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  • Rishi Kapoor asks govts to open liquor stores in evening, incurs social media wrath

    Veteran actor Rishi Kapoor on Saturday said the state and central governments should let the licensed liquor shops operate in the evening during the 21-day lockdown period.

    In a Twitter post, the actor said liquor is a major source of revenue for the government and is already being sold illegally everywhere in the country.

    “Government should for sometime in the evening open all licensed liquor stores. Don’t get me wrong. Man will be at home only what with all this depression, uncertainty around. Cops, doctors, civilians etc… need some release. Black mein to sell ho hi raha hai (It is already being sold in black) (sic),” Kapoor wrote.

    “State governments desperately need the money from the excise. Frustration should not add up with depression. As it is everyone is drinking so legalise it no hypocrisy. My thoughts,” he said in another post.

    Filmmaker Kunal Kohli agreed with Kapoor and said, “Or open in the mornings. 9am-2pm. The revenue is imp for the states& employees (sic).”

    However, Kapoor’s comment didn’t go down well with social media users.

    “What about those families, Sir, where ladies face abuse by husbands under the influence of liquor? And, that’s at the best of times. Do you think that it’s a safe option during a lockdown?, a user wrote.

    Another user said, “Think beyond it Rishi ji. People don’t have and are not getting even basic food to survive. Watch the TV to know the ground reality and to come out of your cocoon. What an immature suggestion. Absurd.”

    “Rich people think in a different trajectory altogether,” a Twitteratti said.

    The country is witnessing a 21-day lockdown, as announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to contain the spread of the virus, which has claimed the lives of over 27,000 people globally.

    Incidentally, Kapoor had slammed trolls, who had asked him if he has stocked up liquor for the lockdown.

    “Anyone cracking jokes about my country or my lifestyle, will be deleted. Be aware and warned. This is a serious matter. Help us to tide over the situation,” Kapoor had tweeted.

  • Cyber Cell registers FIR in fake 4G restoration order

    Cyber Crime Cell today registered FIR against uploading a fake 4G speed internet service restoration in Jammu and Kashmir.

    “We have registered FIR for uploading a fake order with a forged signature of Principal Secretary to the Home Department Government of Jammu and Kashmir in respect of order for restoration of 4G mobile internet services in the Union Territory of J&K,” SP Cyber Crime, Sandeep Mehta, said. He said that they have started investigation against the unidentified persons under relevant sections of IT Act.

  • Man from Tangmarg dies as Kashmir records 2nd COVID-19 death

    The Kashmir Valley recorded second fatality due to the novel coronavirus as a 52-year-old man hailing from Tangmarg area of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district died on Sunday wee hours.

    A senior government officer told GNS that the man died at Chest Disease hospital Dalgate, Srinagar at around 4:00 am.
    A doctor told GNS that the man was referred from SMHS hospital and had tested positive only yesterday.

    “The patient was suffering from liver ailment,” the doctor said.

    A police officer at Tangmarg also confirmed the man’s death and police has been ordered to make necessary arrangements. With his death, the number of fatalities due to COVID-19 has raised two in Kashmir Valley.

    On Thursday last, a 65-year-old from Hyderpora died of the disease, making it the first case of death due to Coronavirus.
    Meanwhile, one more person tested positive for the coronavirus at the Chest Disease hospital, taking the number of such persons to 24 in Kashmir Valley and overall 33 in the entire Jammu and Kashmir. (GNS)

  • Mystery In Wuhan: Recovered Coronavirus Patients Test Negative… Then Positive

    NPR.ORG

    A spate of mysterious second-time infections is calling into question the accuracy of COVID-19 diagnostic tools even as China prepares to lift quarantine measures to allow residents to leave the epicenter of its outbreak next month. It’s also raising concerns of a possible second wave of cases.

    From March 18-22, the Chinese city of Wuhan reported no new cases of the virus through domestic transmission — that is, infection passed on from one person to another. The achievement was seen as a turning point in efforts to contain the virus, which has infected more than 80,000 people in China. Wuhan was particularly hard-hit, with more than half of all confirmed cases in the country.

    But some Wuhan residents who had tested positive earlier and then recovered from the disease are testing positive for the virus a second time. Based on data from several quarantine facilities in the city, which house patients for further observation after their discharge from hospitals, about 5%-10% of patients pronounced “recovered” have tested positive again.

    Some of those who retested positive appear to be asymptomatic carriers — those who carry the virus and are possibly infectious but do not exhibit any of the illness’s associated symptoms — suggesting that the outbreak in Wuhan is not close to being over.

    NPR has spoken by phone or exchanged text messages with four individuals in Wuhan who are part of this group of individuals testing positive a second time in March. All four said they had been sickened with the virus and tested positive, then were released from medical care in recent weeks after their condition improved and they tested negative.

