Category: Union Territory

  • DUBAI EXPO: Gateway of Industrial investments for J&K

    JAMMU, JANUARY 30:  The recently concluded Dubai Expo has opened the gateway for industrial investments for the entire Jammu and Kashmir which will be the ‘Dawn of New Era’ for the industrial development here.

    While participating in the Expo, the Jammu and Kashmir government received an encouraging response from Dubai based industrialists for investment. Several Global investors are now eyeing the untapped market and industrial potential of Jammu and Kashmir.

    During the Expo, J&K Government signed at least six agreements in potential sectors real estate, infrastructure, tourism, healthcare, food processing and others, generating large amount of investments which will be remarkable for the industrial growth of J&K.

    While participating in Expo, several known UAE based companies like Al Maya group, MATU investments LLC, Century Financial, Noon e-commerce and others signed Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with the government of Jammu and Kashmir. Apart from this, Letter of Intent (LoI) was also signed with Magna Waves private limited, Emaar group and Lulu international.

    During the Expo, Emaar Group signed an agreement with the Jammu and Kashmir government to develop a 500,000 square feet shopping mall in Srinagar. Emaar is UAE’s biggest real estate developer and the investment is expected to pave the way for further investments. Lulu Group has also pledged Rs. 600 million to develop a food processing unit in J&K.

    Moreover, UAE’s Century- Financial, whose owner is a son of soil and hails from Doda District, will also be investing $100m to build three hotels and one commercial-residential complex in the UT of J&K. Dubai ports giant DP World is set to build an inland port in J&K and the 250-acre site for the project will be finalized shortly.

    Interestingly, these projects will not only give considerable employment opportunities to the local youth will also benefit the Agriculture sector and uplift the economic conditions of farmers.

    Under the J&K-Dubai partnership, world famous GI-tagged Kashmiri saffron has been launched at Lulu hypermarket in Dubai.

    While participating in the investors summit at Dubai, Lieutenant Governor, Manoj Sinha un his address highlighted the strong business potential of J&K. He said that J&K has moved from a sleeping business destination to the land of opportunities and investment adding that J&K has the capability to provide opportunity to the industries to compete, correct and collaborate with readily available abundant resources.

    In the recent months, the proactive approach taken by the UT government in attracting the investors is testimony of the fact that J&K has ushered on the path of development with investments clocking around 60000 crores and in real terms coming years will be the ‘DAWN OF A NEW ERA’ for Jammu and Kashmir.

  • Pandemic or Endemic | Evolution of the Virus is Uncertain Global Scale Pandemic may Continue to Rage: WHO

    Some political leaders are calling for COVID to be treated as an endemic disease, but scientists warn that talk of a pandemic endgame is premature.

    SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

    Almost two years into the pandemic, some countries have declared their intention to start treating COVID-19 like other endemic diseases, such as seasonal flu.

    Despite witnessing relatively high infection rates amid the frenetic spread of the Omicron variant, which appears to cause less severe disease but is highly transmissible according to early studies, countries including England and Ireland have drastically loosened restrictions on public life.

    Denmark has announced plans to lift all restrictions next week, as its health ministry announced that COVID “will no longer be categorised as dangerous to society.”

    Official messaging from political leaders in Spain, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere has stressed that societies need to learn to live with the virus.

    “COVID is not going away. It’s going to be with us for many, many years, perhaps forever, and we have to learn to live with it,” Sajid Javid, the UK health minister, said last week.

    “I think we are leading Europe in the transition from pandemic to endemic and we’re leading the way in showing the world how you can live with COVID.”

    However, officials from the World Health Organization have warned that it is too early to treat COVID-19 as an endemic disease, stressing that the evolution of the virus is uncertain and noting that on a global scale the pandemic continues to rage.

    “We still have a huge amount of uncertainty and a virus that is evolving quite quickly, imposing new challenges. We are certainly not at the point where we are able to call it endemic,” WHO’s senior emergency officer for Europe, Catherine Smallwood, told a press briefing.

    The Omicron variant continues to cause surges of infection, which have increased pressure on public health systems. According to the WHO, 21 million new coronavirus cases were reported globally last week, the highest number of weekly infections since the pandemic began. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said on Wednesday that the Americas region saw its highest number of infections since the pandemic started, with more than eight million new cases.

    Meanwhile, much of the global population has not been fully vaccinated against COVID, increasing the chances of more severe disease among them. Low vaccination rates in many countries also make the emergence of a new variant more likely, which could derail attempts to treat COVID as endemic.

    What does endemic mean?

    The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) defines endemic “as the constant presence and/or usual prevalence of a disease or infectious agent in a population within a geographic area”.

