Categories
-Top News London News UK News

New email puts Boris under pressure over lockdown parties

PM’s former chief adviser Dominic Cummings claimed last week that a drinks party had been held in the Downing Street garden in May 2020 despite warnings by him that it was against the rules, reports Asian Lite News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s staff were invited to a “bring your own booze” party in the garden of his Downing Street residence during the first nationwide coronavirus lockdown in 2020, according to a leaked email seen by broadcaster ITV.

Johnson, who won a landslide victory in a 2019 election, has faced a barrage of criticism over allegations that there were parties in breach of Covid-19 rules in government offices, including his own.

Around 40 staff gathered in the garden for the drinks party, including Johnson and his wife Carrie, ITV said, even though at the time social mixing between households was limited to two people outdoors.

An email was sent by the Prime Minister’s Principal Private Secretary Martin Reynolds to over 100 employees in Downing Street on May 20, 2020, ITV said. The leaked email asked them to bring alcohol to the party and to “make the most of the lovely weather.”

“After what has been an incredibly busy period it would be nice to make the most of the lovely weather and have some socially distanced drinks in the No10 garden this evening,” Reynolds said in the email. “Please join us from 6pm and bring your own booze!“

Johnson’ office declined to comment.

At the time, schools were shut to most pupils, and pubs and restaurants were closed, with strict controls on social mixing. Two people from different households were allowed to meet outdoors but only if they maintained a distance of 2 meters.

Johnson will be under pressure to explain his own role in the gathering. His premiership has been badly tarnished by controversies in recent months, leading to warnings from some of his lawmakers that he could face a leadership challenge.

The opposition Labour Party accused Johnson of having “no regard for the rules he puts in place for the rest of us.” The Scottish National Party called the email “utterly outrageous.”

London’s police, which previously declined to investigate claims of government officials gathering during the national lockdowns, said on Monday it was in contact with the Cabinet Office after “widespread reporting” of breaches of health protection laws in Downing Street.

A senior government official, Sue Gray, is investigating allegations that at least five parties were held in government departments last year during COVID-19 lockdowns.

Johnson’s former chief adviser Dominic Cummings claimed last week that a drinks party had been held in the Downing Street garden in May 2020 despite warnings by him that it was against the rules.

When the prime minister was asked earlier on Monday if he and Carrie Johnson had attended the event, he declined to answer, saying: “All that, as you know, is the subject of a proper investigation by Sue Gray.”

The allegations of officials holding events in breach of the government’s own lockdown rules, including a Christmas party, have dismayed voters who were told by the government to carefully stick to social distancing rules.

Johnson, 57, has faced criticism in recent months over his handling of a sleaze scandal, the awarding of lucrative COVID contracts, the refurbishment of his Downing Street flat and a claim he intervened to ensure pets were evacuated from Kabul during the chaotic Western withdrawal in August.

Johnson’s Conservatives have lost their lead in opinion polls over the Labour Party and last month suffered an election defeat in a historic stronghold, stepping up pressure from his own lawmakers to reform his team of advisers.

Britain’s official death toll from the pandemic rose above 150,000 on Saturday, the second highest in absolute terms in Europe, behind only Russia’s.

ALSO READ-Boris quashes rumours on easing of immigration rules for Indians

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

Puddings, pageantry for Queen Elizabeth’s platinum jubilee

In her Christmas Day message, the Queen said she hoped her Jubilee “will be an opportunity for people everywhere to enjoy a sense of togetherness”…reports Asian Lite News

The UK will celebrate Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee this year with a pudding contest, pageantry and public holidays, Buckingham Palace said Monday.

Elizabeth was proclaimed Queen on February 6, 1952, after the death of her father, George VI, although her coronation was in 1953. At 95, she will become the only UK monarch to have ruled for 70 years and she has called for Jubilee celebrations to promote a mood of unity.

In her Christmas Day message, the Queen said she hoped her Jubilee “will be an opportunity for people everywhere to enjoy a sense of togetherness”.

Events reflecting Britain’s national passions include a nationwide competition to create a new pudding for the Jubilee, with a panel of judges picking the winner, among them the head chef at Buckingham Palace and veteran television presenter Mary Berry.

