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Tsunami again?

The agency has predicted that a 3-metre tsunami may hit some of Japan’s southwestern islands including Amami Island, while other Pacific coastal areas will likely be hit by a tsunami around 1-metre high….reports Asian Lite News

 The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) has issued a tsunami warning following an earlier volcanic eruption in Tonga.

The weather agency on Saturday midnight warned of the tsunami on the country’s Pacific coast and urged residents to evacuate from seaside areas, Xinhua news agency reported.

The tsunami was triggered following the massive underwater volcanic eruption in the South Pacific island country of Tonga on Saturday.

So far, part of the Amami Island saw a tsunami about 1.2-metre high, while many eastern Pacific coastal areas were hit by a tsunami of 0.4 to 0.6 metre high, according to the JMA.

The agency has predicted that a 3-metre tsunami may hit some of Japan’s southwestern islands including Amami Island, while other Pacific coastal areas will likely be hit by a tsunami around 1-metre high.

After the agency issued the tsunami warning and advisories, the government set up a liaison office at the Prime Minister’s Office to gather information.

NZ issues tsunami warning

 New Zealands National Emergency Management Agency on Saturday issued a tsunami warning following a volcanic eruption in Tonga’s Hunga Ha’apai island.

New Zealand’s coastal areas on the north and east coast of the North Island and the Chatham Islands are expected to experience “strong and unusual currents and unpredictable surges at the shore”, it said in a statement.

This is the largest eruption from the Tonga volcano so far, and the eruption is ongoing, Xinhua news agency quoted the statement as saying.

“Strong currents and surges can injure and drown people. There is a danger to swimmers, surfers, people fishing, small boats and anyone in or near the water close to shore,” it added.

People in or near the sea are advised to move out of the water, off beaches and shore areas and away from harbours, rivers and estuaries until at least early Sunday morning.

On Saturday afternoon, Tonga issued another tsunami warning after massive waves have hit the main island of Tongatapu, including capital city Nuku’alofa.

The volcano has erupted continuously since Friday morning, raising the plume to altitude 5-20 km above sea level.

Tonga’s National Tsunami Warning Centre had issued the first tsunami warning earlier on Friday, alerting civilians to stay away from coastal areas, after swirling abnormal tides drew crowds to the Nuku’alofa waterfront.

The tsunami warning was cancelled for Tongatapu, Ha’apai and southern Tonga on Saturday morning because the observation data recorded from the tide gauge at Nuku’alofa indicated that the state of the sea level was back to normal.

All domestic flights in Tonga were cancelled on Saturday due to the active volcano.

Meanwhile, in Fiji, the Mineral Resources Department has advised the public, especially those in low lying coastal areas to stay out of the water and away from the shore due to strong currents and dangerous waves.

The department said tsunami waves from these volcanic eruptions were in effect along the entire Fiji coastline.

The volcano is part of the highly active Tonga-Kermadec Islands volcanic arc, a subduction zone extending from New Zealand north-northeast to Fiji.

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India Struggles To Stem The Covid Tsunami

The pandemic has provided a time to look back, to look forward to a healthy and safe India, let us hope that the government is also working towards the same target …. Writes Ravishankar Sharma

Among all this gloom India has found an ignominious fame of being the third largest defence equipment spender after the US and China. What does India need and where it is heading are both concerning and arguable?

India’s requirement for medical oxygen isn’t new. In 2017, over 60 infants battling paediatric encephalitis died in a hospital in Gorakhpur — the constituency of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath — due to shortage of oxygen. 

The shambles which Indian health system is in today comes in the backdrop of the government’s aim to achieve a $5 trillion economy target by 2024. Prime Minister Narendra Modi exuded confidence in October 2020 that the pandemic would not hamper the country’s “gallop” towards the target. Does India need to fix a target for the economy to grow while its 1.21 billion citizens are told to clang plates for a better future without basic needs?

A view of LNJP Hospital after lockdown in National Capital in the wake of rising Covid-19 cases, in New Delhi On Friday, 23 April, 2021.(Photo:Qamar Sibtain/IANS)

The pandemic has provided a time to look back, to look forward to a healthy and safe India, let us hope that the government is also working towards the same target.

Crisis brings out the good, bad and ugly even among the best of us, but it also provides a window to pause, rethink and recalibrate our response to the issue. India, which had gloated as the pharmacy of the world, is now gasping for breath. Its rickety health infrastructure is in tatters, visuals of people fighting for oxygen, a bed in a hospital, brings back sepia images of people waiting for their death for deliverance during the Bengal Famine of 1943.

Also read:Armed forces recall retired medics to join Covid fight

The ‘Made In India’ vaccines, which the government boasted about and liberally distributed to countries which had its own stockpile now finds the lifesaving drug in short supply for its own citizens. Under its Vaccine Maitri diplomacy, New Delhi gave away 586 lakh dose for free to 71 countries and 339.67 lakh doses as part of commercial deals. Now, if India wants to cover at least 80 percent of its eligible population — 80 percent of the population above 18 years of age by the end of this year — then it must increase its vaccination rate by about 100 million doses/month.

At the current rate of vaccination, which is about 2.2 million doses administered per day, only 30 percent of the eligible population will be vaccinated fully by the end of this year.

Delhi’s skies are darkened by the fumes of those cremated in packed burial grounds, innumerable families have been bereaved. The daily toll India has been witnessing is more than the number who were killed when Osama’s lieutenants crashed two planes into the World Trade Centre in 2001.

Also read:Help pours in as India reports 3.23L Covid cases