Category: Union Territory

  • Bakery shop owner in Magam escapes after declaring positive, shop sealed

    Budgam: Authorities in Magam area of Central Kashmir’s Budgam district sealed a bakery shop after its owner with multiple addresses was found positive for Covid-19 infection.

    Representational Picture

    Ironically, the 52 year old man escaped from Sub District Hospital Magam and despite being positive had himself visited JVC SKIMS Bemina asking the doctors there to take his samples again. When the doctors at JVC asked him, how he come visited the hospital all alone, the man gave a slip and disappeared for almost 24 hours.

    “We are trying to find out where he had spent his time after declaring positive. It is a serious matter and will be probed,” said an official.

    Tehsildar Magam said that they have sealed his bakery shop and action will be initiated against him for his ‘unpredictable’ behavior and putting the lives of other people into danger.

    Block Medical Officer Magam, Dr Abid Ali told news agency KNT that the man has mentioned three addresses Baramulla, Batamaloo Srinagar and Bamrooda and it was confusing. “We called the control room and he has now been put under isolation ward,” he said adding that the man in question is actually the inhabitant of Baramulla and runs a bakery shop in Magam.

    When KNT contacted the man in question, he said he was walking near Iqbal Park Srinagar, when he received a call from Sub-District Hospital Magam informing him he was found Covid-19 positive. “After this information, I decided to visit JVC to get tested again, but doctors there refused to take my samples asking me to visit Baramulla or Magam for the re-sampling. I spent the night at my rented house and right now I am at CD Hospital Srinagar,” he said.

    He refused to name the location where he had spent the night. (KNT)

  • Pak targets areas along LoC in Nowshera

    PTI

    Jammu: The Pakistani Army on Wednesday opened fire and shelled mortars along the LoC in Jammu and Kashmir’s Rajouri district, officials said.

    The Indian Army effectively retaliated.

    “At about 0730 hours today, Pak initiated unprovoked ceasefire violation by firing of small arms & intense shelling with mortars along LoC in Nowshera Sector”, a defence spokesman said.

    Exchanges were on when last reports came from the area.

    Pakistani troops had shelled areas along the LoC in Mankote and Khari Karmara sectors of Poonch district on Monday and Tuesday.

  • Exclusive: In Talks, China Takes Hard Line, Claims All of Galwan Valley, Chunk of Pangong Tso

    During the military-to-military dialogue on Saturday, China refused to even discuss its intrusions into the Galwan River valley, instead claiming ownership over the entire area.

    New Delhi: Three days after Indian and Chinese military commanders met on Saturday at Chushul, in Ladakh, to discuss the crisis caused by the occupation by thousands of Chinese soldiers of territory traditionally patrolled by both armies, top army sources in India sought to portray a rapidly improving situation.

    Map of Ladakh. Image: Google Maps/The Wire
    Map of Ladakh.
    Image: Google Maps/The Wire

    Claiming that both sides – the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the Indian Army – have “retreated a bit” after the Saturday meeting, the army sources revealed that another Sino-Indian meeting would be held on Wednesday at a more junior level.

    However, sources on the ground paint a far bleaker picture of Chinese intransigence along the Line of Actual Control (LAC). They say that during the talks, the PLA interlocutors flatly rejected the Indian demand for Chinese troops to withdraw from areas they occupied in May and restore the status quo that prevailed in April.

    In fact, during the military-to-military dialogue on Saturday, China refused to even discuss its intrusions into the Galwan River valley, instead claiming ownership over the entire area.

    Underlining these sharp divergences between the Indian and Chinese positions, no joint statement was released after Lieutenant General Harinder Singh, the Leh corps commander, met PLA Major General Liu Lin, who heads the South Xinjiang Military Region in a bid to defuse the confrontation.

    Nor did New Delhi release any details about the military discussions. Only on Tuesday, after being sharply criticised by opposition members, including Rahul Gandhi of the Congress Party, did “top army sources” present the media with the military’s version of events.