There is also an ongoing drive to “plant a tree for the Jubilee”, with the Queen to receive a digital map showing them all.

The main celebrations will be held over a four-day long weekend, kicking off with public holidays on Thursday June 2 and Friday, June 3.

On Thursday, June 2, the Queen’s Birthday Parade will see more than a thousand soldiers, horses and Army musicians perform a Trooping of the Colour ceremony in central London, marking the Queen’s official birthday (her actual birthday is in April) with “military pageantry”.

Continuing a tradition dating back hundreds of years, people will light beacons in over 1,500 towns, cities and villages, across the country that evening.

On Friday, June 3, there will be a service of thanksgiving for the Queen’s reign at St Paul’s Cathedral in London.

On Saturday, June 4, the BBC is to host a live concert called Platinum at the Palace, promising “some of the world’s biggest entertainment stars”.

On Sunday, June 5, people can apply to hold neighbourhood parties as part of a nationwide “Big Jubilee Lunch”. Over 200,000 such events are expected.

There will also be a street pageant in London billed as an “awe-inspiring festival of creativity”, including performers from the Commonwealth countries.

After these main events, the Queen’s Coronation dress and robe will be on display at Windsor Castle.

The programme of mass events makes no mention of Covid restrictions.

Previously the 1977 Silver Jubilee saw nationwide street parties and the Queen processing through London in her carriage, as well as the release of the Sex Pistols’ punk anthem “God Save The Queen”.

The Golden Jubilee in 2002 saw the public revive the tradition of street parties, while the 2012 Diamond Jubilee, ahead of the London Olympics, featured a flotilla of 1,000 boats on the River Thames.

The royal family has faced unwelcome publicity recently, with US legal action targeting Prince Andrew, the Queen’s second son, over alleged sex with a minor, as well as the Queen’s grandson Harry and his wife Meghan airing racism claims.

ALSO READ-Man arrested in Windsor was planning to kill the Queen

Categories
London News UK News

Spy chief thanks China on James Bond spoof

The attached clip — titled “No Time to Die Laughing” — featured a pair of Chinese actors playing fictional British spies called “James Pond” and “Black Window”…reports Asian Lite News

Britain’s spy chief on Thursday thanked China’s state news agency for “free publicity” after it posted a spoof of James Bond that mocked the Western intelligence community’s growing focus on threats posed by Beijing.

The rare response by MI6 head Richard Moore comes as China and Britain clash over Beijing’s treatment of its Uyghur minority and creeping authoritarianism in the former British colony of Hong Kong.

Moore — codenamed “C” within the agency — previously said adapting to China’s rise was the spy service’s “single greatest priority” and warned of Chinese “debt traps, data exposure and vulnerability to political coercion”.

Debt traps refer to China extracting concessions such as the use of ports from countries that sign up to its soft-power infrastructure initiative when they default on loan repayments.

In a tongue-in-cheek Twitter post on Tuesday, state news agency Xinhua said it had uncovered “leaked video” of a “secret meeting” between British and American spies after Moore bumped Beijing higher on MI6’s agenda.

The attached clip — titled “No Time to Die Laughing” — featured a pair of Chinese actors playing fictional British spies called “James Pond” and “Black Window”.

In his Thursday response, Moore tweeted: “Thank you for your interest (and the unexpected free publicity!)”

He posted a link to a speech he gave in November in which he said China sought to “exploit the open nature” of British society and “distort public discourse and political decision making across the globe”.

In four and a half minutes of what Xinhua called “rib-tickling moments” filled with canned laughter, the elegantly dressed duo enter a castle and start discussing a dossier on Chinese espionage tactics, only to realise the papers actually refer to the United States.

Pond — codenamed “Agent 0.07” — then blasts the “fictional Chinese debt trap and data trap” as a “pathetic” excuse to get more funding for British intelligence.In a call with an apparent CIA operative, Pond learns the US has tapped his mobile phone.

He is warned not to buy a model made by sanctioned Chinese company Huawei due to a supposed “backdoor”, before being gifted a new phone by the CIA.

“To be America’s enemy is dangerous,” says the champagne-swilling Pond. “But to be America’s friend is fatal.”

Britain caused outrage in China last year after blocking the involvement of telecoms giant Huawei from involvement in its 5G broadband roll-out, after the US raised spying concerns.

