Friday 31 July 2020

Panel To Decide Fate of Employees Accused of Anti National Activities, Reports

SRINAGAR: The administration in Jammu and Kashmir is contemplating “stringent action, including dismissal” against employees, found guilty of being involved in “anti-national activities”, Chandigarh based newspaper Tribune reported.

B V R Subrahmanyam Is New Chief Secretary J&K

The action can be initiated under Section 311 of the Constitution of India which is applicable to Jammu and Kashmir, the report said. The action can be initiated on the basis of a police case or on the basis of “collateral evidence”.

The administration, the report said, has set up a panel for this purpose that Chief Secretary BVR Subrahmanyam is heading. It has Jammu and Kashmir’s Home Secretary and Police Chief as its members. “The government can now proceed against such employees on the recommendation of a committee set up for the purpose without any inquiry,” the report by Arun Joshi said. “This will also apply to employees who have served detention.”

The report further said that the cases will be dealt with by the police on the basis of the interrogation reports of the employees as well as collateral evidence. “Once the cases are examined and recommended, the General Administration Department will issue orders for their dismissal/suspension. The provision will apply to pending cases too,” the report said.

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Knots In The Yarn

Dilshada earned livelihood selling her work at exhibitions outside Jammu and Kashmir. But she lost everything to 2014 floods. Before she could pick up the threads, her husband was diagnosed with a brain tumour, reports Samreena Nazir

In trying circumstances, it is her handicraft that helps Dilshada to face the challenges and the hardships in her life. KL Image: Samreena Nazir

In September 2014, when the floods inundated large swathes of Kashmir, forcing people to seek safe shelters, Dilshada, 45, along with her family of seven, made a truck their home for a month.  When she returned home, she could barely trace it as the Jhelum had taken almost everything along. Then, she rushed towards her nearby under-construction house but found a heap of slush there.

“The flood had washed away everything we had,” Dilshada said. “Yet, we were happy that we escaped alive.”

Dilshada’s Aarigatno village in Kulgam was among the most affected villages during the flood. It was many dead ahead of Srinagar getting inundated when the people watched the ferocious Veshaw ripping apart the two hamlets – Aarigatno and Kelam Gund. The local population and the administration had put a heroic joint battle to ensure the people survive. Once the river calmed down, the villages’ were literally decimated. More than 98 per cent of the constructions had washed away. Later, the entire population was dislocated.

Dilshada accepted her suffering and the loss as her fate. The family resumed their life at a government relief tent. Two months later her life turned blank upside down when her husband, Mukhtar Ahmad was diagnosed with a brain tumour.

“The flood took away everything including a small apple orchard and the cattle. We were literally left with nothing but we consoled ourselves somehow and thanked Almighty that we were again under a roof,” said Dilshada as tears welled up her eyes. “But when my husband was diagnosed with tumour it seemed like the end.”

The 2014 floods: In Aarigatnoo village in Kulgam, this is the only thing in a spacious house that could survive. KL Image: Bilal Handoo

It was not the first such adversity for Dilshada who hails from Ramsu, a picturesque belt located on the Jammu Srinagar highway. She says her mother died while giving birth to her and the twin sister. Her father Ghulam Rasool Sohal died, when she was only eight.

Dilshada faced hardships while growing up. Youngest among seven siblings, her family started looking for an eligible match for her when she was just 13. She was married to Mukhtar Ahmad Mir, a labourer of Aadigatno.

Even though Mukhtar earned hand to mouth, the couple lived happily along with three daughters and two sons. After giving birth to five kids, Dilshada joined the local girls at the village’s handicraft centre and learnt crewelwork. She was desperate to reduce the load on her husband and help her kids in not reliving the life she had lived.

“Kashmiri crewelwork would always fascinate me and I was keen to learn it. But when I joined the centre, the village women found it awkward as I was a mother of five,” Dilshada said. “My mother-in-law supported me and would accompany me to the centre.”

After learning the art, Dilshada made a group of ten girls in the village and applied for a loan in the block office. She received Rs five lakh.

= Mow Dilshada the entrepreneur, bought the raw material for the crewelwork with her share of the loan. “I was not dependent on middlemen but would work for months and then participate in the exhibitions outside Jammu and Kashmir. The handicraft department Kulgam provided me a stall to represent Kashmiri crewel in the exhibitions and this is how I started earning,” she said while displaying dozens of participatory cards which she got from exhibitions in Surat, Karnataka, Orissa, Mumbai, Goa, Calcutta and the other states. “Every winter I used to take the embroidered pieces on which I work throughout the year and sell them at the exhibitions outside.”

Her husband, Dilshada said, would accompany her everywhere.

“Being a manual labourer, Mukhtar would be jobless during winters so we both would earn from the crewel pieces made by me. In those years we were able to save some amount for the house.  We also got our elder daughter married.” she said with a smile. Dilshada now lives in a small house which she has managed to build from the flood relief provided by the government. After Mukhtar was diagnosed with a tumour, Dilshada has never left her house. She has neither participated in any exhibition nor visited her parental home at Ramsu. Her elder son Waseem Ahmad, who was a student of ninth class in 2014 quit his studies to provide financial support to the family. Ahmad works as a truck conductor and earns Rs 6000 monthly.  The money is spent on the treatment of his father.

“Earlier it cost more than Rs 10,000 a month but for the last two years, Waseem handle’s the father’s checkups with his earning,” said Dilshada’s daughter, Fatima, who studies in twelfth class.

Wearing a frayed pheran and a ragged stole, Dilshada is chain stitching a piece of dusoot. Unlike earlier, when she used to buy raw material and sell it at different exhibitions outside Jammu and Kashmir she gets the cloth and yarn from the middleman and works on it on lesser wages.“I earn four to five thousands rupees a month, which are not enough to run a family of six,”  she said while looking towards the wall clock.

It was time for medicine for Mukhtar. With every word, she was getting emotional and did not want to talk more. She said she will work with her needles till she breathes her last.

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Army man killed along LoC in Rajouri

Srinagar

An Army man was killed on Friday night in a fresh exchange of fire between the armies of India and Pakistan along the Line of Control (LoC) in Rajouri district.

Officials told the news agency KNO that in the intervening night of Friday and Saturday, Pakistan Army violated ceasefire on Line of Control in Tarkundi, and Balakote areas in Rajouri.

“An army man who was posted on LoC received multiple splinter injuries and was evacuated to a nearby Army medical center where he succumbed to his injuries,” officials said.

They added that the slain Army man is a resident of Punjab.

“The Army has also retaliated effectively to unprovoked fire from Pakistan,” officials said.

 

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18 Days After Covid-19 Infection, Tasaduq Jeelani Lost His Struggle For Life

SRINAGAR: Tasaduq Jeelani, a senior KAS officer, who fought a huge battle against Covid-19, finally died in the hospital. He was Special Secretary of Social Welfare. He was in his mid-fifties.

Tasaduq Jeelani

Tasaduq was infected by Covid-19 and had a serious problem initially. “We gave him three doses of plasma therapy,” one senior doctor who was involved in his treatment said. “There is no medicine that we did not give him. Infact some medicines were flown from Delhi specially to see he revives.”

He was admitted in the JVC Bemina since July 14.

“For almost seven days, he was on non-invasive ventilator and today when his situation was not improving, we put him on an invasive ventilator,” one doctor said. “But he could not manage. He died around 6 pm.”

Doctors said Jeelani had developed a number of complicacies after being infected by the Covid-19. He already had co-morbidity. Already a diabetic patient, he was having Covid-19 triggered bilateral pneumonia. In fact, after plasma therapy, he tested negative once. But that did not help him at all.

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COVID-19: Senior KAS officer, SI Among 10 Die In Kashmir, J&K Now Toll 378

Srinagar

The deadly  COVID-19 on Friday claimed ten more lives including a KAS officer and a police Sub-Inspector in Jammu and Kashmir, taking the toll number of deaths in the Union Territory to 378.