    Dr Ebere Okereke, a senior technical adviser at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change and honorary senior public health adviser to Africa CDC, said one key factor is “predictability and stability”.

    “In public health [during endemicity] we have an expected and anticipated number of cases over a time period in a geographical region.”

    Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s health emergencies programme, recently noted, “Endemic in itself does not mean ‘good’. Endemic just means ‘it’s here forever’.”

    An epidemic is defined as a disease that affects a large number of people within a community, population and region. A pandemic is an epidemic that has spread to multiple countries or continents.

    When authorities decide to transition to treating a disease as endemic, it sometimes affects the measures that were previously implemented during the pandemic stage.

    “If something is a pandemic or an epidemic, we have to take certain precautionary measures against it to limit its spread. And with an endemic, those same measures aren’t needed or required,” Dr Anna Blakney, an assistant professor in the Michael Smith Laboratories and School of Biomedical Engineering at the University of British Columbia, told Al Jazeera.

    In the case of COVID, Blakney said this could mean governments are starting to imply they would like to do “less to control this as far as restrictions, testing, masking or any of the measures that have been shown to work against COVID”.

    Is COVID-19 transitioning to an endemic disease?

    Any potential transition would vary from country to country, depending on several factors such as how widespread the disease is within national borders and the level of immunity within the population.

    According to the United Nations, two out of three people have been vaccinated with at least one dose in high-income countries. In low-income countries, one in nine people have been vaccinated with at least one dose as of January 19.

    “When you say that a disease [has] transitioned from epidemic to endemic, there are no hard and fast rules to determine that,” Dr Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told Al Jazeera.

    However, he said one marker could be when you do not see the disease undermining hospital capacity.

    “Once COVID-19 loses that ability through enough immunity … I think the world is going to get to endemicity, but it’s going to be on different timelines depending upon where you are at,” he added.

    According to Adalja, endemicity is inevitable in the case of COVID.

    “I think that from the very first day in the COVID-19 pandemic, it was always going to be the case that this became an endemic respiratory virus,” Adalja said.

    He added that the main priority was to get more tools, like vaccines, antivirals, and monoclonal antibodies, that would help to reduce the strain on hospitals and health systems.

    “Omicron has accelerated this process … we are basically at the cusp of endemicity and it may be the case that after Omicron surge washes over the countries of the world, we will be clearly in the endemic phase,” Adalja added.

    INTERACTIVE - COVID19 endemic diseases

    How close is the world to exiting the pandemic phase?

    Hans Kluge, the WHO Europe director, said on Sunday the Omicron strain has moved Europe into a different stage of the pandemic.

    “It’s plausible that the region is moving towards a kind of pandemic endgame,” Kluge told news agency AFP in an interview, adding that Omicron could infect 60 percent of Europeans by March.

    He said Europe could expect months of global immunity once the current wave subsides due to the vaccines or the infection.

    “We anticipate that there will be a period of quiet before COVID-19 may come back towards the end of the year, but not necessarily the pandemic coming back,” Kluge said.

    But the following day, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus appeared to shoot down Kluge’s comments.

    “It is dangerous to assume that Omicron will be the last variant, or that we are in the endgame … globally the conditions are ideal for more variants to emerge,” he said.

    Okereke shares a similar outlook, noting a lack of knowledge about the coronavirus that is needed for the world to be able to predict the behaviour of new strains and enter endemicity.

    “I don’t believe we know enough about SARS-Cov-2 to say that if a new variant emerges, this is how it will behave, or to say new variants will not emerge, we don’t know,” Okereke said.

    “The key thing to reduce the emergence of new variants is to ensure that we optimise vaccination programmes globally.

    “Until we do that, we run the risk of having new variants, whose behaviour we currently cannot predict,” she added.

    Rates of vaccination against COVID-19 have remained low in Africa, with about 8 percent of the continent’s population fully vaccinated against the disease.

    “In Africa … we do not have the luxury of significant population proportions of our population being immunised enough for us to start to say, we’ve got this, we are in a pandemic endgame,” Okereke said.

    Experts warn there is still not enough information to know with precision what follows next, particularly with new strains.

    “If the virus starts becoming a milder virus, we would be okay,” Blakney said. “But if it suddenly becomes really contagious and lethal then we’re not going to be in a good place.”

    What does the early data around the Omicron variant tell us about the pandemic?

    Omicron was first discovered in South Africa in late November and early research has found the strain appears to be highly transmissible. Symptoms of the infection appear to be less severe than in other variants, while early studies indicate that the symptoms experienced by vaccinated patients seem to be milder than among the unvaccinated.

