Author: hamid

  • Millions Of Jellyfish Headed To Israel’s Coast on their nearly annual pilgrimage, Lifeguards Warn Swimmers

    (c) 2019 The Washington

    Source: NDTV

    Around the world, an estimated 150 million people are stung by jellyfish each year – hundreds fatally – and jellyfish are appearing beyond their usual habitats.

    Millions of jellyfish are headed toward Israel’s coast on their nearly annual pilgrimage, and thousands have clogged the filters of a southern power station. Locals and visitors are already reporting sightings of – and stings by – the creatures, whose presence can spell disappointment for vacationers and trouble for tourism-related businesses. Lifeguards are warning swimmers to take precautions and to follow the latest treatment guidelines to minimize discomfort.
    The problem is not restricted to the Israeli coast, which has seen a significant increase in the number and duration of jellyfish swarms. Around the world, an estimated 150 million people are stung by jellyfish each year – hundreds fatally – and jellyfish are appearing beyond their usual habitats (the question of whether their numbers are increasing is up for debate). Yet many tourists still fail to factor potential jellyfish encounters into their travel plans. That can be a recipe for a ruined vacation.

    By being proactive and informed (ignore that age-old advice to rinse a sting with urine; it can make things worse), travelers can take steps to minimize jellyfish encounters, and to handle them better if they occur.

    Changes in jellyfish behaviour

    To understand jellyfish, you must first understand that they are not fish. They are graceful bell-shaped marine invertebrates with tentacles full of stinging cells that help them catch prey and ward off predators (though all jellyfish sting, not all stings are painful to humans). Fossils reveal that they have been around for more than 500 million years. They are closely related to corals and sea anemones, and are found in all the Earth’s oceans and seas.

    Although scientists lack the data to prove that the global jellyfish population is skyrocketing, there is general agreement that some places are seeing a dramatic increase in jellyfish numbers and in the frequency of their appearances. Warming seas that allow jellyfish to expand their habitats, overfishing of their predators and agricultural runoff that depletes the oxygen that fish – but not jellies – need are all possible culprits. One study even suggests that jellyfish use structures such as offshore oil platforms and wind farms as incubators.

    Another problem is nonnative jellyfish being deposited in other species’ waters by ships or even ocean currents. “The Mediterranean is the most invaded sea in the world, with five invasive jellyfish species,” said Bella Galil of the Israel National Center for Biodiversity Studies at Tel Aviv University’s Steinhardt Museum of Natural History. These particular jellies are making their way from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal. Galil said jellyfish outbreaks in parts of the Mediterranean are “much more frequent” than they were 30 years ago, and that the blooms (masses of jellyfish together) are far larger.

    Danger to humans

    Whether they are local species appearing in greater numbers or nonnative species colonizing new waters, jellyfish can be a threat to vacationers. Jellyfish venom contains cocktails of toxins that help them paralyze and digest prey but also cause pain and tissue destruction in humans.

    Thankfully, most jellyfish stings do not lead to systemic reactions and resolve over a few hours, although they can be extremely painful. Some stings result in rashes that can last for weeks. But in a tiny percentage of cases, jellyfish stings are fatal. In fact, “more people die from jellyfish stings than from shark attacks,” said Angel Yanagihara, a biochemist at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu who studies jellyfish venom.

    Stings by certain species of box jellyfish, including Irukandji species, have caused deaths in the Indo-Pacific. In the Philippines, an estimated 100 to 500 people, most of them children and residents of remote fishing villages, die of jellyfish stings annually, according to research carried out by Yanagihara and her colleagues. While vast underreporting remains a factor worldwide, 80 fatal stings have been documented in the waters off northern Australia since such record-keeping began in the 1880s. In the Mediterranean, one death in the past decade has been attributed to an allergic reaction.

    Stings in U.S. waters are painful but seldom fatal. Scyphozoa jellyfish blooms, or swarms, are seasonally common in the Gulf of Mexico, and in the Chesapeake Bay and other areas along the U.S. East and West coasts, while regions such as the Florida Keys, Puerto Rico and Hawaii have documented serious stings by various box jellyfish species.

