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  • Vijay fan killed by Rajinikanth fan, after argument over coronavirus relief funds

    The duo got into a heated fight over which actor had donated more for the COVID-19 relief fund in Tamil Nadu

    PTI

    A 22-year-old fan of actor Vijay died after he was allegedly attacked by a fan of actor Rajinikanth following a wordy duel at Marakkanam on Thursday.

    Police have arrested A. Dinesh Babu, fan of actor Rajinikanth in connection with the murder. According to police, the deceased M. Yuvaraj and his neighbour Dinesh Babu were in an inebriated condition when the duo got into an argument over which actor had donated more for the COVID-19 relief fund in the State. The argument worsened as each fan tried to reinstate that their star had paid more.

    In a fit of rage, Dinesh Babu attacked Yuvaraj who was a fan of actor Vijay, who kept saying his star had given more funds for COVID-19, and pushed him down. Yuvaraj collapsed and died on the spot.

    The body was sent to a private medical college and hospital in Kalapet in Puducherry.

    Further investigations are on.

  • Iran vows to hit back if threatened

    Guards chief says U.S. warships will be destroyed if security of Gulf is imperilled

    Reuters

    Iran will destroy U.S. warships if its security is threatened in the Gulf, the head of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards told state TV on Thursday, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump warned Tehran over ”harassment” of U.S. vessels.

    “I have ordered our naval forces to destroy any American terrorist force in the Persian Gulf that threatens security of Iran’s military or non-military ships,” Major General Hossein Salami said. “Security of the Persian Gulf is part of Iran’s strategic priorities.”

    Trump said on Wednesday he had instructed the U.S. Navy to fire on any Iranian ships that harass it at sea, but said later he was not changing the militarys rules of engagement.

    Earlier this month, the U.S. military said 11 Revolutionary Guards naval vessels from the Guards Navy came close to U.S. Navy and coast guard ships in the Gulf, calling the moves dangerous and provocative.

    On Thursday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry summoned the Swiss Ambassador in Tehran, who represents U.S. interests in the country, over the recent tensions between Tehran and Washington. “I am telling the Americans that we are absolutely determined and serious in defending our national security, our water borders, our shipping safety, and our security forces, and we will respond decisively to any sabotage,” Salami said.

    “Americans have experienced our power in the past and must learn from it.”

    Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif suggested that Mr. Trump should focus on saving U.S. service members from the pandemic. “The U.S. military is hit by over 5,000 #covid19 infections… Also, U.S. forces have no business 7,000 miles away from home, provoking our sailors off our OWN Persian Gulf shores,” Mr.Zarif tweeted.

  • Trump thinks report was incorrect on illness of North Korea’s Kim Jong Un

    The state-controlled media in North Korea has been silent on Kim’s whereabouts.

    Reuters

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday threw more cold water on reports that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was gravely ill, but declined to say if he had been in touch with officials there.

    “I think the report was incorrect,” Mr. Trump said at a daily White House briefing, adding that he had heard it was based on ”old documents.”

    Mr. Trump had said on Tuesday that he might contact North Korean officials to inquire about Mr. Kim but gave no indication on Thursday he had done so. The two leaders have had regular communications over the past couple of years.

    “We have a good relationship with North Korea, I have a good relationship with Kim Jong Un and I hope he’s okay,” Mr. Trump said.

    Daily NK, a Seoul-based website, reported on Monday that Mr. Kim, who is believed to be about 36, was recovering after undergoing a cardiovascular procedure on April 12. It cited one unnamed source in North Korea. The state-controlled media in North Korea has been silent on Kim’s whereabouts.

    Two South Korean government officials rejected a subsequent CNN report citing an unnamed U.S. official saying that the United States was “monitoring intelligence” that Mr. Kim was in grave danger after surgery.

    On Tuesday,Mr. Trump, who held unprecedented summits with Mr. Kim in 2018 and 2019 in an attempt to persuade him to give up his nuclear weapons, said the reports had not been confirmed and he did not put much credence in them.

    Mr. Kim is a third-generation hereditary leader who rules North Korea with an iron fist, coming to power after his father Kim Jong Il died in 2011 from a heart attack.

    The U.S. governments latest information on the North Korean leadership is that Mr. Kim still remains out of sight and there is a dearth of reliable information about the reasons for his absence, according to a source familiar with current intelligence reporting and analysis.