Officials told news agency KNO that ten patients who died include a 70-year-old male from Dragmulla Kupwara, a 54-year-old woman from Pampore Pulwama, a 52-year-old Police Sub-Inspector from Khanda Budgam, a 62-year-old man from Qamarwari Srinagar, a 75-year-old man from Panzinara Srinagar, a 57-year-old woman from Rainawari Srinagar, a 56-year-old man from Shakti Nagar Jammu, a 75-year-old man from Arigam Tral, a 55-year-old woman from Fatah Kadal Srinagar and a senior Kashmir Administrative Service (KAS) officer.

A senior official from JVC Bemina said that the senior KAS officer who was admitted in the hospital few days before also lost battle on Friday.

He said that he was admitted on 14 July and died due to cardiopulmonary arrest. “He was suffering from diabetes and other ailments,” he said.

Tasaduq Jeelani was presently posted as Special Secretary Social Welfare department.

An official from SKIMS Soura said that a 62-year-old man from Qamarwari Srinagar who was admitted on 19 July died on Friday.

He added that a 75-year-old man from Panzinara Srinagar who was admitted on 18 July also died today.

He further added that a 57-year-old man from Rainawari, Srinagar who was admitted on 26 July also died on Friday.

An official from SMHS said that a 70-year-old man from Dragmulla Kupwara who was admitted with bilateral Pneumonia and was tested positive after death.

He said that a 55-year-old woman from Fatah Kadal Srinagar who was admitted few days before with multiple ailments died on Friday.

An official from JVC Bemina said that a 54-year-old woman from Pampore Pulwama who was admitted on 28 July died at mid-night.

He further added that a 75-year-old man from from Arigam Tral who was admitted on 22 July died on Friday.

An official from CD hospital said that a 52-year-old Police Sub-Inspector from Khanda Budgam, posted in Police Station Awantipora who was admitted on 30 July died on Friday at 3:55 am.

“He was having complaints of breathlessness, fever and respiratory distress and was referred from DH Pulwama on Thursday,” he said.

An official from GMC Jammu told KNO that a 56-year-old man from Shakti Nagar Jammu who was admitted with respiratory distress a week ago died on Thursday and was tested positive for COVID-19 after death.

With ten more deaths, the death toll in J&K has reached to 378 including 351 from Kashmir division and 27 from Jammu division.

 

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365 Days of Loss

Watch leaders of diverse economic sub-sectors of Kashmir telling their stories about the losses they suffered in the last one year

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Day 68: Jammu, Srinagar Airports Receive 23 Domestic Flights With 2,081 Passengers

Srinagar

On day 68 of resumption of routine domestic operations in Jammu and Kashmir, 23 domestic flights with 2,081 passengers on board today arrived at Jammu and Srinagar Airports.

A total of 819 passengers aboard 9 regular commercial flights arrived at the Jammu Airport while 14 domestic flights with about 1262 passengers on board landed at Srinagar Airport on Friday.

Pertinently, Jammu Airport Authorities have received a total of 524 domestic flights with 39,268 passengers while Srinagar Airport Authorities have received 845 domestic flights with 1,08,012 passengers since 25th of May till date.

Also, the Jammu and Kashmir government has brought back about 3,676 passengers from various countries to the Union Territory through special evacuation flights in the wake of global pandemic till date.

After arrival, all the passengers were tested for the COVID-19 and transported to their destinations at both the airports amid strict observance of all necessary preventive protocols.

The Government has made elaborate arrangements for the arrival, screening, sampling and proper transportation of the passengers to the quarantine centers taking special care of guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) prescribed by the Union Ministries of Civil Aviation and Health and Family Welfare.

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J&K Reports 490 New COVID-19 Cases, Tally Reaches 20359

SRINAGAR: The Government on Friday informed that 490 new positive cases of novel Coronavirus (COVID-19), 143 from Jammu division and 347 from Kashmir division, have been reported today thus taking the total number of positive cases in Jammu and Kashmir to 20359. Also 12 COVID-19 deaths have been reported; 02 from Jammu division and 10 from Kashmir Division.

Moreover, 375 more COVID-19 patients have recovered and discharged from various hospitals, 78 from Jammu Division and 297 from Kashmir Division.

According to the daily Media Bulletin on novel Coronavirus (Covid-19), out of 20359 positive cases, 7765 are Active Positive, 12217 have recovered and 377 have died; 28 in Jammu division and 349 in Kashmir division.

The Bulletin further said that out of 637515 test results available, 617156 samples have been tested as negative till July 31, 2020.

Additionally, till date 368806 travelers and persons in contact with suspected cases have been enlisted for observation which included 46478 persons in home quarantine including facilities operated by government, 6 in Hospital Quarantine, 7765 in hospital isolation and 40732 under home surveillance. Besides, 273448 persons have completed their surveillance period.

Providing district-wise breakup, the Bulletin said that Bandipora has 733 positive cases (including 22 cases reported today) with 256 Active Positive, 464 recovered (including 12 cases recovered today) and 13 deaths; Srinagar has 4786 positive cases (including 128 cases reported today) with 2711 Active Positive, 1955 recovered (including 68 cases recovered today), 120 deaths; Anantnag district has 1299 positive cases (including 21 cases reported today) with 256 Active Positive, 1019 recovered (including 25 cases recovered today),  24 deaths; Baramulla has 1901 positive cases (including 24 cases reported today) with 514 Active Positive, 1319 recovered (including 10 cases recovered today), 68 deaths; Shopian has 1430 positive cases (including 08 cases reported today) with 209 Active Positive, 1198 recovered (including 67 cases recovered today) and 23 deaths; Kupwara has 1094 positive cases (including 09 cases reported today) with 237 Active Positive, 837 recovered  (including 46 cases recovered today) and 20 deaths; Budgam has 1277 positive cases (including 29 cases reported today) with 533 Active Positive and 717 recovered cases (including 17 cases recovered today) and 27 deaths; Ganderbal has 411 positive cases (including 10 cases reported today) with 134 active positive cases and 271 recoveries (including 11 cases recovered today) and 06 deaths; Kulgam has 1504 positive cases (including 11 cases reported today) with 276 Active Positive and 1200 recoveries (including 32 cases recovered today) and 28 deaths and Pulwama reported 1480 positive cases (including 85 cases reported today) with 726 active positive cases and 734 recovered (including 09 cases recovered today) and 20 deaths.

Similarly, Jammu has 1070 positive cases (including 43 cases reported today) with 477 active positive cases and 574 recoveries (including 29 cases recovered today) and 19 deaths; Udhampur has 460 positive cases (including 24 cases reported today)   with 124 active positive cases, 335 recovered (including 07 cases recovered today) and 01 death; Samba has 425 positive cases (including 18 cases reported today) with 172 Active Positive and 252 recoveries (including 09 cases recovered today) and 01 death; Rajouri has 670 positive cases (including 24 cases reported today) with 418 active positive cases and 250 recovered (including 04 cases recovered today) and 02 deaths; Kathua has 522 positive cases (including 11 cases reported today) with 178 Active positive and 343 recovered (including 13 cases recovered today) and 01 death; Kishtwar has 137 positive cases  (including 01 case reported today) with 82 active positive cases and 55 recovered (including 01 recovery today); Ramban has 535 positive cases (including 01 case reported today) with 179 active positive and  355 recoveries (including 15 cases recovered today) and 01 death; Reasi has 146 positive cases (including 20 case reported today) with 88 active positive and 58 recovered; Poonch has 210 positive cases (including 01 case reported today) with 67 active positive and 142 recoveries and 01 death while Doda has 269 positive cases  with 128 active positive cases and 139 recoveries and 02 deaths.

According to the bulletin, of the total 20359 positive cases in J&K 4337 have been reported as travelers while 16022 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 metre 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”.

Advisory has further exhorted upon the people not to step out of home, unless absolutely necessary. “If you have to move out for unavoidable reasons, ensure that you wear a mask and practice social distancing, personal hygiene and frequent handwashing with soap and water.”

In case of any emergency people can avail free ambulance services 24×7 at their doorsteps by calling on toll-free number 108 while as pregnant women and sick infants can avail free ambulance services by dialling toll-free number 102.