    Impact on industries

    All around the world, jellyfish blooms have damaged the fishing industry by clogging nets or attacking fish farms. They’ve forced temporary closures of power plants in countries including Sweden and Scotland, and desalination plants in countries such as Oman and Israel. They’ve also damaged local tourism.

    In June 2017, the largest swarm in memory of Rhopilema nomadica jellyfish plagued Egypt’s Mediterranean coast, keeping social media inundated with photos and disappointed vacationers away from beaches. The Environment Ministry announced the formation of an investigative committee to look into the phenomenon. Similar blooms appeared off Turkey and Tunisia, Galil said.

    A 2013 survey by Galil and colleagues found a drop of 3 to 10.5% in seaside visits during jellyfish blooms along Israel’s coast, with an estimated annual cost of several million dollars. The blooms usually hit in July, the height of tourism season.

    During a six-week period of Australia’s 2018 to 2019 summer season, authorities in Queensland closed 18 beaches to bathers because of a jellyfish invasion. Tourism-dependent businesses were likely to incur “billions of dollars” in losses, Lisa-ann Gershwin, a government scientist and director of the Australian Marine Stinger Advisory Service, told the Financial Times.

    How travelers can prepare

    Before booking your next beach vacation, find out if, and when, jellyfish are an issue. In Australia, for example, jellyfish are most common between November and May. In Hawaii, jellyfish often show up on south-facing beaches eight days after a full moon. In the Mediterranean, blooms usually appear in the summer.

    Unfortunately for travelers, there is no worldwide database for recent jellyfish sightings, and tourism officials are sometimes reluctant to publicize jellyfish swarms out of fear that such news will scare off visitors. But social media groups run by beachfront communities, and inquiries at seaside restaurants and pubs, can yield valuable real-time information.

    In some places, such as Israel, residents share information daily on local websites such as meduzot.co.il. Visitors to Hawaii can access a Jellyfish Arrival Calendar, which can help with planning but does not track actual sightings.

    Ultimately “the best approach is prevention,” Yanagihara said. She recommends that swimmers in jellyfish-prone waters wear full-body Lycra suits because the stings of most jellyfish cannot penetrate them.

    Do not touch jellyfish that have washed ashore, because they still contain venom, even when dead.

    The latest first-aid protocol stipulates two important steps. First, immediately rinse the site with vinegar – take some to the beach with you – which prevents a sting from getting worse because it stops additional venom from entering the skin. Second, soak the site in skin-safe hot water – not scalding – for 20 to 45 minutes. Doing so inhibits the venom already injected into the skin and eases the pain. Applying fresh water, ice or baking soda or urine can exacerbate the problem, according to Yanagihara, who was involved in a study of what works best.

    If dousing with vinegar does not fully remove the tentacles, a piece of fabric or tweezers (but never your fingers) can be used to extricate any jellyfish remnants from skin. Scraping or applying any other type of pressure can release more venom.

    Immediately seek medical assistance from a lifeguard, or emergency services in case of a severe reaction, including shortness of breath or severe swelling.

    While jellyfish are often reviled by swimmers, Yanagihara said, “it is important to remember that man poses a larger threat to the marine ecosystem than jellies pose to man.”

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by KASHMIR TODAY staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Srinagar Mayor Junaid Azim Mattu Diagnosed With Bone Marrow Disorder

    After some recent health issues and consequent investigations in Delhi, I’ve been diagnosed with a chronic Myeloproliferative Neoplasm (bone-marrow disorder) called Polycythemia Vera (PV). The treatment and management of the disorder was initiated immediately.

    The prognosis, the doctors tell me, is “very good”. I’ve been told that – with proper management, healthy lifestyle choices and regulars treatment and monitoring – I should be able to live a healthy, normal and productive life for many many years.

