Month: September 2022

  • World Tourism Day observed in Bangladesh

    World Tourism Day observed in Bangladesh

    On the day, hundreds of hotels and tourist spots in the country offered special discounts…reports Asian Lite News

    Bangladesh marked the World Tourism Day with various events, including a colourful rally in the state capital Dhaka.

    “Rethinking Tourism” is the theme for World Tourism Day 2022 celebrated in Bangladesh on Tuesday, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Bangladeshi President Md. Abdul Hamid and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina issued separate messages on the occasion. World Tourism Day was observed in Dhaka and elsewhere in the country.

    On Tuesday morning, the colourful rally in the capital showcased the rich culture and heritage of Bangladesh. State Minister for Civil Aviation and Tourism Md. Mahbub Ali, among others, joined the rally.

    On the day, hundreds of hotels and tourist spots in the country offered special discounts.

    To mark the day, a week-long beach carnival has been organised to attract more tourists to the world’s longest beach in Cox’ Bazar, nearly 400 km southeast of Dhaka.

    The Cox’s Bazar district administration and the beach management committee also held a tourism fair and a beach carnival on Tuesday morning.

    ALSO READ: Death toll in Bangladesh boat capsize mounts to 51

  • How Team India won the war against Covid-19

    How Team India won the war against Covid-19

    At a time when many developed countries struggled with the anti-vaxxers movement, Indians showed through their overwhelming participation in the vaccination drive that it’s a country where scientific temper trumps hesitancy hands down, writes Adar Poonawalla

    In the far from normal last two-and-a-half years, where humanity came the closest to living in a science fiction, India and Indians under the untiring leadership of PM Narendra Modi can collectively claim that we learnt crucial, once-in-a lifetime lessons during the Covid-19 crisis and we demonstrated resilience, determination and strength that has earned respect of the world.

    Such a claim can be made for the vaccine space, too in India. Be it the vaccine manufacturing prowess of India; be it innovation trials in R&D; be it unleashing the potential of public-private partnerships; be it digitization of vaccination drive; be it how government departments came together on a mission mode; under the leadership of Hon’ble Prime Minister Narendra Modi, efforts taken to communicate and convince a billion people to take life-saving jabs, we can claim to have put together lessons of decades into two years, to succeed on many fronts. That’s no small achievement, particularly amid rapidly shifting realities, and real-time evolving science and given social discord and vaccine hesitancy in so many different countries

    The development of safe, effective vaccines for a novel virus like SarsCoV2 in less than a year, will go down as one of the most impressive feats in the history of modern science. And the role of India’s vaccine ecosystem will get etched in that history. Despite myriad local challenges such as accidents, and global ones such as acute shortage of raw-materials, Serum Institute of India (SII), the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer by doses and other Indian vaccine-makers churned out well over 2 billion doses, sufficient to cover almost a third of humanity on the planet if one dose offered immunity to an individual. That scale of manufacturing is a mere indicator of the potential India has to offer to the world as vaccines grow more high-tech and offer life-course protection against several other diseases across ages.

    The country also excelled in providing health tech solutions best showcased by Co-Win, the digital backbone of the vaccination drive. The speed with which India adopted e-Vin, its smart vaccine supply chain management system used in universal vaccination programme meant for children and expecting women into Co-Win has been exemplary. India had started issuing digital vaccine certificates right from the start, at a time when many developed countries were struggling to digitise vaccine certificates and were issuing it manually. Co-Win remains that valuable platform that can prove handy if other universal or age-specific vaccines are to be administered, either responding to an emergency or in a well-planned programme. It’s an asset that can also be adapted for other public health programmes in various ways.

    Three areas where the country took a leap in attempting novel experiments and reaped rich learnings are vaccine research and development, the drug regulatory system, and the deep engagement of the government, across departments with private players to shape the Covid-19 response. First, fully aware of how uncertain the path of vaccine discovery could turn out to be particularly during a raging pandemic, the government chalked out a well thought out strategy.