    U.S. officials acknowledge Mr. Kim does have a history of health problems and is overweight, and say that this does at least raise a credible possibility he has suffered some kind of health crisis, the source said.

    But they do not regard theories that Mr. Kim has had a heart attack or some other serious health setback as confirmed, and said he has disappeared from public view for extended periods in the past.

    U.S. government experts do not believe Mr. Kim’s influential sister, Kim Yo Jong, is a shoo-in to succeed him were he to die. They believe there is no clear designated successor in the event that Mr. Kim dies, the source said.

  • Coronavirus pushes U.S. unemployment toward highest since Depression

    More than 4.4 million laid-off Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, the government reported.

    AP

    Unemployment in the U.S. is swelling to levels last seen during the Great Depression of the 1930s, with 1 in 6 American workers thrown out of a job by the coronavirus, according to new data released Thursday. In response to the deepening economic crisis, the House passed a nearly $500 billion spending package to help buckled businesses and hospitals.

    More than 4.4 million laid-off Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, the government reported. In all, roughly 26 million people — the population of the 10 biggest U.S. cities combined — have now filed for jobless aid in five weeks, an epic collapse that has raised the stakes in the debate over how and when to ease the shutdowns of factories and other businesses.

    In the hardest-hit corner of the U.S., evidence emerged that perhaps 2.7 million New York state residents have been infected by the virus — 10 times the number confirmed by lab tests.

    A small, preliminary statewide survey of around 3,000 people found that nearly 14% had antibodies showing they had been infected, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. Just in New York City, with a population of 8.6 million, Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot said as many as 1 million may have been infected.

    The coronavirus has killed nearly 1,90,000 people worldwide, including more than 1,00,000 in Europe and about 47,000 in the United States, according to a tally compiled by John Hopkins University from official government figures. The true numbers are almost certainly far higher.

    Economic consquences

    In the U.S., the economic consequences of the shutdowns have sparked angry rallies in state capitals by protesters demanding that businesses reopen, and President Donald Trump has expressed impatience over the restrictions.

    Some governors have begun easing up despite warnings from health authorities that it may be too soon to do so without sparking a second wave of infections. In Georgia, gyms, hair salons and bowling alleys can reopen Friday. Texas has reopened its state parks.

    Few Americans count on Mr. Trump as a reliable source of information on the outbreak, according to a survey from NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. About 23% said they have high levels of trust in what he tells the public, while 21% said they trust him a moderate amount.

    On the economic front, few experts foresee a downturn as severe as the Depression, when unemployment remained above 14% from 1931 to 1940, peaking at 25%. But unemployment is considered likely to remain elevated well into next year and probably beyond, and will surely top the 10% peak of the 2008-09 recession.

    Stories of uncertainity

    Janet Simon, laid off as a waitress at an IHOP restaurant in Miami, said she has just $200 in her name and is getting panic attacks because of uncertainty over how she will care for her three children. Simon, 33, filed for unemployment a month ago, and her application is still listed as “pending.”

    “I’m doing everything to keep my family safe, my children safe, but everything else around me is falling apart,” Simon said. “But they see it, no matter how much I try to hide my despair.”

    Corey Williams, 31, was laid off from his warehouse job in Michigan a month ago and saw his rent, insurance and other bills pile up while he anxiously awaited his unemployment benefits. That finally happened on Wednesday, and he quickly paid $1,700 in bills.

    “It was getting pretty tight, pretty tight,” he said. “It was definitely stressful for the last few days.”

    While the health crisis has eased in places like Italy, Spain and France, experts say it is far from over, and the threat of new outbreaks looms large.

    “The question is not whether there will be a second wave,” said Dr. Hans Kluge, the head of the WHO’s Europe office. “The question is whether we will take into account the biggest lessons so far.”

  • Policeman abducted in Shopian village, forces launch search operation

    Srinagar: A policeman was abducted by suspected militants in evening from Mingipora area of South Kashmir’s Shopian district on thrusday.

    Reports reaching GNS said that a policeman was abducted on Thursday evening by suspected militants from Mingipora.

    A senior police officer also confirmed the incident to GNS and said that a joint team of police and army have been dispatched to the area to trace out the abducted cop.

    The officer identified the abudcted constable as Javid Jabbar son of Abdul Jabbar (Belt no. 4613/S) of Chatwatan Vihil Shopian. According to the police officer, Jabbar is posted as an escort duty of SDPO Zakura Srinagar,however, the cop had returned home on leave.