    According to their version, the Indian and Chinese corps commanders met one-on-one for almost three hours before engaging further during delegate-level talks. The two sides “mutually agreed and identified five locations of conflicts” between PLA and Indian troops. These include Patrolling Point 14 (PP14), PP15, PP17, the north bank of Pangong Tso Lake and Chushul.

    The fact that these conflict locations make no mention of the Galwan River valley lends credence to the argument that the sector did not feature on the discussion agenda.

    Galwan River valley

    During the talks, the PLA indicated they were taking control of the Galwan River valley, which has traditionally been a peaceful sector where China adhered to a claim line. Now PLA negotiators have asserted ownership of the entire Galwan Valley, claiming that China had controlled the hilltops astride the Galwan River for “as long as they could remember.”

    The PLA alleged that the one-kilometre-long track that India had built from the Shyok-Galwan river junction, heading eastwards along the Galwan River, was an encroachment on Chinese territory. They alleged that India was developing this track into a metal (black-topped) road.

    Map of the road to Daulat Beg Oldi.
    Photo: Wikimedia

    The Indian army representatives countered that the Chinese had constructed a metal road right to where the LAC had existed up till May – that is five kilometres from where the Galwan flows into the Shyok river – and that the road would soon cross the LAC. The Chinese responded that the Galwan Valley was their area and it was legitimate for them to build a road in it.

    Indian negotiators also objected strongly to PLA troops deploying in the close vicinity of India’s Gogra post. Sources say the PLA did not offer a cogent response.

    Nor was there a cogent PLA response to Indian allegations that the Chinese were constructing a road on India’s side of the LAC between Hot Springs and Gogra.

    Pangong Tso area

    Responding to Indian charges of Chinese intrusions onto the Pangong Tso north bank, the PLA negotiators claimed they had “acted rightfully” in constructing a metalled road up to Finger 4, and preparing defensive positions in that disputed area.

    Prior to May, the Indian army regularly patrolled till their perceived LAC at Finger 8, eight kilometres east of Finger 4. However, since May 5, when thousands of PLA troops blocked and savagely beat up outnumbered Indian troops in that area, Indian patrols are unable to go beyond Finger 4, which the Chinese now claim is the LAC.

    The Chinese military officials accepted that the aggression with which PLA soldiers attacked Indian troops at the Pangong Tso in mid-May “was not in the right spirit,” but said it was a reaction to Indian patrols crossing the PLA’s version of the LAC.

    The Indian army also brought up the need to reduce forward deployments of PLA soldiers, armoured vehicles and artillery guns. The Chinese responded they would have to refer the matter to their superiors.

    Gains and losses

    Army sources apprehend the PLA has gained strategically in the Galwan Valley, where they now occupy positions overlooking the strategic Darbuk-Shyok-Daulet Beg Oldi (DSDBO) road to Depsang, at the base of the Karakoram Pass.

    The Chinese have also gained strategically by isolating the Depsang area, as a consequence of dominating the DSDBO road. There is currently a large Chinese armour build up opposite Depsang, which is raising apprehensions of surprise ingress in that sector by the PLA.

    Chinese gains in the Pangong Tso area, however, are being seen as tactical, even though the levels of violence the PLA displayed there is worrisome.

    The other PLA activities at Naku La (Sikkim) and at Harsil and Lipu Lekh (Uttarakhand) are being viewed as “red herrings”, aimed at tying down Indian troops rather than serving any larger strategic objectives.

    The army is also closely watching the long border between Arunachal Pradesh and Tibet, which is called the McMahon Line. This has been entirely quiet so far, with no Chinese activity in this area.

    On Tuesday, Indian army sources provided a military-political perspective to the on-going PLA intrusions. “The core issue is the undecided LAC. Until that is solved, these episodes and issues will continue to happen,” they stated.

    Also to blame, according to the army sources, was the PLA’s militarisation of the border areas. “China has deployed fighter bombers, rocket forces, air defence radars, jammers, etcetera. India has also deployed all its major assets along the LAC… just a few kilometres away from the frontline. India will continue to have a major build up until China withdraws the build up [it has] done there,” they said.