    I look forward to being back to work this week and will continue my treatment schedule and regime while working. This is a battle I intend to fight and fight with conviction and positivity. I needed to put this out to dispel whispers and rumors about my health.

    So I look forward to being back in Srinagar in the next couple of days and am grateful and humbled by the calls and messages. If anything, I intend to work harder – doing what I’ve set my heart on – delivering change in and ‘Reimagining Srinagar’ – our Srinagar. Cheers.

    Tweets Srinagar Mayor Junaid Azim Mattu

  • Omar Abdullah Undergoes Surgery on His Hand

    I had to have my hand operated but it’s on the mend now. Should have the sling & cast off in a week/ten days Wrote Omar Abdullah On Twitter

  • Modi to fulfil Mookerjee’s dream of scrapping Article 370, 35A: Gehlot

    Raipur: Union minister Thaawarchand Gehlot expressed confidence on Saturday that Jan Sangh founder Syama Prasad Mookerjee’s “dream” of scrapping Articles 370 and 35A of the Constitution would be fulfilled by the Narendra Modi government.
    The Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment was speaking to reporters here after launching the BJP’s membership drive, which coincided with the 118th birth anniversary of Mookerjee, the founder of the Jan Sangh, the BJP’s predecessor.
    Article 370 grants special status to Jammu and Kashmir and limits Parliament’s power to make laws concerning the state. Article 35A empowers the state assembly to define ‘permanent residents’ for bestowing special rights on them.
    “Mookerjee fought against (operation of) Articles 370 and 35A in Kashmir and wanted to abolish these articles from the state. We have been making efforts to fulfil his dream since the time of Jan Sangh. But now it seems the time has come,” Gehlot, a senior BJP leader, said.
    “Both the issues were part of our election manifesto. We will be successful in fulfilling his dream by abrogating these articles,” he added.
    Asked if the party aimed to abolish the two articles within a specified period, Gehlot said, “We will be successful in abolishing these articles in the second term of Modi government. The party manifesto is for five years, but it will be done much earlier.”
    A batch of petitions have been filed in Supreme Court challenging the constitutional validity of Article 35A. The first petition challenging 35A was filed in July 2014 by a rightwing non-government organisation, ‘We the Citizens’. It challenged the validity of the Article on the grounds that it had been inserted into the Indian Constitution through a Presidential Order in 1954, rather than by following the procedure prescribed in Article 368 of the Indian Constitution.
    Subsequent to this petition, three separate petitions were filed to challenge Article 35A. One of these, filed by Dr Charu Wali Khanna, contended that it “denies property right to a woman and her children marrying a person from outside the state”. The West Pakistan Refugees Association challenged Article 35A on grounds of discrimination in acquisition of property, government service, and voting rights.
    The Supreme Court has clubbed the three subsequent petitions with the main petition filed by ‘We the Citizens’.
    —PTI

  • California hit by 7.1-magnitude quake, strongest in two decades

    Friday’s quake was 11 times stronger than the previous day’s ‘foreshock’, seen as part of an ‘earthquake sequence’.

    Southern California has been rattled by its largest earthquake in two decades as a 7.1-magnitude tremor shook buildings and cut power supplies in parts of Los Angeles but did not cause major damage or deaths, officials said.

    The shallow quake struck near the small city of Ridgecrest on Friday at 8:19pm (3:19 GMT on Saturday), US seismologists said, and following a 6.4-magnitude earthquake that hit the same area the day before.

    The latest earthquake was 11 times stronger than the previous day’s “foreshock”, according to the US Geological Survey, and is part of what seismologists are calling an “earthquake sequence”.

    The tremor was felt more than 240km away, in Los Angeles, where the fire department deployed vehicles and helicopters to check on damage and residents in need of emergency aid.

    The earthquake was the largest in southern California since 1999 when a 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck the Twentynine Palms Marine Corps base, according to The Los Angeles Times.

    “We have word of wires down… and localised power outages in several City of Los Angeles neighborhoods… besides a handful of apparently small issues, NO major damage to infrastructure has been identified,” the Los Angeles Fire Department tweeted.

