bandipora 67, Ganderbal 45, Jammu 72, Rajouri 4, Ramban 6, Kathua    10, Udhampur 6, Samba 7, Doda 2, Poonch 14, Reasi 7 and Kishtwar 5.

In Kashmir, Srinagar tops the list with 6350 cases followed by Baramulla with 2231, Pulwama 1897, Kulgam 1642, Budgam 1609, Shopian 1536, Anantnag 1612, Kupwara 1306, Bandipora 1168 and Ganderbal 734.

 

In Jammu division, Jammu district has 1685 cases, Rajouri 767, Ramban 611, Kathua 612, Udhampur 631, Samba 529, Doda 317, Poonch 289, Reasi 235 and Kishtwar 170.

According to the bulletin, of the total 25931 positive cases in J&K 5135 have been reported as travelers while 20796 as others.

The Bulletin said that the breakup represents districts from which the patients have been traced or are ordinarily residing.

The bulletin has informed the people that, the best way to protect themselves from COVID-19 is by maintaining physical distance of at least 2 meter from others, frequently cleaning hands with an alcohol based hand sanitizer or washing them with soap and water and following good respiratory etiquette and hygiene.

As a measure for social distancing in public places and workplaces wearing a face cover is compulsory.

The bulletin again explained that early detection of COVID-19 can prevent the spread of disease so we need to be responsible for the well-being of ourselves and everyone around us. “Not disclosing symptoms could put life of individuals and their families at risk. In case of symptoms like fever, cough and difficulty in breathing report early. Do not fear, call COVID-19 helpline numbers and seek medical advice”.

Meanwhile, 604 more COVID-19 patients have recovered and were discharged from various hospitals—149 from Jammu Division and 455 from Kashmir Valley, they added. (GNS)

COVID -19: PM takes stock of 10 states

 

New Delhi, Aug 11: The country on Tuesday saw a drastic drop of 8463 cases, recording 53,601 cases of COVID-19 during the past 24 hours, while Prime Minister Narendra Modi took the stock of 10 most-affected states of the country.

On Monday, the country had reported 62,064 cases. Health experts, across the nation, termed this drop as a ‘hope amidst despair,’ after the peninsular nation witnessed a long spell of massive single-day spikes.

 

The Prime Minister spoke to the Chief Ministers and representatives of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Punjab, Bihar, Gujarat, Telangana and Uttar Pradesh via video-conferencing, to discuss the current situation and plan the strategy for tackling the global pandemic.

 

He said that if the virus was defeated in these states, the entire country would emerge victorious in this battle.

 

Containment, contact tracing and surveillance are the most effective weapons in this fight, Mr Modi added.

 

‘People have become aware and are ably assisting these efforts, as a result of which, we have been successful in using home quarantine so effectively,’ said the Prime Minister.

 

The fresh cases include BJD Khandapada MLA and Editor of Odia daily Sambad Soumya Ranjan Patnaik, as well as famous Urdu poet Rahat Indori.

 

However, the country’s COVID recovery rate improved to 69.80 per cent, after 47,746 patients were cured or discharged in the past 24 hours, according to the Health ministry data.

 

So far, the total number of patients, who have defeated the disease, stand at 15,83,490.

 

The active case load on the country at present was 6,39,929, while 45,257 people have succumbed to the virus with 871 fatalities being reported in a span of 24 hours.

 

Chief Secy asks officials to workout Red Zone testing strategy

 

Precious Kashmir News
Srinagar, Aug 11: The Chief Secretary, B V R Subrahmanyam today chaired a meeting to take stock of the efforts toward mitigating COVID-19 pandemic and review the related Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and policies.

 

Administrative Secretaries of departments of Health & Medical Education, Disaster Management, Relief, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction and Mission Director, National Health Mission (NHM) participated in the meeting.

Divisional Commissioners of Jammu, Kashmir and Director, SKIMS, Directors of Health Services, Jammu/Kashmir, Principal, GMC, Srinagar along with other HoDs attended the meeting through video conference.

Chief Secretary complimented the divisional administration of Jammu province for effectively implementing hospital referral policy to ensure optimal utilization of resources, wherein the tertiary hospitals would only admit critical COVID patients being referred from district hospitals. Directions were issued for daily monitoring of COVID admissions, testing, discharges and bed occupancy across the COVID care institutions.