    With inputs from The Wire

    (This story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • New media policy for UT: J&K officials to rule on ‘fake news’, take legal action

    Under the new policy, a background check of newspaper publishers, editors and key staff has been made mandatory before empanelling them for government advertisements, apart from security clearance before a journalist is given accreditation.

    “J&K has significant law and order and security considerations, it has been fighting a proxy war supported and abetted from across the border,” reads the 50-page policy document that mostly deals with government advertisements to news organisations.

    New media policy, J&K officials, fake news, Kashmir news, Indian express news

    The new media policy announced by the J&K administration on June 2 gives it powers to decide what is “fake”, “unethical” or “anti-national” news, and to take legal action against the journalist or media organisation concerned, including stopping government advertisements and sharing information with security agencies.

    “J&K has significant law and order and security considerations, it has been fighting a proxy war supported and abetted from across the border,” reads the 50-page policy document that mostly deals with government advertisements to news organisations, adding, “In such a situation, it is extremely important that the efforts of anti-social and anti-national elements to disturb peace are thwarted.”

    Under the new policy, a background check of newspaper publishers, editors and key staff has been made mandatory before empanelling them for government advertisements, apart from security clearance before a journalist is given accreditation.

    While DIPR Director Sehrish Asghar declined to comment, Secretary Information Rohit Kansal, who is also the government spokesman, did not respond despite repeated attempts.

    According to the new policy, the government would monitor content published in newspapers and other media channels and decide what is fake news, anti-social or anti-national reporting. The news organisations involved in “fake, unethical and anti-national” reporting would be de-empanelled and not get government advertisements, apart from facing legal action.

    “DIPR (Directorate of Information and Public Relations) shall examine the content of the print, electronic and other forms of media for fake news, plagiarism and unethical or anti-national activities,” says the media policy on pages 8 and 9. “…Any fake news or any news inciting hatred or disturbing communal harmony shall be proceeded against under IPC and Cyber laws”.

    With regards to “fake news or news with anti-social, communal or anti-national content”, the policy adds on page 9, the DIPR will “devise a suitable coordination and information sharing mechanism with the security agencies”.

    About journalists, the policy says on page 8, “Similarly, while giving/finalising accreditations, a robust background-check including verification of antecedents of each journalist would be carried out with the assistance of the relevant authorities… For this purpose, the guidelines for accreditation shall be revised and updated to reflect this requirement.”

    It says before empanelment of news organisations for release of government advertisements, “antecedents of the paper/news portal as well that of its publishers/editors/key personnel (must be) duly gone into. This shall be reflected in the empanelment guidelines”.

    As of now, security clearance from the J&K Police’s CID wing is mandatory before the Registrar of Newspapers for India issues registration to any newspaper.

    Media in India is largely self-regulated, through agencies like the Press Council of India and News Broadcasting Standards Authority. ‘Print Media Advertisement Policy Guidelines’ of Haryana say a newspaper’s empanelment can be suspended if it “indulged in unethical practices or anti national activities as found by the Press Council of India” or the state government.

    States have separate rules for accreditation of journalists, but these don’t include background check as a pre-condition.

    In the recent past, several journalists in the Valley have faced police action for their news stories. Last month, photographer Masrat Zehra and journalist-author Gowhar Geelani were booked under anti-terror laws for social media posts. Police also registered a case over a news report in The Hindu and summoned its Srinagar correspondent, Peerzada Ashiq.

    With inputs from The Indian Express

  • Shopian Encounter: All three militants killed, operation over

    Shopian Encounter: All three militants killed, operation over12 militants killed in 4 days in Shopian district | Internet snapped

    Srinagar: Three militants were killed in a gunfight with government forces in Sugoo Hendhama area of South Kashmir’s Shopian district on Wednesday.