    Two of them are front-line doctors who were sickened after treating patients in their Wuhan hospitals. The other two are Wuhan residents. They all requested anonymity when speaking with NPR because those who have challenged the government’s handling of the outbreak have been detained.

    One of the Wuhan residents who spoke to NPR exhibited severe symptoms during their first round of illness and was eventually hospitalized. The second resident displayed only mild symptoms at firstand was quarantined in one of more than a dozen makeshift treatment centers erected in Wuhan during the peak of the outbreak.

    But when both were tested a second time for the coronavirus on Sunday, March 22, as a precondition for seeking medical care for unrelated health issues, they tested positive for the coronavirus even though they exhibited none of the typical symptoms, such as a fever or dry cough. The time from their recovery and release to the retest ranged from a few days to a few weeks.

    Could that second positive test mean a second round of infection? Virologists think it is unlikely that a COVID-19 patient could be re-infected so quickly after recovery but caution that it is too soon to know.

    Under its newest COVID-19 prevention guidelines, China does not include in its overall daily count for total and for new cases those who retest positive after being released from medical care. China also does not include asymptomatic cases in case counts.

    “I have no idea why the authorities choose not to count [asymptomatic] cases in the official case count. I am baffled,” said one of the Wuhan doctors who had a second positive test after recovering.

    These four people are now being isolated under medical observation. It is unclear whether they are infectious and why they tested positive after their earlier negative test.

    It is possible they were first given a false negative test result, which can happen if the swab used to collect samples of the virus misses bits of the virus. Dr. Li Wenliang, a whistleblowing doctor who later died of the virus himself in February, tested negative for the coronavirus several times before being accurately diagnosed.

    In February, Wang Chen, a director at the state-run Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, estimated that the nucleic acid tests used in China were accurate at identifying positive cases of the coronavirus only 30%-50% of the time.

    Another theory is that, because the test amplifies tiny bits of DNA, residual virus from the initial infection could have falsely resulted in that second positive reading.

    “There are false positives with these types of tests,” Dr. Jeffrey Shaman, a professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia University, told NPR by email. Shaman recently co-authored a modeling study showing that transmission by individuals who did not exhibit any symptoms was a driver of the Wuhan outbreak.

    How real is China’s recovery?

    On Tuesday, Hubei province, where Wuhan is the capital, said it would relax lockdown measures that have now been in place for more than two months and begin letting residents leave cities the following day. Wuhan said it would begin lifting its quarantine measures and letting residents leave two weeks later, on April 8.

    To leave Wuhan, residents must first test negative for the coronavirus, according to municipal authorities. Such screenings will identify some remaining asymptomatic virus carriers. But the high rate of false negatives that Chinese doctors have cited means many with the virus could pass undetected.

    Last Thursday, Wuhan reported for the first time since the outbreak began that it had no new cases of the virus from the day before — a milestone in China’s virus containment efforts. The city reported a zero rise in new cases for the following four days.

    Assessing asymptomatic carriers

    But Caixin, an independent Chinese news outlet, reported earlier this week that Wuhan hospitals were continuing to see new cases of asymptomatic virus carriers, citing a health official who said he had seen up to a dozen such cases a day.

    Responding to inquiries about how the city was counting asymptomatic cases, Wuhan’s health commission said Monday that it is quarantining new asymptomatic patients in specialized wards for 14 days. Such patients would be included in new daily case counts if they develop symptoms during that time, authorities said.

    “Based on available World Health Organization data, new infections are mainly transmitted by patients who have developed symptoms. Hence [asymptomatic cases] may not be the main source of transmission,” the commission said.

    A researcher at China’s health commission told reporters Tuesday that asymptomatic carriers “would not cause the spread” of the virus. Zunyou Wu, the researcher, explained this was because the authorities were isolating people who had close contact with confirmed patients. Wu did not explain how they would identify asymptomatic carriers who had no close contact with confirmed patients.

    Addressing growing public concern of asymptomatic patients, China’s Premier Li Keqiang urged during Thursday’s senior-level government meeting that “relevant departments must … truthfully, timely, and openly” answer questions, such as whether these patients are infectious and how the course of the outbreak may change.

    Research suggests that the spread can be caused by asymptomatic carriers. Studies of patients from Wuhan and other Chinese cities who were diagnosed early in the outbreak suggest that asymptomatic carriers of the virus can infect those they have close contact with, such as family members.

    “In terms of those who retested positive, the official party line is that they have not been proven to be infectious. That is not the same as saying they are not infectious,” one of the Wuhan doctors who tested positive twice told NPR. He is now isolated and under medical observation. “If they really are not infectious,” the doctor said, “then there would be no need to take them back to the hospitals again.”