ALSO READ-Pak spy chief wants no coverage in media

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

Markle wins £1 in token damages in privacy case

A spokesperson for the Duchess of Sussex said the sum for copyright infringement was “substantial” and would be donated to charity…reports Asian Lite News

Meghan Markle, wife to Prince Harry, has won nominal damages of 1 pound from one of Britain’s biggest newspaper groups after an appeals court ruled in her favour over a privacy case.

The sum, equating to $1.40 or 1.20 euros, is payable by Associated Newspapers for misuse of private information, and it will also have to pay a “confidential sum” for infringing her copyright.

A spokesperson for the Duchess of Sussex said the sum for copyright infringement was “substantial” and would be donated to charity.

Details of last month’s finding by the Court of Appeal in London emerged in a written case order divulged Wednesday by lawyers for Associated, which publishes the Mail on Sunday newspaper and MailOnline.

The order said Associated should also pay 300,000 pouds to Markle for legal costs.

Associated had said it was mulling a further appeal to the UK’s Supreme Court, after a High Court judge initially ruled in the former TV actress’s favour last year without a full trial.

But according to the BBC, “the company has now accepted defeat in the long-running case”.

The duchess had sued Associated over the publication in 2019 by the Mail on Sunday of a letter she had written to her estranged father.

Lawyers for Associated had argued that Markle wrote the correspondence knowing it was likely to be leaked, despite claiming the opposite.

Last month, Markle apologised to the appeals court after admitting she had allowed a former aide to brief the authors of a favourable biography of her short tenure as a frontline royal in Britain, despite previous denials on the matter.

Markle, 40, and Harry, 37, now live in California after stepping down from royal duties in 2019. They have taken legal action against a number of publications, alleging invasion of privacy.

ALSO READ-Tony Blair Seeks Second referendum

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

Calls grow to revoke Tony Blair’s knighthood

The MailOnline’s report came as an opinion poll published by UK polling company YouGov revealed 63 percent of Britons are opposed to Blair being knighted…reports Asian Lite News.

Hundreds of thousands of people in the United Kingdom have joined a call for former British Prime Minister Tony Blair to be stripped of his knighthood, citing his role in the Iraq War.

An online petition had attracted more than 700,000 signatures as of Wednesday morning, just four days after it was set up in response to Blair being made a Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter in Queen Elizabeth II’s New Year’s honours list.

The petition says Blair is “the least deserving person of any public honour” and calls for him to be held accountable for “war crimes”.

“Tony Blair caused irreparable damage to both the constitution of the United Kingdom and to the very fabric of the nation’s society. He was personally responsible for causing the death of countless innocent, civilian lives and servicemen in various conflicts,” it adds.

The ex-Labour Party leader, who served as prime minister from 1997 to 2007, has faced constant criticism in recent decades over his involvement in the United States-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

The invasion, which resulted in former President Saddam Hussein’s removal from power and subsequent execution, ushered in years of conflict that saw hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed as the country descended into chaos.

To justify the invasion, Blair and then-US President George Bush had cast Hussein as a global threat who possessed weapons of mass destruction as Washington, in particular, focused on neutralising supposed threats in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

But no such weapons were ever found.

Late on Tuesday, as the campaign to remove Blair’s knighthood was gathering pace, the UK’s MailOnline news website published resurfaced allegations against Blair.

The site said a former aide of his had in 2003 ordered then-Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon to “burn” a memo written by then-Attorney General Peter Goldsmith that said the invasion of Iraq could be illegal.

At the time, the US and UK had failed to secure a specific UN resolution giving them international backing for the incursion.

Hoon said his secretary was told “in no uncertain terms” by Jonathan Powell, Blair’s then-chief of staff, that the note was to be destroyed after it had been read, the Daily Mail reported, citing passages from Hoon’s recently published memoir, See How They Run.

However, this order was defied and the memo was locked in a safe at the UK’s Ministry of Defence instead.

Blair and Powell have previously dismissed these allegations – which first emerged in 2015 – as false.

The MailOnline’s report came as an opinion poll published by UK polling company YouGov revealed 63 percent of Britons are opposed to Blair being knighted.