    That made sense, as one didn’t know at the time which one would click, and even if multiple vaccine candidates succeeded, which one would emerge the safest, most efficacious and most convenient to use. In vaccine-making, a science so complex, the first is not necessarily the best. Betting on a pipeline that was numerically rich, and technology-wise diverse, meant that the scientific community and innovation ecosystem packed a decade of learning into a year. It also showed us what was possible in vaccine development if companies, policymakers, and scientists came together.

    Our drug-regulatory system, traditionally badgered as slow-moving, learnt to put in place accelerated pathways to approve vaccines, like many global regulators in mature markets. Keeping patient safety as the top priority, these lessons of agility and efficiency would seep into the workflow of the regulatory system, if the war against other diseases, equally or more dreaded than Covid-19, have to be waged effectively and forcefully.

    What also helped in shaping the pandemic response was the way the government turned into one ‘whole’. Under the guidance of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a number of inter-disciplinarian inter-departmental empowered groups broke the culture of working in specialised silos and practiced what is now hailed as ‘whole of government’ approach taking swift decisions. Industry too was involved as an important stakeholder in many areas. All stakeholders including media, local influencers, civil societies and international as well as national partners played supportive roles. Continuing this approach well into the future has the potential to strengthen our country’s response to other public health challenges.

    Finally, one of the most fundamental but valuable lessons we have learnt is to communicate transparently and engage effectively with the community in public health contexts and exhort them to place their faith in science in a language they understand best. From cutting-edge technologies like drones to deeply traditional auspicious symbols such as turmeric, from 24×7 public health and risk communication disseminated across the county, coupled with a range of innovative communication strategies were employed to invite people for vaccination or reach the last mile with vaccines.

    At a time when many developed countries struggled with the anti-vaxxers movement, Indians showed through their overwhelming participation in the vaccination drive that it’s a country where scientific temper trumps hesitancy hands down. Despite being the second most populous country, 96.7% of the eligible population have been vaccinated with the first dose, 89.2% have taken both doses, and over 18.7 crore precaution doses have been administered. It is a clear testament to Covid-19 vaccination’s grand success. Special campaigns are being conducted across the country to encourage eligible beneficiaries to take up their due doses.

    In 2021 alone, Covid-19 vaccination programmes averted nearly 20 million deaths globally, according to an estimate cited in Human Development Report 2022. Despite all the challenges, India, under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has truly turned the response to covid pandemic into a janandolan (people’s movement) through the whole of government approach thorough the participation by all stakeholders.

    (Adar Poonawalla is the chief executive officer (CEO) of Serum Institute of India)

    (The content is being carried under an arrangement with indianarrative.com)

    ALSO READ: Over 200 Indian Sikhs to visit Pakistan for centenary event

  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman named PM

    Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman named PM

    The king meanwhile issued a decree on Tuesday ordering a cabinet reshuffle, appointing Saudi Prince Khalid bin Salman as the Defence Minister…reports Asian Lite News

    Saudi Arabian King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud has appointed Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as the kingdom’s Prime Minister, Saudi Press Agency reported, citing a royal decree.

    The king meanwhile issued a decree on Tuesday ordering a cabinet reshuffle, appointing Saudi Prince Khalid bin Salman as the Defence Minister, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Heads of ministries that were kept unchanged include the Energy Minister, the Foreign Affairs Minister, the Investment Minister, the Interior Minister, and the Finance Minister.

    ALSO READ: Saudi launches new e-platform to facilitate pilgrims

  • Russia claims victory in Ukraine referendums

    Russia claims victory in Ukraine referendums

    Up to four million people were asked to vote in these regions, which make up about 15 per cent of Ukraine’s territory…reports Asian Lite News

    Russia has claimed to win four ‘referendums’ in occupied Ukrainian regions, a victory which Moscow may use as grounds to annex more territory, the media reported on Wednesday.

    Voting had taken place on Tuesday in the separatist eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as in the Russia-occupied parts of the southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, reports the BBC.

    Refugees scattered across Russia were also able to vote at dozens of polling stations, including in Crimea, a southern Ukrainian peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014.

    Up to four million people were asked to vote in these regions, which make up about 15 per cent of Ukraine’s territory.

    The voting was not independently monitored as there was no international recognition to the process, says the BBC report.