People can also call on toll-free national helpline number 1075; J&K COVID-19 Helpline Numbers 0191- 2549676 (UT level Cell), 0191-2520982, 0191-2674444, 0191-2674115 (For Jammu Division), 0194-2440283 & 0194-2430581 (For Kashmir Division) for support, guidance, and response to health-related queries on Novel Corona virus Disease (COVID-19).

Public is advised to strictly follow the advisories issued by the government from time to time and rely only on the information released by the government through the daily media bulletin to print and electronic media.

People are also advised to refrain from spreading rumours and pay no heed to them at the same time.

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2,74,903 Stranded JK Residents Evacuated: Govt

SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir Government has evacuated about 2,74,903 JK residents, stranded in other parts of the country due to COVID lockdown, via Lakhanpur and through special trains and buses till date amid strict observance of all necessary guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures.

As per the official data received in this regard, the Jammu and Kashmir administration has received 100 special trains at Jammu and Udhampur railway stations from different states and UTs, so far, with about 83,914 passengers while about 1,90,989 persons from other states and UTs including 904 from abroad have been evacuated by the government through Lakhanpur till date.

As per the detailed breakup of the figures, about 1554 stranded passengers have entered through Lakhanpur from July 30 to July 31 mornings while 800 passengers have reached today in the 79th Delhi COVID special train at Jammu. So far, 79 trains have reached Jammu with a total of 68,218 stranded passengers belonging to different districts while 15,696 passengers have reached Udhampur in 21 special trains, so far.

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Power Shutdown On August 4: PDD

SRINAGAR: According to the Power Controller, Kashmir Province, in order to carry out the restoration of street light at Hyderpora flyover and to dismantle the poles at the said site which is in close vicinity of the existing 33 kV line, shut down of areas fed from 33 kV Silk Factory-Rawalpora line shall be observed on August 04 from 7 am to 9 am.

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Govt Extends COVID-19 Lockdown Guidelines In J&K Till August 5

SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir government today extended the COVID-19 lockdown guidelines until August 5.

An order issued here by Department of Disaster Management, Relief, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction in this regard said that in the exercise of powers conferred under Section 24 of the Disaster Management Act, 2005, the State Executive Committee hereby orders that the guidelines/ instructions issued vide Order No.65 and 66—JK-(DMRRR) of 2020 dated 03.07.2020 shall continue to remain valid till 05.08.2020.

“The protocol for returnees/passengers shall, however, be governed by the Government Order No.71-JK(DMRRR) of 2020 dated 30.07.2020,” the SEC order said.

It stated that the Union Home Secretary in his capacity as Chairperson NEC, vide Order No. 40-3/2020-DM-I(A) dated 29.07.2020, has issued fresh guidelines for implementation of the extended lockdown in Containment Zones (Red Zones) till 31.08.2020 and reopening some more activities in areas outside Containment Zones (Red Zones); and “these guidelines require State and UT Governments to assess the current spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and based on this assessment, prohibit certain activities outside the Containment Zones or impose such restrictions as deemed necessary, which will require a detailed assessment and consultations on the spread of COVID-19 in Jammu and Kashmir,” it added.

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Ahfadul Mujtaba Administered Oath As JKPSC Member

SRINAGAR: Chairman, J&K Public Service Commission, B.R. Sharma, administered Oath of Office to the newly appointed Member Syed Ahfadul Mujtaba on Friday at Srinagar.

Syed Ahfadul Mujtaba Administered Oath As JKPSC Member

He was administered Oath of Office at Srinagar through video conferencing.

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How Did Media Comment On Omar Breaking His Year-Long Silence?

SRINAGAR: Former Chief Minister and Vice President of Kashmir’s oldest political party, the National Conference, Omar Abdullah broke his year-long silence by writing an op-ed in The Indian Express. A day later, the same newspaper published his detailed interview.

Omar’s writing or his statements were hugely reacted and responded within and outside his party. So far, three newspapers have reacted to the development editorially. Here are the two editorials:

NC leader and former Chief Minister, Omar Abdullah outside the gate of the Hari Niwas Palace after being set free after eight months.

Omar Abdullah Opens The Door
Restoring statehood can revive the political process in J&K
The Hindustan Times
Delhi
July 28, 2020

For the first time since the momentous constitutional changes in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) on August 5 last year, former chief minister of the erstwhile state, and National Conference (NC) leader, Omar Abdullah, who was detained for eight months, has spoken out. Writing in The Indian Express, he expressed his opposition to the effective nullification of Article 370, and the revocation of J&K’s special status.

But the key takeaway from Mr Abdullah’s piece is not his opposition to the change in the special status of J&K — that is to be expected, and that point of view can be debated. The key takeaway is his more fierce opposition to the decision to convert the state into a Union Territory (UT) and a categorical declaration that “while J&K remains a UT”, he — and by extension, the NC — would not contest assembly elections. While this may sound extreme, Mr Abdullah has actually opened the door for a political understanding which can revive the political process in J&K. It is instructive that Mr Abdullah neither made the restoration of Article 370 or the re-merger of J&K and Ladakh his precondition. Both these would have been far more difficult to achieve. Article 370 is history and no government in New Delhi will bring back the constitutional provision effectively. A separate administrative unit of Ladakh is also, now, firmly etched on the map and the stand-off at the Line of Actual Control with China has only cemented New Delhi’s determination to have direct control over the region.

By asking for the restoration of statehood, while opposing the other changes, Mr Abdullah has effectively given room to Delhi to begin a process of reconciliation. Do remember that both Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his address to the nation, and home minister Amit Shah, on the floor of the House, said that the revocation of statehood is temporary, and when circumstances become conducive, it could be reversed. It is time for Delhi to begin a dialogue with Mr Abdullah, release Mehbooba Mufti and start a conversation with her too, and initiate a time-bound process for the restoration of statehood. Promising a more empowered assembly and chief minister, in line with other states of the Union, can possibly result in popular and legitimate elections, help win over the Kashmiri street, empower pro-India mainstream forces, deepen democracy in J&K, weaken Pakistan’s propaganda, and neutralise international concerns. Mr Abdullah has opened the door; the onus now lies on Delhi.

No, Mr Abdullah, Not All In Opposition Betrayed J&K
Mainstream parties in Kashmir might find the going tough after New Delhi’s failure to keep its side of the deal on Article 370
The Asian Age
Delhi
July 29, 2020

In a major newspaper interview that became available on Monday, his first since cataclysmic constitutional changes were carried out in respect of J&K by the Narendra Modi government on August 5 last year, former J&K chief minister and National Conference vice-president Omar Abdullah has spoken of several key matters among them the possible re-working of his party’s “autonomy” platform, and his justified dismay (he called it “betrayal”) at the country’s Opposition parties for backing the Modi government’s move to not just end J&K’s erstwhile autonomy but also for breaking up the former state into two Union Territories.

On both counts, it would appear that the NC leader has reflected deeply. Even so, we invite him to take heart from the fact that many entities and constituencies in the country, including important sections of the political class even if they are not currently substantial in parliamentary number terms, have an appreciation of the events of August 5 last that are not dissimilar to his own.

This is not unimportant as a fact unto itself. Since Mr Abdullah expresses the resolve to carry on a fight against the unconstitutional events “politically, democratically and legally”, he will find he will not be short of allies, especially on the political and intellectual side.

How Media Commented On Omar Abdullah’s Release?

With the RSS-BJP cohorts renewing the catchy and populist slogan of the so-called full integration of J&K with the rest of India, their battle cry of 70 years has found a wider communal echo than when they were not in power.

Many smaller regional parties (though by no means all, as DMK and Trinamul Congress have shown) found this hard to resist on account of perceived electoral compulsions.

The much-weakened Congress, still BJP’s principal opponent, had a small group of waverers (and they appear to be playing a pro-BJP hand from within), but the party’s working committee has taken a healthy stand. Mr Abdullah would be wise to factor all of this in.

Clearly, at the present juncture, it would seem that mainstream parties in Kashmir might find the going tough after New Delhi’s failure to keep its side of the deal on Article 370 and 35-A, and its dishonouring of solemn commitments produced by the Constituent Assembly.

It is good Mr Abdullah is conscious of this. But the ebb and flow of life have a habit of throwing up surprises.

