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  • Coronavirus | Iran’s death toll reaches 2,640, says health official

    Iran’s Health Ministry spokesman Kianush Jahanpur told state TV that “some 3,467 of those infected are in critical condition”.

    The Hindu

    Iran’s death toll from the coronavirus has risen to 2,640 and the number of infected people has reached 38,309, a health ministry official tweeted on Sunday, as the Middle East’s worst-hit country grapples with the fast-spreading outbreak.

    “In the past 24 hours we had 123 deaths and 2,901 people have been infected, bringing the total number of infected people to 38,309,” tweeted Alireza Vahabzadeh, an adviser to Iran’s health minister. “12,391 people infected from the virus have recovered.”

    Iran’s Health Ministry spokesman Kianush Jahanpur told state TV that “some 3,467 of those infected are in critical condition”.

    “I am happy to announce that also 12,391 people who had been infected across the country have recovered … The average age of those who have died of the disease is 69,” said Jahanpur.

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

  • Covid-19: Kashmir’s second victim laid to rest at Tangmarg village

    Only five people attended funeral of deceased, protocol followed for burial

    Sopore, March 29 (KNO): Only five people attend the last rites of Covid-19 first victim in Sulanda Village of Tangmarg north Kashmir’s Baramulla district on Sunday.

    According to wire service—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), the deceased was the second death case of Covid-19. Before him, a Tableegi Jamaat member from Sopore died in a Srinagar hospital recently.

    Witnesses said that only five people, all close relatives of the deceased, attended his funeral prayers after wearing a protective equipment, who also accompanied the body to the graveyard for burial.

    As per the guidelines laid by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), no bathing, kissing and hugging of deceased Covid-19 patient is allowed and same was followed in this case also.

    The deceased was admitted in a Srinagar hospital two days ago after he was tested positive. He had a travel history of being part of a Tableegi Jamaat and had attended many religious gatherings outside the country—(KNO)

  • Stuck in Kashmir amid lockdown, 24 labourers reach Poonch after walking 100 kms by foot

    Rajouri, Mar 29 (KNO): In a surprising incident, at least twenty four laborers hailing from Rajouri district walked over a hundred kilometers in snow packed mountains and reached Poonch’s Surankote  area from Kashmir where they had remained stuck due to lockdown and restrictions over COVID-19 pandemic.

    Official sources told wire service–Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that the group of laborers reached Chandimarh village of Surankote area on Saturday evening following which locals of the area informed authorities about it after they were shifted to Surankote.

    “All 25 four laborers belong to different villages of Rajouri district and especially from Thanamandi tehsil of the district.” said sources, adding that all were working in Valley as laborers and remained stuck for days.

    “Preliminary reports suggest that all started their journey by foot from Shopian on Friday afternoon and spent their night somewhere in the snow packed mountains of Pir Ki Gali and reached Surankote on Saturday evening,” said sources.

    The laborers walked more than a hundred kilometer road stretch of Mughal Road and crossed snow packed mountains as snow at Pir Ki Gali is still above five feet but they braved all odds on these mountains, the officials who interacted with laborers, told KNO wishing anonymity.

    District Magistrate Poonch, Rahul Yadav said that all the laborers are presently in medical aid center where designated teams are carrying out necessary screening.

    “We are not going to allow anyone to move from here and all these laborers have been kept in the quarantine facility in Surankote,” said DM Poonch—(KNO)

  • COVID-19 | Patients complain Poor Care

    According to our sources the matter was taken up with the authority and resolved.

    As on 29 March 2020, patients are satisfied with the service provided.

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    Disclaimer: This story is not a work by Kashmir Today and is published from a syndicated feed.

    No copyright infringement intended.

  • Amid Coronavirus crisis, attack on Riyadh | Saudi forces intercept two missiles over curfew-locked Riyadh

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi rebels have previously launched missiles, rockets and drones on the Saudi capital and other cities.

    Two civilians ‘slightly injured’ from falling missile debris, officials say, blaming attack on Yemen’s Houthi rebels.

    ALJAZEERA

    Saudi Arabia’s air defences have intercepted two ballistic missiles above the kingdom’s capital, Riyadh, and the southern city of Jizan, according to a spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen.