    However, Russian officials deployed in these regions have claimed almost total support from the people who took part in the balloting.

    Responding to the referendums, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of “brutally violating the UN statute” by trying to annex territories seized by force.

    In his nightly video address to the nation, the President said on Tuesday: “None of Russia’s criminal actions will change anything for Ukraine. We recognize the UN Charter, we recognize the basic principles of coexistence of peoples. And we will continue to act in order to protect normal life in Ukraine, in Europe, and in the world.

    “We will act to protect our people in the Kherson region, in the Zaporizhzhia region, in Donbas, in the currently occupied areas of the Kharkiv region, and in Crimea.

    “This farce in the occupied territory cannot even be called an imitation of referenda.”

    ALSO READ: Russia backs India for permanent seat on UNSC

  • Audio leaks put Pakistan’s prestige at stake: Shehbaz

    Audio leaks put Pakistan’s prestige at stake: Shehbaz

    Sharif said the ‘audio leaks’ scandal is a critical matter and he is in the process of forming a high-powered committee to probe into it…reports Asian Lite news

    Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday that ‘audio leaks’ have marred the country’s standing in the international community as no one would feel free to speak with the Prime Minister out of privacy fears, media reports said.

    He said this while addressing a press conference at the Prime Minister’s House in Islamabad, Geo News reported.

    Sharif said the ‘audio leaks’ scandal is a critical matter and he is in the process of forming a high-powered committee to probe into it.

    Responding to a question regarding the audio leaks, he said that such security breaches are a “big question mark”, Dawn reported.

    “Who will come to meet the Prime Minister at the PM House now? Be it a sympathiser or a friend, they will think 100 times before talking. This is about the respect of 220 million people of the country,” he said.

    On Saturday, a recording of Sharif surfaced where he was discussing with an unidentified official the possibility of facilitating the import of Indian machinery for a power project that was a concern of Maryam Nawaz Sharif’s son-in-law, Raheel.

    Countering the matter, the Prime Minister said on Tuesday that Maryam never talked to him about any favours or her son-in-law, Dawn reported.

    “Tauqeer spoke to me about it and said half of the machinery was imported during the PTI tenure. I don’t know what amount was spent and how much loss they will have to bear if half the machinery is left. Tauqeer told me that the provision is banned and it will have to be taken to ECC (Economic Coordination Committee).”

    Sharif went on that he didn’t find it appropriate to take the matter to the cabinet.

    “I said I will convey this to my daughter. Now tell me what is wrong with this,” he asked.

    ALSO READ: US to provide $457.5 mn civilian aid for Ukraine

  • US to provide $457.5 mn civilian aid for Ukraine

    US to provide $457.5 mn civilian aid for Ukraine

    In a statement, Blinken said the aid is designed to help Ukrainian law enforcement and criminal justice agencies…reports Asian Lite News

    The US will provide $457.5 million in in civilian security assistance for Ukraine, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Monday. He said that a portion of the aid will be used to support the government’s investigation of atrocities.

    In a statement, Blinken said the aid is designed to help Ukrainian law enforcement and criminal justice agencies.

    “A portion of this new assistance will also continue U.S. support for the Ukrainian government’s efforts to document, investigate, and prosecute atrocities perpetrated by Russia’s forces, drawing on our long-standing relationship with Ukrainian criminal justice agencies including the Ukrainian Office of the Prosecutor General and the NPU’s war crimes unit,” Blinken said.

    “Since mid-December 2021, the US has now committed more than $645 million in assistance that has provided a tangible, positive impact on our Ukrainian law enforcement and criminal justice partners, including the National Police of Ukraine (NPU) and State Border Guard Service,” the state department said in statement.

    ALSO READ: At SCO, Xi and Modi differed over their views on Ukraine

  • Canada to remove Covid-19 border and travel measures

    Canada to remove Covid-19 border and travel measures

    Transport Canada is also removing existing travel requirements. As of October 1, travellers will no longer be required to undergo health checks for travel on air and rail…reports Asian Lite news

    The Canadian federal government has announced the removal of all Covid-19 entry restrictions, as well as testing, quarantine, and isolation requirements for anyone entering Canada, from October 1.