Even as mainstream parties in Kashmir seemed to be facing an existential crisis, their principal ideological opponent, the religious right strongly backed by Pakistan, has also been pushed on the back foot by the mysterious developments that have hit the camp led by Syed Ali Shah Geelani.

Although there may be a certain “sentiment” in Kashmir (to which Mr Abdullah alludes), this is theoretically beyond the India-Pakistan binary. Politicians live in the real world.

The best thing that Mr Abdullah’s party can do to safeguard Kashmir’s interests and its own is to eschew insularity and seek to make common cause in the electoral arena with all who question the majoritarian basis advanced by the current dispensation in Delhi.

Omar’s Choice
NC leader acknowledges constraints August 5 decision casts on mainstream politics in Kashmir – and challenge ahead
The Indian Express
Delhi
July 30, 2020

The National Conference will fight it out legally, but its top leader says that he is not going to fool people into believing that J&K’s special status could be brought back.

In an extraordinarily candid and reflective interview and a signed article in The Indian Express, breaking his silence since his detention last year, the former Jammu & Kashmir chief minister, Omar Abdullah, spoke of the “betrayal” of August 5, 2019, how it had destroyed the bridge between a mainstream party like the National Conference and the Centre, and reduced such parties, seen to have carried the can for Delhi, into “elements of ridicule”. He expressed doubt about whether there was any more space or scope for mainstream parties in Kashmir — “finding a political plank at this point is not going to be the easiest thing”. His own politics has become “a lot more angry and resentful” and “less trusting”, he said. But Abdullah, who was detained on the day the Centre stripped the state of its special status and bifurcated it into two union territories and released six months later, also appears to have come to terms with the fact that the decisions of that fateful August day are here to stay. He described his state of mind as somewhere between “pessimism and realism”, but it is his suggestion that it may be pointless to demand a rolling back of the decision on Article 370 that is politically significant.

The National Conference will fight it out legally, but its top leader says that he is not going to fool people into believing that J&K’s special status could be brought back. This and his statement, that he would not contest elections in J&K until statehood has been restored — “then we’ll go ahead from there” — have sparked some outrage in the Valley, where these remarks are being seen as an abdication by the main regional party of Kashmir from its commitment to the August 4 Gupkar Declaration. Arrived at between the leaders of all J&K parties, it said that they would remain “united in their resolve to protect and defend identity, autonomy and special status of the JK State against all attacks and onslaughts whatsoever”.

Abdullah was careful to draw a thick line between the NC and Kashmiri separatism, asserting that while the experiences of the last year had made him distrustful of the Centre, and “Delhi did its damnedest to equate us with separatists”, he was not going to come out of detention “espousing a political line that I don’t believe in, because it might be popular or it might be favourable at the time”; he would not incite violent protests that end up taking the lives of more people, he said. Even as he has declared he will not participate in the electoral process of a Union Territory, he has underlined his commitment to the democratic processes. Going ahead, for him and for other politicians of the mainstream in Kashmir, the challenge, as he has admitted, will be to find the next steps in a politically denuded landscape — where the persistence of a political vacuum has always been fraught with the danger of hardliners rushing in.

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Former CM Mehbooba Mufti’s Detention Extended By Three Months

SRINAGAR: The detention of Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) President Mehbooba Mufti was on Friday extended by three more months.

Mufti has been in detention under the stringent Public Safety Act (PSA).

Several political leaders, including Mufti, Omar Abdullah and his father and former chief minister Farooq Abdullah, were detained by authorities on August 5 last year. The PSA of senior Abdullah and his son was revoked earlier in March.

Mufti was initially detained on August 5 last year when the Centre abrogated the special status of the erstwhile state and bifurcated it into two union territories — Ladakh, and Jammu and Kashmir.

Having spent over eight months in detention at two government facilities designated as sub-jails, Mufti was shifted to Farview residence Gupkar on April 7.

Mehbooba Mufti was arrested on August 5 last year and was booked under the stringent PSA on February 6.

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Lt Governor Extends Eid-Ul-Azha Greetings

SRINAGAR: Lieutenant Governor, Girish Chandra Murmu has conveyed his warm greetings to the people of J&K in general and to the Muslim brethren in particular, on the auspicious occasion of Eid-ul-Azha.

In his message of felicitations, the Lt Governor observed that this festival endorses the spirit of sacrifice, benevolence and generosity towards others. He hoped that the auspicious occasion would further enhance the amiable atmosphere and provide beacon light for prosperity and development in the UT.

Every festival is an opportunity to promote peace and harmony and I hope this tradition shall be nurtured to strengthen the bond of communal harmony, peace and amity between various sections of the society, he said.

The Lt Governor, in view of the emerging situation, urged the people to celebrate this festival in adherence to the guidelines and norms issued by the Administration.

He prayed for peace, progress and prosperity in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

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BSF Man Dies Of Cardiac Arrest

SRINAGAR: A BSF soldier died of cardiac arrest during duty along the Line of Control in Mankote area of this district on Friday.

They said constable R .Ravindra of 72 battalion BSF suffered the heart attack at Songali post in Mankote sector. The 43-year-old was shifted to a nearby health facility where doctors declared him brought dead, they said.

SHO Mendhar Manzoor Kohli confirmed to news agency GNS the death of the soldier.

 

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Eid- Ul-Azha Holidays On August 1 And 2 In J&K

SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir will observe a holiday on account of Eid al-Adha on August 1 and August 2, instead of the earlier proposed date of July 31 and August 1, informed the General Administration Department (GAD) of the Union Territory on Friday.

“In partial modification of Government Order No. 251-JK(GAD) of 2019 dated 27.12.2019, the holiday on account of Eid-ul-Azha shall be observed on 1st and 2nd August 2020 (Saturday and Sunday) instead of 31st July and 1st August, 202 (Friday and Saturday), in the Government Offices and educational institutions of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir,” the GAD notification said.

As per the GAD, the earlier issued holiday on July 31 on account of Eid stands cancelled.

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Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine protects monkey in single dose

SRINAGAR: A leading candidate of Covid-19 vaccine developed by global healthcare company Johnson & Johnson (J&J) raised neutralising antibodies and robustly protected monkeys against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

“This vaccine led to robust protection against SARS-CoV-2 in rhesus macaques and is now being evaluated in humans,” said study researcher Dan H. Barouch from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) in the US.

The vaccine uses a common cold virus, called adenovirus serotype 26 (Ad26), to deliver the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into host cells, where it stimulates the body to raise immune responses against the coronavirus.

Barouch has been working on the development of a Covid-19 vaccine since January when Chinese scientists released the SARS-CoV-2 genome.

The research team developed a series of vaccine candidates designed to express different variants of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which is the major target for neutralizing antibodies.

They conducted a study in 52 NHPs, immunizing 32 adult rhesus macaques (monkeys) with a single dose of one of seven different versions of the Ad26-based vaccine, and giving 20 animals sham vaccines as placebo controls.

All vaccinated animals developed neutralizing antibodies following immunization. Six weeks after the immunization, all animals were exposed to SARS-CoV-2.

All 20 animals that received the sham vaccine became infected and showed high levels of virus in their lungs and nasal swabs.

Of the six animals that received the optimal vaccine candidate, Ad26.COV2.S, none showed the virus in their lungs, and only one animal showed low levels of virus in nasal swabs.

Moreover, neutralizing antibody responses correlated with protection, suggesting that this biomarker will be useful in the clinical development of COVID-19 vaccines for use in humans.

“Our data show that a single immunization with Ad26.COV2.S robustly protected rhesus macaques against SARS-CoV-2 challenge,” said Barouch.

“A single-shot immunization has practical and logistical advantages over a two-shot regimen for global deployment and pandemic control, but a two-shot vaccine will likely be more immunogenic, and thus both regimens are being evaluated in clinical trials,” Barouch added.

“We look forward to the results of the clinical trials that will determine the safety and immunogenicity, and ultimately the efficacy, of the Ad26.COV2.S vaccine in humans,” the authors wrote.

The team also noted that the Ad26.COV2.S vaccine is on track to start a phase 3 efficacy trial in 30,000 participants in September.(IANS)

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Sajad Lone Set Free, Finally

SRINAGAR: Authorities have finally set free Sajad Lone, the Peoples Conference president. He was arrested on the eve of August 5, 2019. Early this year he was shifted to his official residence where he was kept under detention.