    The department later released a statement saying that its ground and air survey had found “no major infrastructure damage”.

    “There has been no loss of life or serious injury that we can directly attribute to the widely felt 8:19 PM earthquake,” LAFD spokesman Brian Humphrey said in the statement.

    The San Bernardino Fire Department tweeted that officers in the city east of Los Angeles were dealing with 911 calls, including one reported minor injury.

    “Homes shifted, foundation cracks, retaining walls down,” it wrote.

    LA Police Chief Michael Moore posted on his official Twitter account that rail and bus services were not damaged, and that services were still working.

    The ‘Big One
    The tremor sent Ridgecrest residents fleeing outside for safety and reporting continued aftershocks, with one woman saying she was “not comfortable” about heading back inside for the night.

    The shaking stops “for a minute, and then it starts rolling again … it’s pretty bizarre. But now at the moment, I’m not comfortable inside,” said Jessica Kormelink.

    The earthquake revived fears of the “Big One” – a powerful tremor along the San Andreas Fault that could devastate major cities in southern California.

    On Thursday, Caltech seismologist Lucy Jones had warned a press conference that there was “about a one-in-20 chance that this location will be having an even bigger earthquake within the next few days, that we have not yet seen the biggest earthquake of the sequence.”

    On Friday, Jones tweeted: “You know we say we 1 in 20 chance that an earthquake will be followed by something bigger? This is that 1 in 20 time.”

    SOURCE: AFP NEWS AGENCY

  • Tunisia bans Niqab in government offices

    Tunisia’s prime minister has banned the full-face veil in all government buildings due to security concerns. It comes after a deadly double suicide bombing in Tunis in late June.

    Prime Minister Youssef Chahed has barred women from wearing the full-face veil — or niqab — after the latest suicide attack in the capital, Tunis, at the end of June left two dead and seven wounded.

    Chahed signed a government circular “banning access to public administrations and institutions to anyone with their face covered,” his office said. The decision was made for “security reasons.”

    On Tuesday, the mastermind of those bombings blew himself up in a Tunis suburb to evade capture, the Interior Ministry said. But it denies that he was wearing a niqab to disguise himself, which witnesses had claimed.

    As far back as February 2014, police had been instructed to step up supervision of the wearing of the niqab — which covers the whole head apart from the eyes — as part of anti-terrorism measures, to prevent its use as a disguise or to escape justice.

    Niqabs and other forms of Islamic dress had been banned in Tunisia under secular presidents Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and Habib Bourguiba until a 2011 coup overthrew Ben Ali. (Agencies)

  • Eid Al Adha likely to fall on August 11

    Eid Al Adha is likely to fall on Sunday, August 11, according to the International Astronomical Centre (IAC) in Abu Dhabi.
    Eng Mohammed Shawkat, Director of the Centre, said there will be no dispute over the sighting of the Helal or new moon of the lunar month of Zul Hijjah.
    “Most Arab and Islamic centres will be able to easily and clearly see the new moon of Zul Hijjah by naked eyes and telescopes,” he said.
    As is the case every year, Saudi Arabia will announce the sighting of the new moon of Zul Hijjah and “most countries will approve this sighting which is linked to the season of Haj or pilgrimage.”
    He added that most Arab and Muslim countries will sight the Helal of Zul Hijjah on Thursday, August 1, 2019.
    “All these countries will be able to sight the new moon after the sunset by telescopes and even naked eyes at some regions.”
    It’s worth mentioning that the new moon of Zul Hijjah last year was sighted on Sunday, 12 August, 2018, while the Eid Al Adha fell on Tuesday, August 21 last year.
    Echoing the same, Ibrahim Al Jarwan, member of the Arab Union for Space and Astronomy Sciences (Auas), said the new moon of the lunar month of Zul Hijjah, the season of Haj or Pilgrimage, is expected to be on Thursday, August 1, around 7:11am.
    “It will disappear 28 minutes after the sunset.”
    “Therefore, the first day of the month of Zul Hijjah is predicted to fall on Friday, August 2, and Eid Al Adha will be on Sunday, August 11,” Al Jarwan said.