    Inspector General of Police Kashmir Zone Vijay Kumar (IPS) told GNS that three militants were killed in the operation. However, he said, the identity of the slain militants was yet to be ascertained.

    Its pertinent to mention that total of 12 militants have been killed all alone in Shopian district since 07th June including two commanders.

    Meanwhile Mobile Internet has been suspended in the Shopian district for precautionary measures.

    Earlier, according to the reports reaching GNS, a joint team of Police, Army’s 44RR and CRPF launched a cordon-and-search-operation in Sugoo Hendhama.

    As the joint team approached the suspected spot, the hiding militants fired upon them. The fire was retaliated by the joint team, triggering off an encounter. (GNS)

  • Covid-19 test results can change within a few hours: Doctors

    Srinagar: Kashmir-based doctors on Tuesday said that Covid-19 test results of a person can change within a few hours depending upon the viral load and RT-PCR value.

    They said that although human error cannot be ruled out, scientific and clinical evidence confirms that Covid-19 test result shows huge variation in some patients within a short period, depending upon the timing of sample collection, subsequent testing, and status of the virus in the body.

    File Photo | Dr. Parvaiz Koul

    A leading pulmonologist of Kashmir, Dr Parvaiz Koul, told Kashmir Reader that the Covid-19 test result can change from positive to negative within a day or a few hours if the patient’s viral load changes.

    The patient can be declared as positive on day one if the samples have a rather low cycle-threshold (CT value), he said.

    “And on day two, CT value could just be above the cut-off, though not very significantly different from day one, and it could be correctly reported as negative. So, change in the result is possible scientifically, unless both samples were collected simultaneously and sent to two different labs. In the latter case it can be a clear lab error,” Dr Koul, who also heads the Internal and Pulmonary medicine department at SKIMS, said.

    Another doctor, Dr Shahnazwaz B Kaloo, who is working as Consultant for Vascular and Interventional Radiology, said that a positive test means ‘infection’ but a negative test does not always mean ‘no infection’.
    “Sampling error is common and it can result in ‘falsely negative’ test. Lastly, if someone tests positive, he shouldn’t repeat it elsewhere. This is a waste of resources,” he wrote on Twitter.

    On Monday, controversy emerged over the authenticity of Covid-19 testing in Kashmir after a senior journalist among many who tested positive for Covid-19 at the lab of Chest Diseases Hospital tested negative at other labs, including SKIMS. This discrepancy prompted the Lieutenant Governor of J&K to order a probe into it.

    According to Nodal Officer for Covid-19 at Government Medical College (GMC) Srinagar, Dr Saleem Khan, the CD Hospital lab is ICMR approved and comes under Biosafety level 3.

    “There is no question that the CD Hospital lab is incorrect in its test reports. The possibility of the results changing is there because in most cases the samples were taken more than 24 hours apart,” he said.

    Dr Khan said that the CD lab stands by its reports, and so does GMC Srinagar.
    “Some netizens and non-medicos misunderstood the test results,” he said.

    Dr Khan said he was happy that the journalist was tested negative of Covid-19. However, he added that CD Hospital microbiologists and GMC Srinagar administration were sure that the journalist was positive earlier as per the lab report.

    “We confirmed the samples twice as per the guidelines. He was positive but his viral load might have shown decline when his second sample was taken at SKIMS,” he said.

  • Cancel Amarnath Yatra this year: Kashmir’s Grand Mufti asks Govt

    Srinagar: Kashmir’s Grand Mufti Nasir-ul-Islam has appealed the authorities to cancel the Amarnath Yatra this year in view of spread of coronavirus.

    With Jammu and Kashmir witnessing a spike in Covid-19 cases, authorities are considering holding Amarnath Yatra only through the shorter Baltal route this year.

    The 41-day Yatra was to begin on June 23, but owing to Covid-19, authorities are yet to make an announcement. In April, the UT administration and Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board said the Yatra would be cancelled this year. The press note was later withdrawn.