While reviewing the discharge policy, Chief Secretary informed that the policy has been successful in lessening the burden on the tertiary health care system in Kashmir province- which has seen a recent surge in critically ill COVID patients. Divisional Commissioner, Kashmir was directed to strictly implement home quarantine guidelines for asymptomatic patients and ensure that they are free of co-morbidity and provided with Government sponsored oxymeters, before being sent to home quarantine, besides using Arogya Setu app to monitor their status.

Observing that the patient load in Jammu province has remained stable and in view of the recent spike in cases as a result of contacts with COVID positive patients, Chief Secretary directed Health Department to modify the discharge policy and allow institutionalized quarantine for asymptomatic patients in Jammu province.

Chief Secretary underscored the importance of aggressive testing for early medical intervention and asked the concerned to work out a ‘Red Zone testing strategy’ focusing on vulnerable patients including children, old aged, pregnant ladies, patients with Influenza like Illness (ILI), Severe Acute Respiratory Infections (SARI), co-morbid conditions, service providers, drivers and healthcare professionals. “The Rapid Antigen Test in addition to RTPCR can be used for cleansing and securing a red/containment zone by testing all probable contacts of patients and vulnerable population in the area”, he said.

 

Directions were issued for close monitoring of COVID trajectory with special focus on spread of infection through travelers, primary and secondary contacts. Health department was asked to conduct serological surveys to ascertain spread of infection in both the provinces.

 

Chief Secretary also directed Health department to issue advisory to all private health care institutions to compulsorily test all their symptomatic patients including those with Influenza like Illness (ILI), Severe Acute Respiratory Infections (SARI) and co-morbid conditions.

 

In view of expected resumption of religious pilgrimage, directions were issued to ramp up the testing capacities at all arrival points including airport and railway stations.

In Kashmir, only a dead leader is a good leader: Shah Faesal


Srinagar, Aug 11: Shah Faesal, former IAS officer-turned-politician, who stepped down from the top post of Jammu and Kashmir People’s Movement — says that during his detention for the past one year, he has realised that he should not “sell false dreams” to the people of Kashmir.

Faesal had floated the J&K People’s Movement a year ago after he had quit the civil services. On Monday, however, he stepped from the top post amid speculations that he may rejoin the government services.

Faesal was arrested in August 2019 from Delhi airport and detained till June. He is currently placed under house arrest.

Speaking to Outlook, Faesal says that the period of detention has brought in him a transformation and offered him a “ringside view” of Kashmir politics.

 

“The period of detention transformed me. It was a ringside view of Kashmir politics. As I came to terms with the August 5 decisions, I realised I should not sell false dreams to people and instead stand up and tell the truth to them. There is no shame in accepting the reality and telling people that look I can’t promise you something which I can’t deliver,” Faesal said.

In response to a question about what had changed in Jammu and Kashmir politics since August 5, 2019, Faesal said the decision to abrogate Article 370 eliminated the grey zone. “The 1949 National consensus was that Article 370 should stay. The 2019 National consensus is that it should go. In such an environment you are either with India or against India,” he said.

“Those of us who reject this consensus will find it very difficult to operate in a non-existent space,” he adds.

Amid a strict lockdown, extensive military build up, communication blockade and arrest of many people including three former chief ministers, the Centre on August 5 last year revoked Article 370, nullified Article 35A and bifurcated Jammu and Kashmir into Union Territories. Faesal had expressed his resentment against the move. He was arrested after his interview with the BBC in which he had said , “The abrogation of Article 370 has finished the mainstream. Constitutionalists are gone. So you can either be a stooge or a separatist now. No shades of grey.”

Now, Faesal said, mainstream politics in Kashmir will be about confronting the new political reality and working around the national discourse. “I don’t think there are too many choices now,” he says.

Will he ever return to politics? “I have quit politics because I don’t want to give false hope. Rather than telling people two decades later ‘look, I can’t do it’, I am doing it now. I don’t think I can ever come back to this field,” Faesal said.

Faesal termed the Kashmir politics “complicated”. “People want you to fight for them but they won’t stand behind you. You are alone between the devil and the deep sea.”

He argued that violent conflict has led to a lack of consensus on basic issues in Kashmir. “There are a million visions of the future and each one of them is mutually clashing. In such an environment, you can choose to be a leader at your own peril,” the former IAS topper said.

“In Kashmir, only a dead leader is a good leader. That is not how societies progress.” (Courtesy Outlook)