    Its high transmissibility has also proven to be a challenge. Its spread has caused a significant strain in health systems, with many countries struggling with an influx of patients.

    “Omicron is so widespread that we’re still seeing a spike in the hospitalisations and deaths from it,” Blakney said.

    The current situation “tells us that as long as there is a risk of significant transmission and emergence of new variants we have to keep our guard up”, Okereke said.

    ” It tells us that, although our vaccines may not be the perfect solution … they have a significant role in reducing the severity of illness in the vaccinated.

    “But the Omicron variant also shows us that we can’t let our guard down, we need to continue to improve the tools we have in our portfolio to manage this pandemic,” she added.

    How can the world exit the pandemic?

    There is a consensus among most health experts that a way of ending this pandemic is by making vaccines and treatments available on a global scale.

    “Vaccinations are key,” Blakney said.

    “We need to keep making new vaccines, and understanding how long that immunity lasts. We also need to scale up the production of every tool that we have, antivirals, testing, monoclonal antibodies, and make sure they are widely accessible.

    “We have the tools, it is just a matter of making them accessible to people all around the world,” she added.

    SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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

  • Opinion | SMC Demolition Drive Right or Wrong?

    SMC Demolition Drive Right or Wrong?

    By: Showkat Wisal

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    Disclaimer: This video is not a work by Kashmir Today Staff.

    No copyright infringement intended.

  • JeM’s Kashmir Chief, mastermind of IED attacks among 4 slain militants in Pulwama gunfight: Top Security Officials

    Another militant killed in Budgam, total 5 killed in 12 Hrs; Foreign militants settling in civilian areas, human, technical intelligence leading to successful Ops: IGP Kashmir; Says focus is to bring down number of active militants to less than 100 this year; House owner’s son was a Hybrid militant; House owner to be booked under UAPA, will wipe-out; 8 foreigners among 21 militants killed since Jan 1; Killing of Zahid Manzoor a big success: GoC Victor Force

    Pulwama, Jan 30: Top security officials Sunday said that five militants were killed in twin encounters in past 12 hours—four in Naira, Pulwama district and one in Charar-e-Shareef area of Budgam district. They said among the four slain in Naira, Pulwama was the wanted Jaish-e-Muhammad outfit’s Kashmir chief for south Kashmir Zahid Manzoor Wani.

    Addressing a joint press conference at Balapur, Shopian, the General officer Commanding (GoC) of South Kashmir based Victor Force Lieutenant General Prashant Srivastava said that acting on a specific lead, joint teams of police, army and CRPF laid a siege in Naira village of Pulwama on Saturday evening. “In the initial assault, three militants were killed and later the presence of another militant was established and he was also killed and identified as Zahid Manzoor Wani, an IED expert and the JeM’s south Kashmir chief,” the GoC Victor Force said as per news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO). He was the master mind of IED attacks carried out in South Kashmir since 2017 and the main recruiter of local boys into militancy fold. “His killing is a big success for forces,” he said.

    Speaking on the occasion, IGP Kashmir Vijay Kumar said that during the operation, house owner’s son Inayat Ahmed, was asked to surrender but he along with militants opened fire at the security forces and got killed. “He was a hybrid militant,” the IGP said. He said that the house owner at Naira, Pulwama, in whose house the encounter took place, will be booked under UAPA.

    He said the killing of JeM commander Zahid Manzoor Wani, who was the wanted commander of JeM, was killed along with his three associates while another militant of LeT was killed in an encounter at Charar-e-Shareef in Budgam district. “In total, five militants, of which four were killed in Naira, Pulwama and one in Budgam in the past 12 hours,” he said. The IGP said that Zahid was in fact the chief of JeM for the entire Kashmir. “His brother was also a militant and is in jail,” the IGP said.

    The IGP said that since January 1, 11 encounters took place in which 21 militants including eight foreigners were killed. “Foreigners who were hiding in forests are coming and settling down in civilian areas. With the help of human and technical inputs, we are zeroing in on them and killing them in clean operations,” he said, adding that in both the operations, there were no casualties to security forces. He said all efforts are in place to bring down local militant recruitment and a strategy is being followed to bring the number of active militants less than 100 this year—(KNO)

  • Private Bank’s cash-filled ATM stolen in South Kashmir’s Qazigund

    Qazigund, Jan 30: A private bank Automated Teller Machine (ATM) carrying Rs 4.5 lakh was stolen in Qazigund area of South Kashmir’s Kulgam district on the intervening night of Saturday and Sunday, official sources said.

    Sources told news agency Kashmir News Trust that some miscreants barged into the HDFC Bank ATM located near Petrol Pump in Qazigund. The burglars took away the machine along with the cash.