Interestingly, it was Sajad who announced his release personally using twitter almost a year after.

Sajad’s release came on the eve of Eid. It also coincided with the controversy over Prof Saifuddin Soz’s arrest that the government denied in the Supreme Court.

One of Lone’s party activists said he has been informed at his Church Lane jail that he is free. “He is still there and has not started for home,” he said. He said he will share more details as and when he meets his leader.

Interestingly, the last tweet of Lone – who was a cabinet minister in BJPDP government, was on August 5. Almost a few days short of a year, he tweeted again.

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Why We Remember Dead On Eid While Forgetting Those Living Around?

by Syed Kaisar Shah

Meh Meh” mimicking the sound of the neighbour’s sheep that will be sacrificed on the upcoming Eid, followed by his mother yelling Nair Vih (go now) at him. I stopped and his mother, a midday meal cook in a nearby Government school, requested me to take him to the other village to which I nodded.

I took him along. This 12-year-old is not very impressive in his studies but famous for his naughtiness. I initiated the conversation by asking, will you sacrifice any animal on this Eid? “We don’t need an animal to please Allah; we have already sacrificed our desires, in his way,” he replied with a palpable tinge of pride in his voice.

Further, I asked, what are your plans for Eid? He answered quickly Eid Gaye Ameeran (The Eid is for rich people). He justified the argument by saying; it will be rich people cooking different meals, burning firecrackers, wearing fancy dresses, doing unnecessary shopping and poor will remain a mute spectator.

I could feel the anger and disappointment in his statement. I interfered and tried to convince the child by saying the literal meaning of Eid that is ”the day of happiness”. His sarcastic smile was clearly showing his disagreement with my statement.

Researches show, children born in Kashmir during the conflict are highly traumatized and depressed facing emotional disorder and behavioural changes. Even some of the children grew up with pessimistic traits but this case was different.

He seemed more mature than his age, he was distinctive. His experiences seem horrible and it gives him the pragmatic feel of the society. His father, who was a private teacher, is in jail since the removal of Article 370. He will be celebrating this Eid without his father. He seemed annoyed about the people who live around him who are religious and rich. They have managed to decorate the mosque with crewel curtains, costly Kashmiri Kaleen (carpet) and full wooden panelling. They even take care of the other village affairs but fail to see the miserable condition of his family.

His next-door neighbour, a businessman, who sacrifices an animal every year which costs more than this family’s annual expenditure never lend a helping hand but this kid is not envious of him. He expects a share from his animal sacrifice. He talked about how their family waits for the sacrificial meat and makes barbeques and cooks it. At least this child has the hope that his father will return one day.

A study by UK-based child rights organization, Save the Children, has revealed that the estimated population of orphans in Jammu and Kashmir is more than two lakh. Will their condition be any better?

Syed Kaisar Shah

Meanwhile, we reached his destination and I asked hurriedly, why are you going there? He gabled, we don’t own a smartphone so my mother has requested them to allow me to watch my online classes.

He left with a smile on his face but imposed many thoughts in my mind. We might be spending hefty amounts on Eid but that is not enough. We visit graveyards on Eid and remember our dead but the question is do we care about the living ones?

(The author has completed M Tech in Software Engineering. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author’s and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of Kashmir Life.)  

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After 4 hours of blockade, Srinagar-Muzaffrabad road restored for traffic

Srinagar

The traffic movement on the Srinagar-Muzaffrabad highway was restored after four hours as it got hit by massive landslides and shooting stones near NS Bridge following the heavy rains on Friday early morning.

A senior official of the local administration confirmed to news agency GNS that the road has been cleared for the traffic. “The highway has been restored for the traffic after we pressed our men and machinery into service,” he said.

The road was blocked at 6 am and has been restored at 10 am, the official said adding “all the traffic has been cleared on the road”.

 

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Thursday 30 July 2020

India records 1-day spike of over 55K coronavirus cases, tally reaches16,38,871

Srinagar

India reported the single-day spike of 55,079 coronavirus cases and 779 deaths in the last 24 hours pushing the total tally to 16,38,871 and 35,747 deaths, stated the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare on Friday.

More than one million people have recovered till now, over 1.9 times the number of active cases. As many as 10,57,805 have been discharged, while 5,45,318 still remain affected.

As many as 16 states and UTs have a recovery rate more than the national average of 64.44 per cent. Highest number of recovered patients are in Delhi, Ladakh, Haryana, Assam, Telangana, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat.

Maharashtra remains to be the worst-hit state and has 4,11,798 total cases, including 2,48,615 recovered cases and 1,48,150 active cases. It is followed by Tamil Nadu, which has 2,39,978 cases and then Delhi, which logged 1,34,403 cases.

Besides this, India achieved another landmark. More than six lakh tests were done in 24 hours on Thursday, the Ministry said that the testing infrastructure has increased and almost one crore tests were conducted in the span of the last one month.

At the global front, The total number of global coronavirus cases has topped 17.2 million, while the deaths have increased to more than 6,71,000, according to Johns Hopkins University.

As of Friday morning, the overall number of cases stood at 1,72,37,642, while the fatalities rose to 6,71,909, the University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) revealed in its latest update.I(IANS)

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Landslides close Srinagar-Muzaffarabad road in Uri  

SRINAGAR: Hundreds of vehicles are stranded on  Srinagar-Muzaffarabad road in Uri town of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district as landslides blocked the access in between. The landslides were the outcome of the heavy rain last night.

Landslides close Srinagar-Muzaffarabad road in Uri

The landslide, triggered by rains, struck the Srinagar-Muzaffarabd highway at Uri. Hundreds of vehicles including ambulances were stranded, sources said.

The agency maintaining the highway are trying to reopen the road as early as possible, the official said.

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Girl drowns, 2 others rescued in Poonch

SRINAGAR: A 12-year-old girl died and two other siblings were rescued after the trio drowned in a canal here last evening, official sources said on Friday.

They said the siblings, children of Zakir Hussian Peer, were playing near the canal at Jallian Azambad and subsequent went inside it, leading to the drowning of one of them while two others were rescued by a team of police and locals.

The victim has been identified as Shabnam Kousser (12) while others, Hussam Din (8) and UmmarDin (6) were rescued and taken to SDH Mandi.

Station House Officer Mandi, Tilak Raj told GNS that while Shabnam was declared dead on arrival by the doctors at SDH, two other children were later shifted to District hospital Poonch.

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COVID-19 Claims Seven More Lives, J&K Toll Now 373

Srinagar

Seven more deaths were reported in Jammu and Kashmir due to COVID-19 since last evening, taking the toll to 373, officials said on Friday.

Four of the victims were from Srinagar, two from Pulwama while one, a 56-year-old, was from Jammu’s Shakti Shakti Nagar.

Regarding two Pulwama casualties, they said, one was a 52-year-old man from Awantipora who died at CD hospital and other, a woman from Pampore, who passed away at SKIMS Bemina.

“The woman was referred from Sub District Hospital Pampore on July 29, a day after she tested positive for the virus,” a senior doctor at SKIMS Bemina told GNS. “She was a case of ARDS with Diabetic ketoacidosis with Sepsis,” the doctor said, adding, “She was put on ventilator and had cardiopulmonary arrest. She was declared dead at around 10.45 p.m.”

Regarding the Awantipora resident, a doctor at CD hospital told news agency GNS that he had underlying ailments and died early morning.

Regarding deaths from Srinagar, they said, all took place at SKIMS Soura and include an 82-year-old from Lal Bazar, a 75-year-old from Panzinara, a 62-year-old from Qamarwari and a 57-year-old from Rainawari.

Regarding the 56-year-old man, a senior doctor at Government Medical College Jammu told GNS that he was brought dead to the hospital. “The man had high fever for the last 8 days and respiratory distress since Thursday night. He collapsed at home. His covid-19 sample returned positive later,” the doctor added.