The survey was based on responses from 2,441 Britons and suggested that most Labour voters were also against the move.

Despite the mounting public pressure for Blair’s knighthood to be revoked, several leading politicians have spoken out in favour of him being honoured by Queen Elizabeth II.

Current Labour leader Keir Starmer and Speaker of the House of Commons Lindsay Hoyle, both of whom have already been knighted by the monarch, made separate remarks on Tuesday defending the former prime minister as a worthy recipient of the decoration.

ALSO READ-Tony Blair, King of Jordan, Czech PM figure in Pandora Papers

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

Boris resists another lockdown

The 24-hour tally, after chalking up multiple records in the run-up to New Year, hit 218,724 and another 48 deaths were reported in the latest government data, reports Asian Lite News

British hospitals have switched to a “war footing” due to staff shortages caused by a wave of Omicron infections, the government said Tuesday, as the country’s daily Covid caseload breached 200,000 for the first time.

The 24-hour tally, after chalking up multiple records in the run-up to New Year, hit 218,724 and another 48 deaths were reported in the latest government data.

Hospital admissions have not hit anything like the peaks of previous waves of the pandemic, and the number of people requiring ventilation has remained flat so far.

But the state-run National Health Service (NHS) is struggling with staff forced to stay at home after testing positive, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised action to plug staffing gaps in the worst-hit areas.

The reactivation of emergency “Nightingale” clinics, along with the drafting of medical volunteers backed by army support, meant the NHS was back on a “war footing”, he told a news conference.

“So anyone who thinks our battle with Covid is over, I’m afraid, is profoundly wrong. This is a moment for the utmost caution,” Johnson said.

However, he ruled out another nationwide lockdown, crediting mass vaccinations including a recent programme of booster shots, as the NHS marked a year since administering the first Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

Transport networks also battled absences, leaving commuters facing long waits on their return to work after a public holiday on Monday, while municipal services such as household bin collections were hampered.

But Johnson said a new programme of daily testing for 100,000 “critical workers”, including in transport and food processing, would help Britain “ride out this Omicron wave”.

Vaccines minister Maggie Throup said it was unclear how many Britons were currently in self-isolation after a Christmas surge in the highly transmissible virus mutation.

“But what is good news, it doesn’t seem to be resulting in severe diseases as some of the other variants did,” she told Sky News.

Around 50,000 NHS staff were reportedly absent from work last week because they were ill or self-isolating.

At least six hospital groups have declared “critical incidents”, which mean crucial services may be under threat. One hospital in Plymouth, southwest England, reported that nearly 500 staff were absent.

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation which represents healthcare providers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, said cases appeared to have levelled off in London.

But he told Times Radio that staff shortages and rising cases across the rest of the country were a concern.

“The unpredictability of staff absence means NHS leaders having to work around the clock just thinking about how they can deploy their resources best to deal with the most urgent and pressing needs,” Taylor added.

“Even using all their imagination and creativity, it is becoming almost impossible, which is why we see hospitals declaring critical incidents.”

Anyone testing positive for the virus has to self-isolate for 10 days, or seven days if they produce a negative test.

There have been calls to ease those restrictions for health staff. But Health Secretary Sajid Javid on Tuesday ruled that out.

Pupils returning to school also faced the prospect of mass staff absences and merged classes.

Secondary school pupils have been told to wear face masks in class as a “temporary” measure.

Britain has suffered nearly 149,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic in early 2020. But Johnson defended his decision not to increase restrictions over Christmas in England, unlike in other parts of the UK.

“We clearly can’t rule anything out. But what we’re trying to do is take a balanced approach,” he told Tuesday’s news conference.

ALSO READ-Boris Celebrates Vaccine Success in New Year Message

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

Westminster repairs could last 20 years and cost £14 billion

It has now been nine years since a parliamentary report stated that the Palace of Westminster, which was built to replace a medieval complex that burned down in 1834, was riddled with fire-safety issues, leaking roofs, and asbestos, reports Asian Lite News

MPs and peers would be barred from the Palace of Westminster for a period of 20 years, under shocking new restoration proposals that might cost taxpayers a whopping £14 billion. The plans, which would see legislators ‘decanted’ into temporary quarters for the next 20 years, are based on the most extensive survey work yet on the decaying 19th Century World Heritage Site.