    Sources said that there was no security guard present at the ATM at the time of the incident.

    “There were approximately Rs 4.5 lakh in the ATM,” said a bank employee on condition of anonymity.

    Police have taken cognizance of the theft incident and started an investigation. (KNT)

  • Top JeM commander among Five militants of JeM/ LeT killed in Overnight twin Gunfights

    JeM commander Zahid Wani and Pakistani Kafeel @Chotu among 05 militants killed in last 12hrs, says big success for us: IGP Kashmir

    Srinagar, January 30: Top commander and a Pakistani among Five militants affliated with outfit Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-i-Toiba were killed in twin overnight gunfights in Pulwama and Budgam districts on Sunday.

    In a tweet by official Police handle, the Kashmir Zone Police while Quoting Inspector General of Police Kashmir Vijay Kumar wrote, ” 05 militants of Pakistan sponsored militant outfits LeT & JeM killed in dual encounters in last 12 hours. JeM commander militant Zahid Wani & a Pakistani militant among the killed. Big success for us,”.

    Talking to GNS Inspector General of Police Kashmir Vijay Kumar said that besides top commander Zahid Wani, a Pakistani militant identifying him as Kafeel @Chotu was killed in Pulwama Gunfight. Both were affiliated with JeM.

    Kafeel was active since 2020 in Pulwama-Shopian Belt, the top police officer added.

    On Saturday evening two encounters started back to back in Naira area of Pulwama and Charar-i-Shareef area of Central Kashmir’s Budgam district between militants and security forces.

    Three militants of JeM including top commander Zahid Wani were killed in Naira area of Pulwama while as two LeT militants were killed in Charar-i-Shareef area of Budgam, an official added.(GNS)

  • Encounter breaks out in Charar-e-Shareef

    Budgam, Jan 29: An encounter broke out between forces and militants in Charar-e-Shareef area of Budgam district.

    As per the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), police said that the gunfight raged in Charar-e-Shareef area while police and security forces are on job.

    “#Encounter has started at Chrar-i-Sharief area of #Budgam. Police and security forces are on the job. Further details shall follow,” Kashmir Zone Police tweeted—(KNO)

  • SMC mulls to cancel allotment of shops to street vendors who still install carts in on roadsides

    Srinagar, Jan 29: The Srinagar Municipal Corporation (SMC) is mulling to cancel the allotment of the street vendors, who despite being allotted the shops are still installing their carts at Hari Singh High Street and other places.

    SMC Commissioner, Athar Aamir Khan talking with the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) said that a lot of street vendors have so far been allotted the shops in order to reduce the number of street vendors and ensure the roadsides are not occupied.

    However, he said that the complaints are pouring in that the street vendors, who have been allotted the shops, still install their carts at Hari Singh High Street and other places failing under SMC’s jurisdiction, thus adding to the miseries of the people, especially pedestrians and the commuters.

    “I don’t have the exact figures at present, but a large number of street vendors have been provided the shops so far. In order to act against the persons installing their carts despite being allotted the shops, the corporation is going to cancel the allotment to such street vendors,” he said.

    He added that it is an extensive exercise, which further needs to be done also.

    Pertinently, the commuters have been complaining that the roadsides being occupied by the street vendors are pushing them to the wall as the street vendors leave no space for them, which most of the times also result in traffic mess as well.

    In the recent past, the government shifted at least 250 registered street vendors to the smart vending zone, established at Magarmal Bagh area of Srinagar.

    Besides, the street vendors were also allotted the suitable space in the commercial hub Lal Chowk, which has been named ‘Makkah market’—(KNO)

  • BJP strongly condemns killing of Police Constable in Bejbehara, Anantnag

    Srinagar: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Unit Kashmir strongly condemned the killing of Policeman Martyr Ali Mohmmad by terrorists at Hassanpora, Bejbehara, Anantnag.

    BJP General Secretary Organization Ashok Koul termed the killing as barbaric and cowardly act and have no place in a civilized society, deserve strong condemnation by all without any caste, creed or religion.

    Koul also expressed his grief with bereaved family and prayed for their courage to bear this irreparable loss.

  • Policeman Shot Dead In Hassanpora Anantnag

    Srinagar, Jan 29: A policeman was shot dead by militants in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district on Saturday, official said.

    A police official told GNS that the head constable Ali Mohammad son Ghulam Qadir Ganie was fired upon by unknown militants at Hassapora area, leaving him critically injured.

    He was shifted to GMC Anantnag were doctors declared him dead.

    “He was brought dead,” a doctor at GMC Anantnag said. (GNS)