    Public Health Agency of Canada said in a statement on Monday that the removal of border measures has been facilitated by a number of factors, including modelling, that indicates that Canada has largely passed the peak of the Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 fuelled wave, high vaccination rates, lower hospitalisation and death rates, as well as the availability and use of vaccine boosters, rapid tests, and treatments for Covid-19.

    According to the statement, all travellers will no longer have to submit public health information through the ArriveCAN app or website; provide proof of vaccination; undergo pre- or on-arrival testing; carry out Covid-19-related quarantine or isolation; and report if they develop signs or symptoms of Covid-19 upon arriving to Canada.

    Transport Canada is also removing existing travel requirements. As of October 1, travellers will no longer be required to undergo health checks for travel on air and rail; or wear masks on planes and trains. Cruise measures are also being lifted, Xinhua news agency reported.

    “We expect Covid-19 and other respiratory viruses will continue to circulate over the cold months, so I encourage everyone to stay up-to-date with their Covid-19 vaccination, including booster doses and exercise individual public health measures,” said Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos.

    Although the masking requirement is being lifted, all travellers are strongly recommended to wear high quality and well-fitted masks during their journey, the statement added.

    “Canada’s travel measures successfully mitigated the full impact of COVID-19 for travellers and workers in the transportation sector, and helped keep communities safe. Thanks to Canadians who rolled up their sleeves and got vaccinated, we are able to take this great step towards easing measures and returning to normal,” said Transport Minister Omar Alghabra.

    ALSO READ: Canada struggles to restore power after storm

  • US envoy praises Abe’s contribution to Japan-US ties

    US envoy praises Abe’s contribution to Japan-US ties

    Rahm said the attendance of Vice President Kamala Harris at the funeral “demonstrates the respect President Joe Biden has for former Prime Minister Abe Shinzo and his family…reports Asian Lite News

    US Ambassador to Japan on Monday recalled and praised late ex-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s work that brought Japan and the United States together.

     “I am honoured to be part of the Presidential Delegation and to have the opportunity to pay my respects to the former Prime Minister at the state funeral,” Rahm Emanuel said in a statement ahead of Abe’s state funeral.

    The 67-year-old politician was gunned down at an election rally in July.

    “As President Biden said on the day of Abe-san’s death: ‘The United States stands with Japan in this moment of grief’.  It was true then; it remains true today.”

    Rahm said the attendance of Vice President Kamala Harris at the funeral “demonstrates the respect President Joe Biden has for former Prime Minister Abe Shinzo and his family, and sends a strong signal of our deep commitment to the Japanese people. While we are allies by treaty, we are friends in our hearts.”

    On the achievements of Abe in the context of Japan-US relations, Rahm said: “Abe-san lived a life worth living. He was a great statesman with strong connections to America and Americans; he was the first and only Japanese Prime Minister to address a joint session of the US Congress; he accompanied President Obama on the first visit by a sitting US President to Hiroshima; and he was the first Japanese Prime Minister to visit the memorial aboard the USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor.”

    Shinzo Abe addressing the gathering during the event celebrating 30 years of Sasakawa in Africa (Photo Twitter@AfDB_Group)

    “These were historic events that show his unwavering commitment to the US-Japan Alliance and our two countries’ friendship. Abe-san was indispensable for developing the strong relations between us, and his vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific informs strategic architecture across the region.”

    Meanwhile, some 20,000 police officers have been reportedly being deployed for the security at the event being held at the Nippon Budokan arena in central Tokyo which is estimated to cost taxpayers $1.65 billion yen ($11 million).

    Prime Minister Fumio Kishida received the ashes, which appear to be contained in a ceremonial box.

    He then formally handed it to military officers who placed the box in the centre of the altar, set up at the front of the room.

    Up to 1,000 soldiers are set to perform ceremonial duties, with a military honour guard firing 19 blank rounds from a cannon to salute the former Prime Minister.

    This is only the second state funeral held in Japan. The other was for former Prime Minister Yoshida Shigeru 55 years ago.

    Members of the public have been laying flowers outside the venue to pay their respects. Flags at government offices across Japan are also being flown at half-mast, reports public broadcaster NHK.