    “Kashmiris have always welcomed the Amarnath Yatris but it should be cancelled this year in view of the coronavirus. Kashmir is already vulnerable for COVID-19, if Yatra is allowed, there could be further spread of this infection in the valley,” Mufti Nasir-ul-Islam told news agency Kashmir Indepth News Service (KINS).

    “If Mosques and other religious places are closed then why Amarnath Yatra can’t be cancelled this year,” he asked.

    He also raised questions why Bandipora and Ganderbal were not declared Red Zones. “Is this because Yatris have to go through these places” he asked.

    The government has recently said that around 20,000 healthcare professionals and 30,000 police and paramilitary personnel were working to contain the spread of coronavirus, and their availability is also to be ascertained for the conduct of the Yatra.

    The annual pilgrimage attracts devotees from all over India. The pilgrims have to register with the SASB to take part in the Amarnath Yatra. The SASB organises the travel and security with the help of the government of Jammu to Kashmir.
    The Yatra starts from Yatri Bhawan in Jammu and is escorted by CRPF to the base camp at Pahalgam in Anantnag in south Kashmir. The Yatris halt at Pahalgam and then proceed in groups to trek the 48-km route for the darshan of the lingam at Amarnath cave. (KINS)

  • False negative results are occurring because healthcare providers aren’t collecting samples with enough of virus: DAK

    Srinagar: Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) on Tuesday said one in three patients infected with the novel coronavirus receive false negative test results.

    “A negative test does not exclude the possibility of Covid-19 infection,” said DAK President Dr Nisar ul Hassan.
    “RT-PCR test is the most common diagnostic test used to identify people currently infected with Covid infection. It works by detecting the virus from nasal or throat swabs of patients,” he said.

    Dr Nisar said the clinical sensitivity of PCR test ranges from 66% to 80%. That means more than 30 percent of positive cases may be missed by the test.

    “Inappropriate sample collection is the main culprit behind inaccurate testing,” he said.

    Dr Nisar false negative results are occurring because healthcare providers aren’t collecting samples with enough of virus. This can happen because they don’t insert a swab deep enough in the nose or don’t collect enough of the sample.

    “False negative can also occur if persons are testing too early or too late during their infection and there isn’t lot of virus in their cells,” he said.
    “And, errors can happen if a sample sits too long before being tested which allows the virus to break down,” he added.

    Dr Nisar said another issue related to PCR test is “false positive result”.
    “That means people who are uninfected receive positive results for Covid,” he said.

    Dr Nisar said the false positive result can be due to contamination either from a positive sample analyzed in the lab at the same time (cross contamination) or more likely from genes amplified from prior positive samples or positive controls (carryover contamination). False positives can also be produced by sample mix-ups or data entry errors.
    “False positive results lead to unnecessary sequestration of uninfected individuals and waste of human resources in contact tracing,” he said.

    “It is important to mention that if the test is not perfect, it does not mean it is not useful.

    Proper sample procedures, good lab practice standard and using high quality PCR kits could reduce inaccurate results,” said Dr Nisar.

  • India-China border dispute ‘killing thousands of pashmina goats’

    Herders and officials say goats that produce cashmere wool are being pushed out of grazing lands in the sensitive area.

    AFP

    The world is heading for a shortage of the highly prized and super-soft cashmere wool as pashmina goats that live on the “roof of the world” become caught up in the fractious border dispute between nuclear neighbours India and China.

    Wool from pashmina goats, reared by nomads in the inhospitable high-altitude cold desert region of Ladakh, is the most expensive and coveted cashmere in the world.

    cashmere production
    A pashmina goat out to pasture near Durbuk village between Chang La mountain pass and Tangste in Ladakh
    [File: Noemi Cassanelli/AFP]

    But the shaggy creatures that provide the yarn are being pushed out of their grazing lands in the tussle between the world’s two most-populous nations, causing the death of tens of thousands of kids this season, locals and officials said.