    Geoff Brumfiel contributed reporting from Washington, D.C.

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

  • Drug for coronavirus treatment via stem cells made in Iran: Scientist

    An Iranian scientist claims that a drug has been produced in Iran by using stem cells in order to treat the deadly new coronavirus.

    PressTv

    Iranian stem cell scientist Dr. Masoud Soleimani, who has been recently released after over one year of imprisonment in the United States, has said that many doctors have expressed their satisfaction with the impact of the drug on the treatment of patients with coronavirus, Fars news said in a Twitter post on Saturday.

    “This drug can treat coronavirus-affected patients within a period of 3-6 days in three phases,” he said.

    There are numerous reports about potential treatments for COVID-19, including Japanese conglomerate Fujifilm — most famous for its film and instant cameras — who promotes a drug called Avigan, also known as favipiravir, and the use of common anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine that is advised by US President Donald Trump. But, according to the World Health Organization, there is no specific medicine to prevent or treat coronavirus disease (COVID-19) yet.

    The WHO says health officials are testing four of the most promising drugs to fight COVID-19, including malaria medications chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, an antiviral compound called Remdesivir, a combination of HIV drugs Lopinavir and Ritonavir and a combination of those drugs plus interferon-beta.

    There are no proven therapies to treat COVID-19 but there are a number of clinical trials that are ongoing, Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of WHO’s emerging diseases and zoonosis unit, told reporters on Friday. “It’s important that these medications are evaluated appropriately so we know what works and that we have the right data to support what works.”

    Kianoush Jahanpour, the head of public relations and information center of the Iranian Ministry of Health, said on Saturday that 35,408 individuals have been confirmed to be infected with the disease, 2,517 of whom have lost their lives. As many as 11,679 individuals have also recovered from the virus.

    “The condition of 3,026 of those hospitalized is critical in one way or another,” he said, adding that 57 million Iranians had been screened for the virus.

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

  • BREAKING | Italy reports 5,974 new cases of Coronavirus and 889 new deaths

    Bloomberg

    Italy’s coronavirus deaths surpassed 10,000 on Saturday even as the contagion’s spread remained substantially stable.

    Europe’s hardest-hit country had 889 new fatalities in the last 24 hours, health authorities said, with a slight decline compared to Friday’s record. New cases rose marginally to 5,974, bringing the total count of patients in the country to 92,472.

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

  • Bandipora MBA student develops website to help administration fight COVID-19

    Bandipora, Mar 28 (KNO): In a bid to fight the COVID-19 in district Bandipora, an MBA pass out from the University of Kashmir has developed a website where students and travelers can self-report their travel history.

    The website also provides options for volunteer registration and doctors and paramedics volunteer registration as well.

    According to wire service—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), the website was created by Mehran Sofi who hails from Naz Colony locality of Bandipora. He has done Masters in Business Administration from the University of Kashmir.

    Mehran Sofi successfully developed the website and named it as findcovidbandipora.in. He has donated the website to district administration Bandipora to help fight the pandemic in the district.

    Speaking to KNO, Mehran said he created the website with an aim to fight the COVID-19 and help trace those students and travellers who have arrived from outside Kashmir and are yet to report their travel history.

    He said that he has also added some other options in the website wherein people can register as volunteers and doctors and paramedics can also register themselves as volunteers to work with the administration in this crisis situation.

    He said it will definitely help the administration to reach out to those students and travelers who are yet to report their travel history in the district.

    Mehran said that it took him two days to create the website because of slow internet speed as there is 2G internet connectivity in Jammu and Kashmir.

    He urged the government to try and restore the $G internet services so that people will come up with more such ideas and initiatives which will help in fighting this deadly virus.

    He said there is another option of emergency helpline numbers of district administration on the website which will make it easy for the people to reach to the admin in emergency situations—(KNO)

  • Coronavirus Kills More Than 1,000 In UK: Report

    PM Boris Johnson and his health minister, Matt Hancock, were confirmed on Friday to be among those infected, although both said they had only mild symptoms.

    NDTV

    London: The number of coronavirus deaths in Britain jumped by 260 in one day to pass 1,000, official data showed Saturday, the day after Prime Minister Boris Johnson himself tested positive.
    At 5:00pm (1700 GMT) on Friday, the death toll was 1,019, up from 759 at the same time on Thursday, the health ministry figures showed.

    As of 9:00 am on Saturday, a total of 120,776 people in Britain had been tested, of whom 17,089 were confirmed positive.

    Johnson and his health minister, Matt Hancock, were confirmed on Friday to be among those infected, although both said they had only mild symptoms.

    Their cabinet colleague, Scottish Secretary Alister Jack, revealed on Saturday that he too had developed mild symptoms and was self-isolating, but had not been tested.