    Meanwhile, when reports last came in the search operation was going on in the village and its adjoining areas. (GNS)

  • Ramadan 2020: moon not sighted in Pakistan today

    Agencies

    KARACHI: Moon of Ramadan didn’t appear on today (April 23) in the country.

    Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee had a meeting in Karachi today to decide about sighting of the Moon for Ramazan-ul-Mubarak 1441 Hijri or otherwise.

    The Pakistan Meteorological Department said on Thursday (April 23) that moon of Ramadan was born on at 07:26 PST.

    The MET office also added that the new moon will not be sighted today (April 23).

    Chairman of the Committee Mufti Munib-ur-Rehman chaired the meeting.

    The first Ramadan will be on Saturday (April 24).

    Federal Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry said on his official twitter, “For the first time in history of Pakistan, the Ministry of Science and Technology has been included in the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee.”

    Earlier Ruet-e-Hilal Committee Chairman Mufti Muneeb ur Rehman said that he and Mufti Taqi Usmani would offer payers at home during Ramazan amid COVID-19 pandemic

    “We have started implementing the 20-point agreement finalized with the federal government,” Muneeb ur Rehman said.

    Ruet-e-Hilal Committee Chairman stressed upon other clerics to implement the agreement with the government.

    “We have promised with the president and the prime minister that people aging above 50 will not come to mosques,” he said.

    In his message for the prayer leaders, Mufti Muneeb ur Rehman said that they should point out signs in the mosques to implement social distancing during the prayers.

  • COVID-19: Positive doctor treated patients at GMC Baramulla even after his sample collection, allege locals

    MS GMC Baramulla says allegations baseless, doctor was put under quarantine on same day when his sample was taken

    Baramulla: Fear and panic has gripped the residents of Baramulla district after a junior doctor posted at GMC tested positive for novel Corona-virus who is believed to have attended hundreds of patients even after his sample was collected for Covid-19 testing on Sunday afternoon.

    Official sources told news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), that a junior doctor who tested positive for Covid-19 on Tuesday was working as per the routine roster at GMC Baramulla even after his sample was collected.

    A health official posted at GMC Baramulla said that the said doctor was attending Covid-19 patients admitted in isolation ward and was also attending other patients on daily basis as per the routine roaster.

    He claimed that the doctor has come in contact with many health workers and other hospital staff at GMC. “He was also offering joint prayers with the staff posted there.”

    This has caused fear and panic among the health workers and other staff posted at GMC, fearing that they might have contracted the virus from the doctor.

    Suhail Ahmad, a local resident who claimed to have visited district hospital Baramulla few days ago to donate the protection equipments told KNO that the doctor was rooming without wearing mask in the hospital premises and also attended hundreds of patients.

    He said that the doctor was attending patients even after his report was received on Tuesday afternoon which came positive.

    Meanwhile the officials said that doctors’ wife has also tested positive for Covid-19 on Thursday, thereby creating more fear among his contacts.

    However the medical superintendent, GMC Baramulla, Dr. Syed Masood denied the allegations and said the doctor was not allowed to perform his duty after his sample was collected on Sunday.

    “Rumours are being spread about the doctor that he has attended the patients after collection of sample are baseless. He was not allowed to work after his samples was collected instead was put under quarantine,” he said.

    Dr, Masood said that over 50 contacts including some health workers have been put under quarantine so far—(KNO)

  • J&K Govt to come up with rules for domicile law on jobs

    Srinagar: The government will soon come up with rules for implementation of the domicile law on jobs in Jammu & Kashmir, sources told news agency — Kashmir News Observer (KNO)

    Highly placed sources disclosed that General Administration Department (GAD) will come up with detailed  guidelines  for implementation of the changes made by the Centre in “The Jammu and Kashmir Civil Services, Decentralization and Recruitment Act-2010” to reserve all jobs for J&K domiciles.

    “The rules would be notified shortly,” the sources said, adding that discussions have taken place between different departments over the matter.

    According to sources, the rules will define procedure for obtaining domicile certificate and competent authorities which will certify whether a person seeking domicile certificate has remained in J&K for the requisite period prescribed under the law.“The rules would be in consonance with the law,” they told KNO.

    On April 3, the Central government notified changes in the Jammu & Kashmir Civil Services (Decentralization and Recruitment) Act to reserve all jobs for J&K domiciles.