    ALSO READ: Japan bids farewell to Abe

  • UN Chief calls for elimination of nuclear weapons

    UN Chief calls for elimination of nuclear weapons

    Guterres noted that the elimination of nuclear weapons would be the greatest gift “we could bestow on future generations”…reports Asian Lite News

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for the use of every means to eliminate the nuclear threat.

    Guterres made the appeal at a UN General Assembly high-level meeting to commemorate and promote the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, which falls on September 26.

    “We come together on this international day to speak with one voice. To stand in defence of our world — and our future. And to reject the claim that nuclear disarmament is some impossible utopian dream,” he said on Monday.

    He noted that the elimination of nuclear weapons would be the greatest gift “we could bestow on future generations”.

    In late August, the 10th Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons failed to result in the adoption of an outcome document.

    Expressing disappointment about the conference’s failure to reach a substantive outcome, Guterres vowed that “we will not give up”.

    “I urge all states to use every avenue of dialogue, diplomacy and negotiation to ease tensions, reduce risk and eliminate the nuclear threat,” he said.

    Guterres also called for a new vision for nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation, Xinhua news agency reported.

    He highlighted the need to take into account the evolving nuclear order, including all types of nuclear weapons and their means of delivery, as well as the need to address the blurring lines between strategic and conventional weapons, and the nexus with new domains of cyber and outer space.

    The UN chief urged General Assembly delegates to seize the opportunity and make new commitment to work toward a peaceful future.

    “Without eliminating nuclear weapons, there can be no peace. There can be no trust. And there can be no sustainable future,” he added.

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  • World Bank cuts economic outlook for East Asia & Pacific

    World Bank cuts economic outlook for East Asia & Pacific

    The global economic slowdown is beginning to dampen demand for the region’s exports of commodities and manufactured goods, the report noted…reports Asian Lite News

    The World Bank has downgraded growth for developing East Asia and Pacific to 3.2 per cent in 2022.

    The region’s growth is projected to slow this year from 7.2 per cent in 2021, before accelerating to 4.6 per cent next year, according to the World Bank’s newly released East Asia and Pacific Economic Update.

    In April, the developing East Asia and Pacific countries is projected to grow by 5 per cent in 2022, reports Xinhua news agency.

    The global economic slowdown is beginning to dampen demand for the region’s exports of commodities and manufactured goods, the report noted.

    Rising inflation abroad has provoked interest rate increases, which in turn have caused capital outflows and currency depreciations in some East Asia and Pacific countries, the report noted.

    These developments have increased the burden of servicing debt and shrunk fiscal space, hurting countries that entered the pandemic with a high debt burden, according to the report.

    “The Fed’s response to higher inflation in the US in terms of faster than expected tightening of monetary policy and increases in interest rates, certainly putting pressure on all developing countries, including those in the region,” World Bank East Asia and Pacific Chief Economist Aaditya Mattoo said at a virtual press conference in response to a question from Xinhua.

    “We have seen capital outflows and those have contributed to depreciating exchange rates, and in order to try and support their currencies and also to deal with the slight increase in core inflation in the region, the region has had to tighten its interest rates,” said Mattoo, adding that it has done so “less than most other parts of the world so far.”

    He noted that most of the developing countries in the region have switched their borrowing largely towards their domestic market, with smaller share of debt denominated in foreign currencies, which makes them less vulnerable.

    “But that doesn’t mean that they’re immune to the consequences of higher interest rates, both in terms of the effect that they will have on economic activity, on investment, on consumption, as well as the potential financial strains, given that they’re coming out of the pandemic with relatively high levels of both private and public debt.

    “So I would say strains, yes. Serious instability, not yet,” he said.

    As countries of the region seek to shield households and firms from higher food and energy prices, current policy measures provide much-needed relief, but add to existing policy distortions, the report noted.

    “Policymakers face a tough trade-off between tackling inflation and supporting economic recovery,” said Mattoo.

    “Controls and subsidies muddy price signals and hurt productivity. Better policies for food, fuel, and finance would spur growth and insure against inflation.”

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