However, the timetable, which is claimed to be given out in preliminary estimates by the official group drawing up the renovation plans, will enrage many MPs, who were originally told the decant would last only six years. There will also be outrage at the projected £14 billion cost of the improvements, which are set to begin in 2027, after initial estimates placed the sum at £4 billion, according to the various media reports.

Riddled with fire-safety issues, leaking roofs

It has now been nine years since a parliamentary report stated that the Palace of Westminster, which was built to replace a medieval complex that burned down in 1834, was riddled with fire-safety issues, leaking roofs, and asbestos that if it ‘were not a listed building of the highest heritage value, its owners would probably be advised to demolish and rebuild.’

https://twitter.com/Andrew_Adonis/status/1475378628267544579

Four years ago that the Victorian palace’s plumbing, which was constructed in 1876, was so inadequate that sewage was flowing into a basement. More extensive examinations have now revealed asbestos in 2,500 sites, which will take around 300 workers at least two and a half years to remove or make safe, according to reports.

Before the vote in 2018, some MPs argued that rebuilding should continue while they were still inside the UNESCO World Heritage site. However, that was ruled out after an assessment of the required building work by the Restoration & Renewal Sponsor Body, which included MPs, peers, historians, and infrastructure specialists, found that it would drag out the process for more than 30 years.

As a result, among the possibilities being considered is one that would require MPs to leave Westminster Palace for 20 years. A more popular proposal would presumably oblige MPs and peers to leave the building for a period of 12 to 15 years.

A shortage of qualified craftspeople, such as stonemasons and plasterers, is another issue that may cause restoration work to be delayed. According to a poll of historic contractors, finding professionals in furniture, textile and painting restoration, stained glass conservation, and clock manufacture in the UK would be difficult. In addition, some of the historic sector trades that would be required for the project have become “extinct” or “critically endangered.”

A total of 2,343 rooms, spaces and conference areas were examined over the summer, with experts recording thousands of issues including cracks in stonework and widespread water damage. The intricate network of outdated electrical and mechanical systems was analysed.

Many of the historic features, including original Victorian stained-glass windows which are warping and sagging due to age, have issues. The specialists also studied the enormous basement and the miles of outdated and interweaving gas, electrics, water, sewage, and heating pipes to get up to date records on the problems that need fixing.

Acoustics experts considered how to improve audibility within the building; walked 240 km, measuring 80 rooms, running 300 individual acoustics tests, taking 2,000 measurements.

Experts in ecology and door specialists from Manchester, window surveyors from Glasgow and architects and engineers from across London, in addition to historic surveyors and specialists from Cambridge, Suffolk and Hampshire, were involved in the meticulous examination.

The Palace of Westminster has survived a bombing threat. Around midnight on November 4, 1605, Guy Fawkes was found in one of its cellars with barrels of gunpowder. The conspiracy by persecuted Catholics against the Protestant dispensation was to blow up the building. Fawkes and his plotters were executed for treason. Thus, every November 5, the Britons mark the day by burning his effigies.

ALSO READ-Dollar crunch: Lanka hints at tough measures

Categories
-Top News London News

Patel condemns anti-semitic attack in North London

The London police have released a CCTV image of a man they said they need to speak with in connection with a hate crime outside an overground train station in Camden on December 2…reports Asian Lite News.

Home Minister Priti Patel on Thursday condemned a “seriously disturbing” anti-Semitic attack in north London, and said she was in close contact with the Metropolitan Police and a charity protecting the Jewish community in the UK.

“Seriously disturbing antisemitic incident in north London. I will remain in close contact with @metpoliceuk and @CST_UK [Community Security Trust] as the investigation progresses and I would urge anyone with info to contact the police immediately,” Patel wrote on her official Twitter account.

The London police have released a CCTV image of a man they said they need to speak with in connection with a hate crime outside an overground train station in Camden on December 2.

The victim – a man in his twenties – was approached by the suspect, who made anti-Semitic comments after damaging a display that had been raised to celebrate Chanukah. The Campaign Against Antisemitism said in a statement that the alleged assailant told the victim that he was “looking for a Jew to kill” before leaving the scene.