    Turki al-Malki, in a statement quoted by the Saudi Press Agency, blamed the foiled assaults on Yemen’s Houthi rebels and said the missiles were destroyed around 23:23 (20:23 GMT) on Saturday.

    Turki al-Malki, in a statement quoted by the Saudi Press Agency, blamed the foiled assaults on Yemen’s Houthi rebels and said the missiles were destroyed around 23:23 (20:23 GMT) on Saturday.There was no immediate claim of responsibility, however.

    Al-Malki said the interception of the missiles had resulted in “debris scattering on some residential areas” in Riyadh and Jizan.

    The SPA later said “two civilians were slightly injured due to the falling of the intercepted missile’s debris as it exploded in mid-air over residential districts”. Residents in Riyadh reported at least three blasts late on Saturday night, followed by emergency vehicle sirens in some northern districts.

    Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya television said US Patriot missile defence systems were used in the interception.

    Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis battling the Saudi-led coalition have launched hundreds of missiles and drones across the border, mostly at nearby military and civilian targets, but also at Riyadh.

    The city is about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) north of the border with Yemen, and the last attempted attack on the capital was in June 2018.

    The latest missile attack comes after all parties in Yemen’s long conflict offered support on Thursday for the United Nations’ call for a ceasefire to protect civilians from the novel coronavirus pandemic. The call coincided with the fifth anniversary of Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Yemen’s civil war, at the helm of a military coalition supporting the internationally recognised government against the Houthi rebels.

    In his statement, al-Malki said that firing missiles at this time by the Houthis and Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps showed the real threat the group, and the Iranian government supporting it, posed.

    He added: “This escalation by the Houthi militia does not reflect its announcement of acceptance of the ceasefire and de-escalation, nor any seriousness in engaging in confidence-building measures and reaching a comprehensive political solution with the Yemeni government to end the coup.”

    The Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen’s civil war in 2015 to try to restore the internationally recognised government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, deposed by the Houthis in 2014. The conflict has killed more than 100,000 people, many by Saudi-led air raids. It has also created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, leaving millions suffering from food and medical shortages.

    The warring sides had earlier shown an interest in de-escalation, with a Saudi official saying in November that Riyadh had an “open channel” with the rebels with a goal of ending the war.

    The Houthis also offered to halt all missile and drone attacks on Saudi Arabia after attacks on its oil installations last September, which were claimed by the armed group but widely blamed on Iran, despite its denials.

    But those efforts seem to have unravelled. Observers say the rebels may have used the lull to bolster their military capabilities.

    Sami Hamdi, editor-in-chief of the UK-based International Interest magazine, also blamed Saturday’s missile attack on the Houthis, calling it a “PR stunt” by the rebels aimed at “appearing stronger than they are”.

    Noting the Houthi support for a ceasefire, as well as an offer last week by the group to release Saudi captives in exchange for Palestinian Hamas members, Hamdi told Al Jazeera: “This is part of a PR offensive to win the wider Arab public opinion outside Yemen … They knew the missiles wouldn’t cause any damage to Riyadh. They knew the missiles would not cause any impact militarily against Saudi Arabia, but the aim is to show the world ‘Look how the Houthis are sending missiles towards the Saudis’.”

    With the recent escalation in fighting in Yemen, more than 40,000 people have been displaced since January, adding to the roughly 3.6 million who have fled their homes since the war began.

    A number of those fleeing in recent weeks, including women and children, escaped on foot, walking for days without food or water across open desert, according to a recent statement by the United Nations refugee agency.

    Yemen’s broken healthcare system has not so far recorded a case of the COVID-19 illness, but aid groups have warned that when it does hit, the effect will be catastrophic in a country already regarded as facing the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

    Saudi Arabia is scrambling to limit the spread of the disease at home. The kingdom’s health ministry has reported 1,203 coronavirus infections and four deaths from the disease so far.

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

  • COVID-19: Five more tested positive in Kashmir, toll mounts to 38 in JK

    Srinagar, Mar 29: The Jammu and Kashmir government on Sunday said that five more cases have been tested positive for novel Coronavirus, taking the total toll of active cases to 34 in Jammu and Kashmir.