So far 346 deaths have been reported in Kashmir and 27 in Jammu division. Srinagar district with 117 deaths has the highest fatalities followed by Baramulla (68), Kulgam (28), Budgam (26), Anantnag (25), Shopian (23), Pulwama (21), Kupwara (20), Jammu (18), Bandipora (12), Ganderbal (6), two each in Rajouri and Doda and one each in Ramban , Poonch, Udhampur, and Kathua.

 

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The Virus Hunter

At the forefront of the detection and control of the viral outbreaks within and outside the USA in the last more than 20 years was an epidemiologist, Dr Ali S Khan, a Kashmiri American, at the American Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. He was the American who, after the fall of the USSR, sat with Russian scientists to collaborate on vaccine technology. Having predicated a pandemic in 2016 in his book, Dr Khan talked to Saima Bhat on being a virus hunter and the issues linked to the ongoing pandemic

Dr Ali S Khan a Kashmiri American, had predicted that a pandemic was round the corner.

In 2006, when Dr Ali S Khan came up with his book The Next Pandemic: On The Frontlines Against Humankind’s Gravest Dangers forecasting that an unknown virus might spill out from the animals into the human, which will transmit from person to person creating a global pandemic. Then it looked like a fiction. Only four months later, the world is actually struggling with a pandemic that has killed around 650 thousand people worldwide.

 Dr Khan, MD, MPH, presently a Dean at the College of Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Centre in Omaha (USA), has been a medical doctor by training, an epidemiologist by career. He has worked for two decades as an officer at the National Centre for Zoonotic, Vector-borne, and Enteric Diseases, Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Department of Health and Human Services. He joined CDC and the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps in 1991 as an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer.

Born and raised up in Brookly by his Kashmir origin parents, Dr Khan has worked tirelessly for crucial epidemiological work for many years at the international level. During the 1995 Ebola outbreak in Kikwit, then Zaire, he was the person who was organizing counter-epidemic measures, investigating transmission, tracing the outbreak back to its Patient Zero, to end the cycle of misery and death.

After that his expertise and services were sought when severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) hit the world in 2003, which had come out of southern China and killed people in Toronto, Singapore, and a few other cities. Considered as the bad respiratory illness that led lead to lethal pneumonia, infected more than eight thousand people, of whom about ten per cent died, and then the outbreak ended.

In controlling the different deadly viruses he has travelled the world on outbreak responses for two decades. He was the person behind investigating the Hantavirus outbreak in southern Chile for which he visited remote villages, sometimes on horseback, trapping rodents to determine which species carried the virus.

Other than Ebola, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever, Ebola again in 2001, SARS in Singapore, in 2003, he worked in Chad as well to eliminate polio in 2008, he worked for monkeypox, avian influenza, Rift Valley fever, avian influenza, the Asian Tsunami, and the initial public health response to Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.

After Hantavirus was controlled he worked on Rift Valley fever in Saudi Arabia, in 2001. In appreciation of his work the Saudi Minister of Health gave him a Lucite replica of a beheading sword as a token of gratitude, reported The New Yorker.

His vast experiences have been colourful field adventures and seriously threatening situations also. Khan has written most of his experiences in his book. He has always been at the forefront as a warrior not to fight with the patients only, but to strategise and plan the removal of the diseases.

A colourized scanning electron micrograph of a cell (green) heavily infected with particles (orange) from the virus that causes COVID-19, isolated from a patient sample.

In 1999, Dr Khan also served as one of the main architects of CDC’s public health bioterrorism preparedness programme which upgraded local, state, and national public health systems of the USA to detect and rapidly respond to bioterrorism.

As CDC Deputy Director, he has led the creation of the critical agent list, which reportedly became the basis for all biological terrorism preparedness. This work was published as the first national public health preparedness plan with key focus areas to improve local and state capacities and initiated pilots of syndrome-based surveillance. These preparedness efforts were reported to be crucial in limiting the scope of the first anthrax attack during which he directed the CDC operational response in Washington.

Before joining CDC, Dr Khan received his MD from Downstate Medical Centre in Brooklyn, New York and completed a joint residency in Internal Medicine and Paediatrics at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Paediatrics and the American College of Physicians. He has since completed a Masters of Public Health from Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health where he now holds an adjunct Professor appointment and co-directs the Emerging Infections course. He has over 150 peer-reviewed publications, textbook chapters, editorials, and brief communiqués. He has consulted extensively for multiple US organizations including NASA, Ministries of Health, and the World Health Organization.

These days Khan remains busy with the discussions for drug-trials research, immune response, the latest in disease modelling, and how best to decontaminate N95 masks.

In an interview with the morning edition of NPR in May, Dr Khan was confident that the second wave of Coronavirus will happen in the USA. He described the second wave through community transmission as a mountain range rather than a big peak. “Even though we call it a pandemic, it’s really multiple hundreds of different outbreaks in the US going on at the same time,” he had said. “A lot of separate outbreaks will feel like sort of a second wave coming.” This situation he predicted as his country did not adhere to the basic protocols for pandemics.  

The only things to protect masses he had said was the ramping up testing and contact tracing as well as a continued adherence to public health practices such as washing hands, social distancing and wearing masks.

In the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic that has made the USA the biggest epicentre of the virus, Kashmir Life spoke to Dr Khan to understand the history of viruses and the devastating they have created to humankind. Owing to his extremely busy schedule he managed to respond after almost two months. Here are the excerpts of the interview:

KASHMIR LIFE (KL)The great epidemiologist in the USA is a Kashmiri. Dr Khan, please tell us more about your Kashmiri roots and your parents. Why and how your father came out of Kashmir?

Dr Ali S Khan (DASK): My family comes from a beautiful valley in the foothills of the Himalayas from now Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. As a teenager in pre-partition India brutally ruled by the British Empire, my father left on a multi-week journey to Bombay to escape poverty and find adventure. He lied about his age and joined a merchant ship as a greaser boy in the engine room under the eye of many Sikh elders who kept watch over him.

My father eventually jumped off a ship in San Francisco after the Second World War and made his way to New York City, our home for 70 years.

KLYou have helped in fighting deadly epidemics like Ebola, SARS, MERS and a lot more scary diseases, which killed thousands of people. You have always been on the ground, you were never scared? Please share some experiences.

DASK: Yes, I have been honoured to join and lead many global investigations with my work at the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization (WHO). This has included trips to India and Pakistan.

I am rarely scared of the diseases – these are simple microbes. We know how to prevent them and my job was to help get them under control. I was occasionally scared such as when I took care of Ebola patients in full personal protective equipment and low light making a needle-stick injury very possible.

I was more at the risk from the situations I found myself including no food safety, civil unrest, child shoulders, small aeroplanes.

Dr Ali S Khan, a Kashmiri American who was chasing the viruses across the globe, like a hunter, as part of his duty as an epidemic intelligence officer.

KLAfter reading your work, I have realised epidemiology is a very important field then why the subject is not taken so seriously in the third world countries?

DASK: Yes, epidemiology and public health are an extremely important field, more now than ever. Unfortunately, children rarely learn of this as a career field. And governments do not fund enough to prevent disease and promote health. They are more likely to finance poor functioning healthcare systems which are more visible to the community.

KLIn 1918, many deaths were reported and we couldn’t do anything to stop them. In 2020 when we are caught by Coronavirus we are still not able to do anything to prevent deaths. Why is it so? And how is Covid-19 different from other epidemics like Hantavirus, Monkeypox, Ebola and SARS?

DASK: Covid is not different from Ebola or SARS or Monkeypox in that it can be easily contained with good public health.  Unfortunately, the global community needs to learn this lesson again and again.

KL: Why is it after every killing epidemic is over we forget the chances of having a new disease? Why is the world caught unprepared always? You had recommended creating one common platform worldwide to fight these diseases, is there any progress on that front?

DASK: Political leaders have short terms and shorter memories. It is easier to fund something visible for more votes than invest in preparedness.  The WHO exists to help fight diseases but it needs to be reformed and we need new global leadership at the level of the United Nations.

KLInfluenza kills more people than any epidemics. Why are we not able to control influenza even if doctors recommend influenza vaccines before the onset of every winter? And what is the chance of developing antibiotic resistance because of them?