    The law defines domiciles as those who are living in the Union Territory for 15 years. It also includes those who have studied for seven years in the UT and appeared in 10th or 12th class in J&K. All the migrants registered by the Relief and Rehabilitation Commissioner would also be eligible for the reservation.

    The children of central government employees, All India Service officers, public sector undertakings, statutory bodies, central universities and recognized central research institutes who have served in J&K for 10 years would also fall in the category of domiciles.

    Under section 15 of the law, the Government may, by notification in the Government Gazette, make rules for carrying out the purposes of the Act.

    “Any rule made under this Act shall as soon as may be after it is made, laid before each House of the State Legislature,” reads sub-section (2) of section 15. Before abrogation of Article 370 by BJP-led Central government, all jobs in J&K were reserved for its permanent residents—(KNO)

  • Newly recruited militant arrested in South Kashmir

    Srinagar: Police on Thursday arrested a newly recruited militant from Neehama area of Kulgam district in south Kashmir.

    Reports reaching GNS said that following a tip-off, a police party during a raid apprehended the militant at Neehama village.

    Confirming it, a police officer identified the arrested militant as Shakir Ahmad Alie son of Mushtaq Ahmad Alie, a resident of DH Pora, Kulgam. “Some arms and ammunition were recovered from the arrested person,” he said.

    A case in this connection has been filed and further investigations initiated.

    Alie, according to police had joined militant outfit Hizbul Mujahideen on April 14. (GNS)

  • Docs say, take precautions while consuming dates in Ramadan, “Wash, dry them for few days before you eat”: Dr Naveed

    Srinagar: With the Holy Month of Ramadan, devoted to fasting and prayers for Muslims, starting to begin from Saturday, the doctors here have advised the people to take all precautious before consuming the dates.

    “Dates are particularly beneficial during Ramadan because they are high in sugar and vitamins such as potassium and magnesium as well as an excellent source of fiber and carbohydrates. But yes we advise people to take all precautions while consuming the dates,” Kashmir’s leading pulmonologist and head of Chest Diseases Hospital, Srinagar, Dr Naveed Nazir Shah told news agency KINS.

    However Naveed advised people to properly wash and then dry the dates before eating them “You can buy the open dates from local markets, but yes before consuming them, all you need is to ensure that you wash and leave them for at least three days before eating,” he said.
    Dates are also known to help with digestion and can prevent an upset stomach when eating large amounts of food after a long period without eating.

    Meanwhile one of the senior doctors, expert in infectious disease here in SKIMS said that there is no published evidence, and we are not aware of unpublished evidence that people have developed COVID-19 illness from touching food or food packaging. “However, the virus causing COVID-19 can survive on surfaces and objects for a limited period of time. So it is better to throw the packing of dates as soon as you bring them home, as the wrapper may have the virus on it,” the doctor told KINS insisted not to be named. He also suggested that dates should be washed and left to dry properly.

    The doctor said that the available evidence suggests that the virus can remain for 3 days on hard surfaces and 1 day on soft surfaces.
    While the proverb “an apple a day keeps the doctor away” is known all over the world, the saying for Muslims go like “seven dates a day keeps the doctor away. There are different types of dates, the best and most precious one is the round-shaped, curled, black “Ajwa” which is grown in Medina
    From April 24 to May 24, Muslims will be observing Ramadan. This is the first Ramadan where people won’t be able to gather.

    “In Islam Ramadan is obligatory for Muslims. The Month has a lot of activities of spirituality. It’s all missing this year and then on top of that, if poor people do not have food at home, it’s going to have a huge impact emotionally, physically, and financially to them,” one of the senior citizens here in Srinagar told KINS.
    Many are wondering how to safely shop, order, and prepare food to minimize transmission of the novel coronavirus.

    The people here feel that it is a dramatic shift in their normal Ramadan practices and activities. “We won’t be able to pray Taraweeh in the mosques in fear of further spreading the virus. The mosques will be sad and thus our hearts will also be sad,” Habibullah a resident of Bemina Srinagar said.

    “Perhaps the pandemic will bring us together in new ways we hadn’t considered before.

    Although the religious activities that occur every Ramadan will not exist this year, Mohmmad Ramzan, the Islamic studies scholar, says that doesn’t necessarily mean people can’t attain the same level of spiritual fulfillment they ordinarily would.
    For instance, Taraweeh, he said, can be offered at home. “Praying Taraweeh in a group inside a mosque is not obligatory; the Prophet Mohammed, peace be upon him, used to offer it individually.” he said. (KINS)