    According to wire service—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), Government Spokesperson Rohit Kansal in a tweet informed that five more cases were tested positive.

    He said fresh new positive cases two belong to Srinagar, two from Budgam and one case form north Kashmir’s Baramulla distirct.

    “5 more positives cases confirmed in Kashmir -2 from Srinagar, 2 Budgam, 1 Baramulla,” Kansal tweeted.

    With new cases, the total number of cases has taken abrupt surge to 38 of which only 34 are active among which 27 are from Kashmir Valley alone and seven in Jammu division.

    Two cases have so far died while as one each from Jammu and Kashmir have recovered—(KNO)

  • Walking Home From Delhi For Over 200 km, Delivery Agent Dies On Highway

    India Lockdown: Ranveer Singh, who worked as a delivery agent in Delhi, was among the thousands of migrants desperately trying to return to their hometowns and villages after they were left without jobs, shelter or money.

    NDTV

    Agra: A 38-year-old man, who had walked over 200 km from Delhi to reach his home in Madhya Pradesh after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a 21-day lockdown to stop the spread of coronavirus, died on the way.

    Ranveer Singh, who worked as a delivery agent in Delhi, was among the thousands of migrants desperately trying to return to their hometowns and villages after they were left without jobs, shelter or money. Most of them have been covering a journey of hundreds of kilometres on foot, as all transport services are shut, including passenger trains and interstate buses, in a bid to curb the spread of COVID-19.

    Ranveer Singh had started walking to his village in Madhya Pradesh’s Morena district, around 326 km from the national capital.

    When he collapsed on the highway in Agra in Uttar Pradesh, a local shopkeeper offered him tea and biscuits. But soon, Ranveer Singh had a heart attack and died. The man was about 80 km away from his village.

    On Saturday evening, thousands of migrant workers crowded into bus terminals around the national capital trying desperately to return home across the border in Uttar Pradesh.

    The centre’s “total lockdown”, meant to halt the spread of a highly infectious novel coronavirus that transmits rapidly in crowded spaces, had suspended all interstate bus and railway services, leaving migrants and their young families no option but to walk hundreds of kilometres foot in searing heat.

    The Uttar Pradesh and Delhi governments responded Saturday by arranging buses to ferry the people home; the UP government said it had organized 1,000 buses and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said 200 buses would also be pressed into service.

    The government has faced criticism that the lockdown, that came two months after the global outbreak, was announced abruptly and without planning, leaving millions stranded and triggering panic about access to food and basic necessities.

    The government brushed aside the allegation that the nationwide lockdown was announced without any planning, triggering a major crisis for migrant workers and people who live on daily incomes. The country’s response to COVID-19 has been “pre-emptive, pro-active and graded”, the government said on Saturday.

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

  • Same travel history, one tests positive another negative; 87 contacts of positive Pulwama patient quarantined

    Pulwama, Mar 29, KNT: South Kashmir’s Pulwama youth tested positive for Covid-19 infection has contacted 87 people and all these persons have been quarantined, official sources told Kashmir News Trust.

    Pertinently, a 26 year old youth (name withheld) from Khaigam, Rajpora area of South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, affiliated with Tableegi Jamat has been tested positive for Coronavirus.

    While tracing the travel history and contacts authorities found that the victim was with Tableegi Jamaat outside the Jammu and Kashmir for about one month, during which he reportedly visited many states of India and is likely to have come in contact with Tableegis from other countries like Malaysia, Indonesia etc, during various religious congregations.

    An official told KNT that the youth reached district Pulwama on 20 March after travelling from Delhi to Jammu and from Jammu to Pulwama.

    “In Pulwama, before going to his home at Khaigam (a village close to Pakherpora Budgam) he spent some days in Gudoora and Chandgam hamlets of Pulwama, before finally reaching his home on 25 March. On 26 March he was screened at his home, however he was asymptomatic and was adviced to go for home quarantine. On 27 March he developed fever and went to Sub District Hospital Pakherpora for check up, and from there he was advised to go to SDH Charar-e-sharief, where from he was shifted to SKIMS on same day. At SKIMS he tested positive on 28 March.”