DASK: Influenza is a virus so antibiotics do not work and actually lead to greater harm in the community. Influenza can be prevented with a vaccine but the vaccines are not very good and everybody does not get vaccinated each year.

KLYou have met so many people affected by many diseases, why is a stigma attached to all diseases including epidemics and pandemics?

DASK: I believe there is a primordial survival instinct to prevent infection. We have seen this for centuries with global plagues even before we knew they were due to microbes. Think about the word leper.

KLMost of the epidemics have started from China. What is the connection? And this time as well, there was a rumour initially that the virus came out of a laboratory in Wuhan, do you see it as an attempt of bioterrorism?

DASK: The virus was natural from bats as are other similar Coronaviruses. There are lots of opportunities in a country the size of China and their customs for animal disease – like influenza and Covid – to move to humans. 

KLWe have seen bats, rodents as the basic transmitters of the epidemics and pandemics. Isn’t it possible we get away with both of these?

DASK: No. Bats and rodents play an important ecologic role and are too abundant to eliminate. The same challenges exist for mosquitoes.

KLHow long it takes epidemics and pandemics to go away? And why is it that some people die and some recover from the same disease? Is there any chance of ending the dance of microbes and humans?

DASK: We will always have infectious diseases from the natural world and us.

KLYou are a doctor by profession and we have seen doctors’ writing papers or academic books only. How you managed to write this wonderful book which is more like a novel, keeps you hooked till the last page?

DASK: I had excellent help from my co-author, Mr Patrick, and my publisher, Mr Adams at Hachette Books.

KLOther than pandemics and epidemics, rising global temperatures and chaotic weather patterns is another threat but then there is bioterrorism and nuclear war threat as well, which one you think can prove more deadly?

DASK: The next pandemic with 1918 Influenza-like virus.

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Highest 1-day spike of 17 deaths takes J&K COVID-19 toll to 366

SRINAGAR: In a biggest-spike in deaths in 24 hours, Jammu and Kashmir reported seventeen more covid-19 deaths since last night, taking the fatality count due to the virus in J&K to 366, officials said on Thursday.

Among them, 16 deaths were reported from Kashmir, mostly from Srinagar which continues to top the list with highest number of fatalities, while one death occurred in Jammu.

They said that while nine deaths took place in this summer capital of the J&K, three victims belonged to Shopian while one death each was reported from Baramulla, Kulgam, Budgam and Jammu.

They said that four deaths took place at CD hospital, one of the exclusive facilities for the management of the covid-19 patients, and five took place in the SKIMS Soura including a 55-year-old CRPF trooper, while two persons died at Government Medical College Baramulla and one, an 80-year-old man from Shopian, at District Hospital Pulwama and his age-mate from the same district at SMHS hospital here.

They said that a 53-year-old woman Ashagipora Anantnag died, a day after she was admitted to SKIMS hospital.

The four other deaths reported at SKIMS Soura include a 75-year-old woman from Shivpora Srinagar, a 72-year-old man from Batamallo Srinagar, a 60-year-old man from Srinagar besides the CRPF trooper from 198 battalion, a senior doctor at the tertiary care hospital said.

The deaths reported from CD hospital include a 50-year-old woman from Batamaloo Srinagar, a 70-year- old Keegam Shopian, a man from Humhama Budgam and a 65-year-old man from Naseembagh Srinagar.

A senior doctor at CD hospital said that the woman from Keegam Shopian had severe “pneumonia with hypothyroidism and the patient was ventilator.”

“She developed sudden cardiopulmonary arrest at 2 a.m. today. The CPR was done but she could not be revived,” the doctor said.

Regarding the quinquagenarian from Batamaloo, the doctor said that the patient had bilateral Community Acquired Pneumonia.   “The woman was suffering from hypertension and hypothyroidism,” the doctor said, adding, “The patient had cardiopulmonary arrest at 7 a.m. on July 30 and was declared dead after 45 minutes.”

Regarding the man from Humhama Budgam, the doctor said that he was suffering from “bilateral pneumonia with hypothyroidism.”

“He was on mechanical ventilator and developed sudden cardiopulmonary arrest at 1:20 a.m. today and was declared death after 15 minutes,” the doctor said.

As regards the man from Naseembagh Srinagar, the doctor he was suffering from pneumonia with hypertension “He was on mechanical ventilator and was extubated twice.  He had sudden cardiopulmonary arrest last night and he could not be revived.”

The other deaths include a 70-year old woman from Delina, a 75-year-old man from Kreeri Baramulla besides two octogenarian men from Muldare and Turkawangam.

A doctor at District hospital Pulwama said that the octogenarian from Muldora Shopian was having chest diseases along with comorbidities. The 80-year-old from Turkawangam died at SMHS hospital, three days after he was admitted there. “He was suffering from pneumonia and had comorbidities,” a senior doctor at the hospital told news agency GNS.

Regarding the septuagenarians from Delina and Kreei respectively, sources said that both of them were suffering from bilateral pneumonia and died on the same day, July 29, at GMC Baramulla. One of them, 70-year-old woman from Delina, remained admitted for three days before the death while the 75-year-old from Kreeri was admitted on July 27.

Regarding the Kulgam death, they said, that a 60-year-old man from the Damhal area of district who died on July 28 was included in the list by the government today.

Meanwhile, a 56-year-old woman from Shastri Nagar Jammu who was brought death to GMC Jammu yesterday, tested positive on Thursday.

“She was a known case of t2 diabetes mellitus and had high fever AND COUGH 3 days back, “a doctor at GMC Jammu told GNS, adding, “Rapid antigen test was done as well as RTPCR test and it reported positive.

So far 339 deaths have been reported in Kashmir and 26 in Jammu division. Srinagar district with 113 deaths has the highest fatalities followed by Baramulla (68), Kulgam (28), Budgam (26), Anantnag (25), Shopian (23), Kupwara (20), Pulwama (19), Jammu (17), Bandipora (12), Ganderbal (6), two each in Rajouri and Doda and one each in Ramban , Poonch, Udhampur, and Kathua.

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CEO chairs meeting of Srinagar Smart City Advisory Forum

SRINAGAR: Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Srinagar Smart City Limited (SSCL), Dr Shahid Iqbal Choudhary, Thursday convened a meeting of the Srinagar Smart City Advisory Forum or SSCAF.

CEO chairs meeting of Srinagar Smart City Advisory Forum

Chief Engineer PWD, Director Tourism, Vice Chairman SDA, SSP Traffic, CPO Srinagar, Joint Commissioner SMC and Executive Engineers KPDCL and Srinagar Smart City Limited attended the meeting.

The meeting briefed the SSCAF members about the status of ongoing Smart City projects under execution in Srinagar and issues and concerns hampering them and requiring resolution.

Extensive discussions were held on various projects including variable messaging display, hawker zones, junction improvement, drainage and Yarkand Saria during the meeting. It was proposed that the work related to pedestrian pathways should be started at an earliest.

It was emphasised that participation of line departments is required for seamless implementation with reference to area based and pan-city development projects.

SSCL in association with line departments will sort out issues and concerns and finalise project proposals and resolution wherever required.

It was decided stressed that Junction Improvement among other important works be finalised for approval by the forum in its next meeting. The SMC and R&B were asked to prepare DPRs to be taken up for approval in the next Board of Directors meeting.

The Chief Executive Officer SSCL also asked the Srinagar Municipal Corporatation and the Srinagar Development Authority to provide a revenue sharing model for relevant projects.

During the meeting the SSCAF also discussed the need for creating more car parking spaces in the city. The need for setting up a parking space near Jamia Masjid mosque where insufficient parking space leads to traffic mess.

Dr Shahid while speaking on the occasion stressed the importance of various ongoing Smart City projects and said he expects full handholding from all members of the SSCAF and support from the line departments.

He called for focusing on economies of the people and overall feasibility while preparing the projects. He also reiterated instructions to concerned departments to ensure time-bound and result-oriented implementation of all decisions.

The SSCAF has been constituted to advise and enable collaboration among various stakeholders. It meets to advise and enable collaboration among various stakeholders including line departments for smooth implementation of Smart City projects.