    “In about three years when the newborn goats would have started yielding pashmina we’ll see a significant drop in production,” Sonam Tsering of the All Changtang Pashmina Growers Cooperative Marketing Society told AFP.

    cashmere production
    A Changpa child sits near pashmina goats in a nomadic camp near Korzok village in Ladakh’s Leh district
    [File: Noemi Cassanelli/AFP]

    There have been numerous face-offs and brawls between Chinese and Indian soldiers over their 3,500-kilometre (2,200-mile) frontier, which has never been properly demarcated.

    The latest is concentrated in the Ladakh region, just opposite Tibet, with Indian officials claiming Chinese troops encroached over the boundary in recent weeks.

    The alleged movements came after military fisticuffs at the eastern part of the border near Sikkim in May.

    ‘Newborns dead’

    Some traditional grazing land is lost to China each year, Tsering said.

    AFP/Disputed Kashmir

    But this year, even the main winter grazing areas near KakJung, Tum Tselay, Chumar, Damchok and Korzok are out of bounds amid the heightened tensions, he added.

    “It’s devastating. The PLA (China’s People’s Liberation Army) used to encroach into our side by the metres, but this time they have come inside several kilometres,” said Jurmet, a former elected official who has only one name.

    “It was breeding season for the goats. Around 85 percent of their newborns died this year because large herds were pushed out into the cold from the grazing lands (in February),” he told AFP over the phone from Leh, the region’s capital city.

    Tsering said Indian soldiers were blocking the animals from entering areas deemed as sensitive, while herders told him the Chinese army was pushing Tibetan nomads into their grazing areas.

    AFP/File/ Noemi Cassanelli
    The shaggy creatures that provide the yarn are being pushed out of their grazing lands in the tussle between China and India

    Half a dozen residents involved with goat herding who AFP spoke to said that until a few years ago, they would cross over the frozen Indus river for grazing during the winter, but those areas were now being encroached by China.

    Meanwhile, communicating with the herders — whose satellite phones provided by Indian officials have been withdrawn in recent years — has become difficult, said Jurmet.

    Vital handicrafts industry

    AFP/File/ Noemi Cassanelli
    More than 1,000 families of nomadic Changpa herders roam the vast Changtang plateau grazing thousands of animals

    The huge number of deaths — in the tens of thousands according to a local Indian official who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity — could devastate the sector in the coming years.

    The goats yield some 50 tonnes of the finest and most expensive feather-light cashmere wool each year, supporting the vital handicrafts industry in Kashmir that employs thousands of people.

    Most of the wool is woven into yarn and exquisite shawls sold the world over from luxury store Harrods in London to the Dubai Mall in the United Arab Emirates, and can cost up to US$800 for one scarf.

    More than 1,000 families of nomadic Changpa herders roam the vast Changtang plateau at over 5,000 metres (16,400 feet), grazing some 300,000 Pashmina goats, black yaks and horses through the summer months.

    They move to the slightly lower altitude grazing lands straddling Tibet and along the mighty Indus river during harsh winter months of December to February when temperatures drop up to minus 50 degrees Celsius (minus 58 degrees Fahrenheit).

    AFP/File/ Noemi Cassanelli
    The military tensions are the latest blow for the herders, who are already reeling from the impact of climate change

    The military tensions are the latest blow for the herders, who are already reeling from the impact of climate change which has made winters harsher and summers drier.

    Something have even abandoned their generations-long way of life to migrate to towns in Ladakh in search of other sources of income.

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

  • Prominent advocate appointed judge of J-K High Court

    PTI

    New Delhi: A prominent advocate was on Tuesday appointed a judge of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court.

    According to a Law Ministry notification, Javed Iqbal Wani has been appointed a judge of the common high court of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir and Union Territory of Ladakh.

    His recommendation, made by the Supreme Court Collegium, was pending with the central government for the past few months.

    The recommendation was finally processed last week and the notification issued on Tuesday.

    Wani has represented the Union government in several cases in the Jammu and Kashmir High Court.

    He is the son-in-law of Mian Abdul Qayoom, the president of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court Bar Association, who was detained under the Public Safety Act.