The campaign group also claimed that the police faced criticism for their initially slow response to the attack, but that the investigation has been upgraded following intervention by the CST.

ALSO READ-Omicron alarm sounded in London

Categories
-Top News London News UK News

PM’s “wonderful” Christmas gift idea

The prime minister has rejected harsher virus restrictions in England over Christmas despite a record surge in cases driven by the Omicron variant…reports Asian Lite News.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in his Christmas Eve message on Friday exhorted the public to get jabbed as a “wonderful” gift for the nation as cases soar.

Johnson said that while little time remained to buy gifts, “there is still a wonderful thing you can give your family and the whole country… and that is to get that jab, whether it is your first or second, or your booster”.

The prime minister has rejected harsher virus restrictions in England over Christmas despite a record surge in cases driven by the Omicron variant.

He has focused instead on a drive to offer booster jabs to all adults by the end of the year.

He acknowledged that “after two years of this pandemic, I can’t say that we are through it”, as the UK set a new record on Thursday of almost 120,000 cases in 24 hours.

Last year, Johnson imposed a stay at home order on December 19 for London and southeast England that meant millions had to change Christmas plans.

This year he opted not to tighten rules, saying in his message that “for millions of families up and down the country, I hope and believe that this Christmas is, and will be, significantly better than the last”.

People must test themselves before meeting vulnerable relatives, he cautioned, while encouraging them to enjoy a jolly family Christmas.

If the pile of wrapping paper is bigger than last year due to more family members attending, it’s because of the vaccine rollout, he stressed.

He also said that getting a vaccine accorded with the teaching of Jesus Christ that “we should love our neighbours as we love ourselves”.

Johnson’s popularity has been battered by reports of parties held by Downing Street and other government departments during lockdown periods, and his party lost a by-election in a previously safe seat this month.

Some within his own party have also revolted against the most recent Covid measures, particularly on mandatory showing of Covid passes to enter crowded venues such as nightclubs, which they see as violating personal freedoms.

Almost 100 Tory MPs opposed the measure, which was passed by parliament as a whole.

Johnson’s Brexit project is also still mired in wrangles over French fishing rights, a year after the UK reached an agreement with the European Union on a trade deal.

ALSO READ-Global Covid caseload tops 278 mn

Categories
Books Lite Blogs London News

Vikas Dhawan writes what India ‘feels’ like

Vikas Dhawan brings forth memories of childhood, of growing up and of the warmth of family and friendships, sketching a vibrant essence of the country when it had old-fashioned charm, Rahul Laud reports

What does India ‘feel’ like? For that matter, what does any country feel like? To enjoy a witty narration, and experience what India was like back then; to relive your memories, and cherish your own ‘India India’ feeling author Vikas Dhawan’s book India India feeling is launched.

In India India Feeling, a light-hearted exploration of India, Vikas Dhawan brings forth memories of childhood, of growing up and of the warmth of family and friendships, sketching a vibrant essence of the country when it had old-fashioned charm.

The book enables you to take part in entertaining journeys of horse-driven tongas to school, of whole families travelling on a scooter, impromptu street parties during power cuts, neighbourhood cricket matches and of kites that coloured the sky in a festival like no other.

To delve into humorous conversations with the author where the single household in a locality owning a telephone or a TV set received iconic status, where passport-size photos became king of all photographs and to take a nostalgic stroll through the street food, TV programmes and newspapers that defined growing up, Vikas narrates this life in India.

Vikas Dhawan grew up in India and has been living in England for the past two decades. He enjoys writing for leisure as well as in professional capacity, and has experience working in the education sector at the UK Civil Service and the University of Cambridge. He is a leader in the field of data and insights. He maintains his passion for writing since his teenage years and has been writing for leisure and in a professional capacity.

‘’Music and rhythm are an important part of his life, ‘’he says. He enjoys percussion and singing, and admires Sufi and other poetry, folk music and classic Bollywood songs. He has a soft spot for antiques, clocks and steam trains. He can be found indulging in reading, playing tennis, cooking and walking.

The book is available worldwide through Amazon, including:
UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09MYX1JDH
India: https://www.amazon.in/dp/8195543839/
Canada: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B09MYX1JDH
Australia: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B09MYX1JDH
US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09MYX1JDH