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Tragedy Visits Hiller’s Wani’s Third Time, Kills Fourth Member

SRINAGAR: Zaffar Wani, a mechanical engineer, died in a road accident at Bijbehara. He was a resident of Hiller in Kokernag.

Engineer Zaffar Wani

Reports said that Wani was on his way to his office when the car he was driving turned turtle. The exact details of the accident are not known. Somehow, he was rescued and driven to Bejbehara hospital wherefrom he was referred to District Hospital in Anantnag. After doctors assessed him, they decided to send him to SKIMS. “As he was being brought into the hospital, he passed away, “one of his colleagues said.

Wani was an Assistant Engineer in the Roads and Building Department and was deputed to oversee the Saffron Mission that has a mechanical component.

Wani was barely 38. He is survived by his 18-months old daughter and a young wife.

What is tragic is that this is the fourth family member that was consumed by a road accident in recent years.

Wani’s brother was a KAS officer, Shabir Ahmad Wani. He also died in a tragic road accident along with his father in 2009. Tragically, his sister, Waheeda who was working in the UAE also died in a road accident in 2010. Her husband was posted there and she was also working, reports said. When his brother died in the accident, he left behind a one-year-old son who was being taken care of by Wani. Now the accident left yet another orphan in the family.

Now the family is left with the third brother, Bilal Ahmad, 27. Unmarried, he will have to take care of the orphans of his two brothers.

Shocked over the accidental, Jammu and Kashmir Mechanical Engineering Graduates Association (JKMEGA) president, Er Firdous Bhat said they have no words to mourn the death. He was young, dynamic and noble person, he said. Bhat said they have laid him to rest in Kokernag as thousands mourned the loss to a family already hit the accidents.

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Day 67: Jammu, Srinagar airports receive 25 domestic flights with 2,463 passengers

Srinagar

On day 67 of resumption of routine domestic operations in Jammu and Kashmir, 25 domestic flights with 2,463 passengers on board today arrived at Jammu and Srinagar Airports.

A total of 777 passengers aboard 10 regular commercial flights arrived at the Jammu Airport while 15 domestic flights with about 1686 passengers on board landed at Srinagar Airport today.

Pertinently, Jammu Airport Authorities have received a total of 515 domestic flights with 38,449 passengers while Srinagar Airport Authorities have received 831 domestic flights with 1,06,750 passengers since 25th of May till date.

Also, the Jammu and Kashmir government has brought back about 3,676 passengers from various countries to the Union Territory through special evacuation flights in the wake of global pandemic till date.

After arrival, all the passengers were tested for the COVID-19 and transported to their destinations at both the airports amid strict observance of all necessary preventive protocols.

The Government has made elaborate arrangements for the arrival, screening, sampling and proper transportation of the passengers to the quarantine centers taking special care of guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) prescribed by the Union Ministries of Civil Aviation and Health and Family Welfare.

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Class IV Posts: 1,96,868 Candidates Submit Online Application

SRINAGAR: Till Friday morning, 3,79,100 Registrations have been done by the candidates on JKSSB’s Online Portal, since the commencement of online application submission from 10th July, 2020 and 1,96,868 candidates completed their online application submission process for Class IV posts. Also, 40,508 applications have been submitted online for the post of Accounts Assistant. It has been noted that about 86,000 unique visitors visited the online application portal of JKSSB on Wednesday.

Pertinently, the Jammu and Kashmir Services Selection Board has advertised 8575 Class IV posts for District/Divisional/Union Territory cadre in various departments under the provisions of the Jammu and Kashmir Appointment to the Class-IV (Special Recruitment) Rules, 2020, in pursuance of General Administration Department’s Revised Indent No. GAD/Mtg/RB-IV/50/2020 Dated 22.06.2020 under Advertisement Notification No. 01 of 2020 dated 26.06.2020.

Further, the Services Selection Board has operationalized two helplines one each at Srinagar and Jammu for the convenience of aspirants. In addition, any person who finds difficulty in submission of application form due to technical issue or for any other reasons, may send a self-explanatory mail at ssbjkgrievance@gmail.com for seeking guidance, clarification etc.

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SEC issues revised Protocol for administrative, institutional quarantine for travellers

Srinagar

The State Executive Committee (SEC), has issued revised Quarantine Procedures and protocols to be followed for all incoming passengers by Air, Rail and Road into the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

The SOPs regarding COVID testing have been revised by the SEC in exercise of powers conferred upon it under Section 24 of the Disaster Management Act, 2005 in supersession of all previous orders, instructions and protocols on the subject keeping in view the minimal positivity rate among Rail and Air travellers.

The revised guidelines read that all passengers arriving by Air, Rail or Road into the UT of J&K shall be 100 per cent tested for COVID 19 antigen using the RTPCR or Rapid Antigen test or any other prescribed method.

All Air and Rail passengers who have a valid contactable mobile number with the Aarogya Setu application downloaded on their phones shall be sent for Home Quarantine for 14 days or till their test results are reported negative, after their sampling is done as per the protocol in use, in case of Air or Rail passengers without a valid contactable Phone number with the Aarogya Setu app downloaded on their phones, they will be sent to Administrative/institutional Quarantine or Paid Quarantine for 14 days or till their test results are reported negative, in which case they are released for Home Quarantine.

In the event of any such Air or Rail passengers testing positive, the protocol with regard to COVID-19 positive patients will be followed.

The existing practice of 100 per cent Institutional/Administrative/Paid Quarantine for 14 days of all passengers till the test results are received shall, however, continue in case of Road travellers who arrive in a regulated manner at Lakhanpur.

The testing and quarantine procedures prescribed above will be applicable to all air travellers from a Red district to an Orange/Green district within UT of J&K.

Additionally, some identified categories of passengers arriving by any means other than rail / air from outside the UT into the UT of Jammu and Kashmir will be sampled on arrival for COVID-19 RTPCR or Rapid Antigen testing or other approved methods and sent to Home Quarantine for 14 days; and, if their test result is positive, will be treated as per the existing protocol for COVID-19 positive patients. The categories included Pregnant women in the last trimester, with a doctor’s certificate of pregnancy, Cancer patients on chemotherapy, Chronically ill/organ transplant/IVF patients discharged from a hospital after a surgical procedure, Dialysis patients with a doctor’s certificate of being on dialysis, Mothers with infants below 1 year, Children below 10 years travelling alone without a family member, Government of India personnel on bona fide government duty, Passengers/travellers with an RTPCR TEST Negative Certificate from an ICMR approved laboratory/testing facility, not older than 2 days (48 hours) before the arrival date, Business travellers by air/rail to J&K on business/industrial visits, with a confirmed return air/rail ticket booking within 4 days, confirmed hotel reservation and a business ID and Business travellers by road to J&K on business/industrial visits, with an undertaking to return within 4 days, a confirmed hotel reservation and a business ID, ambulance drivers of J&K dropping patients outside the UT, on their return, if they return within 36 hours.

The new Procedures also said that business travellers to J&K on business/industrial visits, with a confirmed return air ticket booking, confirmed hotel reservation and a business ID will proceed to their hotel from the airport and restrict their interactions to the business purpose for which they have come. They will however be sampled on arrival for the COVlD-19 antigen and, if their test result is positive, will be treated as per the existing protocol for COViD-19 positive patients. They shall also be required to maintain complete details of the persons whom they came in contact with during their stay in J&K.

Besides, the personnel of Defense and Central Armed Police Forces returning to duty, including transit labour hired by BRO to go to Ladakh, are exempted from compulsory 100 per cent COV1D-19 antigen testing and administrative/institutional quarantine in any facility authorized by the Government of Jammu and Kashmir. The said personnel shall be allowed to proceed to the institutional quarantine of their respective Units/Formations for necessary quarantine as per their internal procedures.

Any violation of these instructions will attract penalties under the Disaster Management Act-2005 and other provisions of Law.

Pertinently, the existing instructions of J&K Government on the subject mandated 100 per cent administrative and institutional quarantine or paid quarantine for 14 days, of all incoming passengers by Air, Rail and Road or till their COVID-19 antigen test results are reported negative, in which case they are released for Home Quarantine, or if positive, in which case they are sent to a COVID hospital for recovery and treatment.

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