    The official said that so far at least 87 contacts of the subject (75 from khaigam, 12 from Chandgam ) have been put under quarantine at a private school in Dangerpora Pulwama.

    The official said that ironically the companion of the confirmed case from the same village ( name withheld) who has similar travel history of outside, but has returned directly to his home on March 20 rather than going to Gudoora and Chandgam villages has tested negative for Coronavirus. They were shifted together to SKIMS from SDH Chari-e-Sharief. (KNT)

  • COVID-19 | Here are the latest updates

    India coronavirus lockdown, day 5 live updates; Over 980 test positive as death toll touches 24

    The Hindu

    Italy’s death toll tops 10,000, becomes highest in world

    Italy’s death toll from the novel coronavirus shot past 10,000 on Saturday with 889 new deaths, the country’s Civil Protection Service said.

    The toll in Italy, which has suffered more deaths than any other country, now stands at 10,023. An additional 5,974 infections brought to 92,472 the number of people who have officially tested positive for COVID-19 in Italy since the crisis began last month.

    USA:

    In rare case, US infant dies from COVID-19

    A U.S. infant has died from the COVID-19 illness, officials in the state of Illinois said on Saturday, marking an extremely rare case of juvenile death in the global pandemic.

    The state Department of Public Health said the child who died in Chicago was younger than one year old and had tested positive for COVID-19.

    “There has never before been a death associated with COVID-19 in an infant,” the department’s director Ngozi Ezike said in a statement.

    A full investigation is underway to determine the cause of death, said authorities. Multiple studies have found the virus disproportionately affects older patients and those with underlying conditions.

    Deaths in U.S. surge past 2,000

    Deaths from new coronavirus in the United States surged past 2,000 Saturday, doubling in just three days, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

    The number of deaths late Saturday was 2,010, about a quarter of them in New York City, the country’s hardest hit region, Johns Hopkins reported. That i2,314 in Frances fewer than the 10,023 in Italy, Spain’s 5,812, China’s 3,299 or the 2,314 in France, the tally showed

    KARNATAKA:

    Fresh restrictions in Hassan, Karnataka

    The district administration has announced fresh restrictions on petrol pumps and  shops selling essential things in Hassan, with effect from Sunday.

    The petrol pumps, grocery shops, milk booths, malls and others establishments that sell other essential things like vegetables will be open between 7 a.m. and 12 noon on all odd days in a week. On even days, only circulation of newspapers and sale of milk will be allowed between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m.

    There is no restriction on medical shops. Hotels are allowed to offer home deliveries. Only two petrol pumps in each city limits will be allowed to open throughout the day.

    The administration took this decision after J.C.Madhuswamy, Minister in-charge of the district, held a meeting in Hassan

    CANADA:

    Canadian PM’s wife has recovered from coronavirus illness

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s wife said that she has recovered from being ill from COVID-19.

    “I am feeling so much better,” Sophie Gregoire Trudeau said in a statement on social media. She said she received the clearance from her doctor and Ottawa Public Health.

    Mr. Trudeau’s office announced on March 12 that she had tested positive for the coronavirus after she fell ill upon returning from a trip to London.

    The Prime Minister and his family have been in self isolation at home since then. He and their three children didn’t show symptoms.

    – AP

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

  • Kashmir University postpones all upcoming exams

    SRINAGAR: University of Kashmir on Saturday postponed all upcoming examinations in view of COVID-19 lockdown.
    The new date sheets for the exams, which were scheduled from April, will be notified separately – a notification issued by the varsity’s Controller of Examinations said.
    It also said the dates of submission of examination and re-evaluation forms already notified shall be extended once the university reopens.
    “The 5th-semester examination date sheet for regular 2017 batch and backlog batch 2016, that of 2nd-semester regular batch 2019 and backlog batches, 2018, 2017 and 2016, and 1st semester from a regular batch, 2020 and backlog batches, 2018, 2017, 2016 shall also be notified after the reopening of the university,” the notification added.
    The notification asked the students to prepare for the examinations by taking the help of the online study material.