  • Pakistan Beat Bangladesh By 94 Runs

    Pakistan Beat Bangladesh By 94 Runs In Their Last Match

  • Pakistan officially knocked out of CWC 2019

    Pakistan team is out of the ongoing cricket world cup after Bangladesh crossed the calculated net run rate margin, which Pakistan needed to reserve a seat in semis, today in Lord’s Cricket Stadium.

    Earlier, Pakistan chose to bat after winning the toss and scored 315 at the loss of nine wickets.

    Chasing was not an option for Pakistan as then the net run rate differential margin with New Zealand was impossible to achieve batting second. Pakistan are currently on 9 points from 8 matches with 4 wins, 3 losses and one washout. Their current net run rate sits at -0.792 while New Zealand are at 0.175.

    They made a remarkable comeback in the ongoing tournament but could not make it to the semis.

    Earlier, Pakistan lost three of their first five matches with West Indies, India and Australia.

  • Land of sufi saints—Kashmir is now a ‘drug abusers paradise’

    2018 shows registration of 46,000 OPD patients at SMHS, over 12000 treated at ODP in 2019 so far; 88 per cent were male, 12 per cent females, say doctors, cannabis, anti- depressants, Heroine most favourite substances

    Srinagar, July 05: Kashmir, the land of sufi saints and a place known for its conservativeness is fasting turning into drug abusers paradise given the alarming figures disclosed by team of doctors at the Srinagar Maharaja Hari Singh hospital to Kashmir News Observer (KNO) on Friday. In year 2018, more than 40,000 patients were admitted for consuming various substances that include anti-depressants, cannabis and heroine and shockingly while as 88 per cent of total drug abusers were found males 12 per cent were females.

    The official figures accessed by the KNO shows the data of people who had fallen prey to the drug abuse since 2014. The figures paint a dismal picture as the numbers of drug abusers have shown a sudden surge in the past eight years with majority youth showing their addiction towards the use of cannabis (charas), alcohol and also some were seen addicted to the use of heroine. “Twelve percent of the females were also found involved in drug addiction. Some of them were also addicted to use of alcohol while majority were seen taking anti-depressants especially Benzodiazepine.”

    “Though the use of Heroin was not much among the patients admitted here but majority were consuming anti-depressants and cannabis and some were also seen addicted to alcohol,” a doctor at SMHS hospital told KNO, wishing not to be named. Official figures reveal that in the OPD at SMHS hospital total of 22791 were treated while as the figure rose up to 25823 in 2015. “In year 2016, the figure went up dramatically as 33747 patients were treated at the OPD. In 2017, the figure showed further upward trend as 33747 patients were treated at the OPD,” the figures reveal.
    In 2018, the data shows 46629 patients were registered at the OPD of the SMHS and in 2019 so far, 12615 patients were registered at the OPD of the hospital.

    The doctor said that the use cannabis was found at 35 per cent among the patients treated at OPD while as ten per cent was Alcohol usage, and 30 per cent multiple substances. “The figure includes 37 per cent Urban population and 62 per cent Rural Population. Srinagar tops the list of abusers followed by Anantnag, Pulwama, Budgam, Baramulla andBandipora. Kulgam has shown only two per cent population involved in the drug abuse,” another doctor revealed, stating the situation was alarming in Kashmir.

    A patient, who was addicted to the use of heroine, told KNO that heroine was easily available and he was getting it from his friends in Srinagar. “Whenever I consumed it, I lost my senses and preferred myself to keep locked inside a room in my house. Ever since I was treated here, I have stopped consuming heroine and won’t touch it again. But there is a huge market of drug peddlers in Srinagar and that can be gauged from the fact that heroine is just a phone call away,” he said, wishing anonymity.(KNO)