    In a video message on Friday from Downing Street, where he lives and works, Johnson said he would continue to lead the government’s response to the outbreak.

    Media reports suggest his pregnant partner, Carrie Symonds, who normally lives with him in Downing Street, moved several days ago to the couple’s south London home to self-isolate there.

    England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty, another key player in the UK’s response, also said Friday that he was in self-isolation after experiencing symptoms of COVID-19.

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

  • Kashmir Records Highest Covid-19 Jump In Single Day

    8 More Cases Recorded, J&K Tally Rises To 33; 5919 People Under Surveillance

    Srinagar, March 28 (GNS): Kashmir Valley recorded highest single day jump in covid-19 cases, with eight persons testing positive for the pathogen on Saturday.

    Official sources told Global News Service (GNS) that the seven of them are admitted in CD hospital here and include a 56-years-old man from Jawahar Nagar Srinagar who has travel history to Indonesia, and three persons, aged between 28 to 35 years, are from Hajin area of Bandipora and had come in contact with the 65 year-old man who died of the disease on Thursday. The other one is 62-year-old from Tangmarg area of Baramulla and he has no travel history even to outside Valley and is believed that he might had come in contact with covid-19 patients. The two other persons include a 45-year-old man, and his wife (40) from Ahmad Nagar Srinagar. They had returned from Mumbai, the sources said.

    Besides, them one more person aged 26-year-old, admitted in SKIMS tested positive, they said. He is a resident of Rajpora Pulwama, they said.

    With these eight fresh cases, the tally of COVID-19 patients in the Kashmir region has gone up to 22 and one of them, the 65-year-old man from Hyderpora, originally a resident of Sopore, died on Thursday. Among them, a 67-year-old woman who was first COVID-19 patient in Valley has recovered at SKIMS Soura, the Valley’s only tertiary care hospital.

    In all, 33 persons have tested positive for the COVID-19 in Jammu and Kashmir and 6 of them are in Jammu region—3 in the winter capital of the J&K and as many in Rajouri district.

    Meanwhile sources said sixteen more persons with covid-19 symptoms were admitted to SKIMS Soura. With this, 39 people are admitted in isolation facility there.

    Regarding CD hospital Srinagar, they said, 22 more suspected persons were admitted today. Also two persons were admitted to JLNM hospital Rainawari. In all 65 persons are admitted in these two isolation facilities, they said.

    When contacted Dr Manzoor Ahmad Qadri, state surveillance officer told GNS that so far 223 samples have been taken in Kashmir Valley and 22 of them tested positive for the disease.

    The Government informed that 5919 travellers and persons in contact with suspected cases have been put under surveillance so far.

    As per the daily Media Bulletin on novel coronavirus, 3535 persons have been kept under home quarantine (including facilities operated by Govt.) while as 227 are in hospital quarantine.

    Persons who are under home surveillance stand at 1525 while as 632 persons have completed their 28-day surveillance period.

    It said that 486 samples have been sent for testing of which 486 tested as negative. The bulletin further stated. (GNS)

  • Search begins for appointing Managing Director of J&K Bank

    Nasir Azam

    Srinagar, Mar 28 (KNO): The Jammu & Kashmir government has flagged off the search for appointing first fulltime managing director of J&K Bank.

    To begin with, the J&K Bank has invited applications from professionals with experience in mainstream banking sector for filling the key position.

    According to advertisement notice, the candidate must be citizen of India and shall have 15 experience in mainstream banking sector with three years at Board level. The government will appoint MD on recommendations of a screening committee which will hold interactions with suitable candidates, the notice reveals.

    “The applications be screened by a Screening committee and suitable candidates meeting the eligibility criteria shall be shortlisted for an interaction with the selection/search Committee, which will make

    Recommendation to the Government of Jammu & Kashmir for appointment as Managing Director of the Bank. The decisions/ recommendations of the screening / selection/search committee and J&K Govt. shall be final,” reads the notice. As already reported by KNO, the government has set up a three-member committee headed by Tapan Ray, ex-Union Corporate Secretary for screening/ selection of chairman and managing director of J&K Bank.

    Arun Kumar Mehta, Financial Commissioner Finance department and Anand Madhukar, officer on special duty in department of Financial Services, Government of India are two members of the panel.

    It is worthwhile to mention here that Reserve Bank of India in October last year gave a six months extension to R K Chhibber as the bank’s Chairman and Managing Director. He was appointed as the bank’s interim CEO for three months in June this year following the removal of Parvez Ahmed from the post by the State Government.

    In June last year, the Board of Directors of J&K Bank had recommended the appointment of separate chairman and a managing director of the bank. The J&K government was repeatedly directed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to separate the positions of Chairman and Managing Director for better governance—(KNO)