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  • Samples for COVID-19 testing go missing but inmates allowed to go home from quarantine centre in Pulwama

    Anantnag: In an example of blatant negligence, authorities in Pulwama allowed all inmates to go home from the quarantine centre despite two samples for COVID-19 testing were missing.

    A Kachipora Pulwama youth returned from Pune on May 24. He was kept in a quarantine centre along with several people at Islamic University of Science and Technology Awantipora for 11 days.

    “I was then told my test is negative and was allowed to go home like others. I was with my family members for three days before officials told him I have to come again for sampling as two samples had gone missing. Then my sample was collected which tested positive,” he told news agency Kashmir Indepth News Service (KINS).

    He said all his eight family members have got infected. One-year-old baby has also been infected. “This is all because of negligence of the authorities who allowed everyone to go home from quarantine centre despite two samples were missing.

    Among two people whose samples were missing, one was tested positive. We caught the infection there because we were using one washroom and many were put up in one room,” he claimed.

    CMO Pulwama Dr Haseena when contacted said that she has no information in this regard. “I don’t have any information. I will confirm it from my BMO then I can comment on it,” she told KINS.

    BMO Pampore said he will seek details from concerned medical officer.

    “I will get the details then only make comments,” the BMO said.
    This is not an isolated case; there are many incidents when COVID-19 positive cases were sent home, risking the lives of their families.

    One of the cases of alleged negligence came to the fore in Baramulla when a patient was declared positive for novel coronavirus. However a day after he was allowed to go home by administration after testing “negative” for COVID-19 and was later told he is positive.

    In another case, a 40-year-old man who was kept under official quarantine at Baramulla town was discharged after being declared negative for COVID-19. Then he was told by the administration to immediately return to the quarantine facility citing that his test has come positive for the same disease.

    In another case a person from Handwara was discharged from a COVID-19 quarantine centre after declaring him negative for the disease. However, the officials rushed to put him in isolation after his test reports came positive for the deadly disease.

    “These cases are typical examples of official negligence which has put lives of many others in the quarantine centre at risk in addition to the family members of these people,” opined a doctor on the condition of anonymity. (KINS)

  • UK begins human trials for Covid-19 vaccine

    PTI

    London: A team of UK scientists hopes to receive approval to begin human trials of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine this week.

    The vaccine in question would harness new technology, which would mean it could be manufactured in large quantities with equipment bought off the shelf, and be relatively cheap to produce at just £3 ($3.76) per dose.

    The UK government has given £18.5 million in funding toward research and trials of the vaccine, with £5 million more being donated from private sources.

    The scientists, at Imperial College in London, said the new vaccine works by injecting a dose of approximately a thousandth of a thousandth of a gram of genetic material, called RNA, into the body, allowing it to begin multiplying.

    The RNA would then cause human cells to begin producing a protein found on the surface of COVID-19 cells, in a large enough quantity to train the immune system to detect and neutralize the protein — enabling it to do the same if later infected with the virus itself.

    Prof. Robin Shattock, the team’s leader and a mucosal infection specialist at Imperial College, said the amount of RNA required would mean that a liter of the vaccine could be enough to inoculate 200 million people.

    “It really is a tiny dose,” he told The Times newspaper. “That’s very good from a safety point of view but also in terms of production — it makes it much easier to scale up.”

    Animal trials conducted on mice have returned positive results, though the team cautioned that at least one booster might be required were the effects of the initial dose of the vaccine to prove insufficient.

  • Aarti Tikoo Singh, Foreign & Strategic Affairs Editor, IANS posts a worrisome tweet

  • Sonia Gandhi writes to PM Modi, seeks rollback of fuel price hike

    PTI

    New Delhi: Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Tuesday demanded a rollback of hike in fuel prices, saying the government’s decision to increase the prices of petrol and diesel during the coronavirus crisis is “wholly insensitive” and “ill-advised”.

    The government is doing nothing short of “profiteering off its people” when they are down and out, she said in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Petrol and diesel prices were hiked for the 10th day in a row on Tuesday.

    “I am deeply distressed that in these exceedingly difficult times since the beginning of March, the government has taken the wholly insensitive decision to increase petrol and diesel prices on no less than ten separate occasions,” Gandhi said in her letter.

    She accused the government of earning an additional revenue of nearly Rs 2.6 lakh crore through these “ill-advised” hikes in excise duty and increase in prices of petrol and diesel.

    “I urge you to roll back these increases and pass on the benefit of low oil prices directly to the citizens of this country.

    “If you wish for them to be ‘self-reliant’ then do not place financial fetters on their ability to move forward,” the Congress president said.

    Gandhi also urged the government to use its resources to put money directly into the hands of those in need in these times of severe hardship.

  • COVID-19: Cases in India climb to 3,43,091; death toll 9,900

    PTI

    New Delhi: India registered over 10,000 new COVID-19 cases for the fifth day in a row pushing tally to 3,43,091 on Tuesday, while the death toll rose to 9,900 with 380 new fatalities, according to the Union Health Ministry data.

    The country recorded 10,667 coronavirus infections in the last 24 hours.

    The number of active cases stands at 1,53,178, while 1,80,012 people have recovered and one patient has migrated, according to the officially updated figure at 8 am.

    “Thus, around 52.46 per cent patients have recovered so far,” an official said.

    India is the fourth worst-hit nation by the pandemic after the US, Brazil and Russia.

    According to the Johns Hopkins University, which has been compiling COVID-19 data from all over the world, India is in the eighth position in terms of death toll.

    The total number of confirmed cases include foreigners.

    Of the 380 new deaths, Maharashtra accounted for the highest 178 fatalities followed by Delhi at 73, Tamil Nadu at 44, Gujarat 28, Haryana 12, West Bengal 10, Rajasthan 9 and Madhya Pradesh 6.

    Andhra Pradesh and Punjab have reported 4 fatalities each, Jammu and Kashmir and Karnataka 3 each, Telangana 2 and Bihar, Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Kerala 1 each.

    Of the total 9,900 deaths, Maharashtra tops the tally with 4,128 fatalities followed by Gujarat with 1,505 deaths, Delhi with 1,400, West Bengal with 485, Tamil Nadu with 479, Madhya Pradesh with 465, Uttar Pradesh with 399, Rajasthan with 301 and Telangana with 187 deaths.

    The death toll reached 100 in Haryana, 89 in Karnataka, 88 in Andhra Pradesh, and 71 in Punjab. Jammu and Kashmir has reported 62 COVID-19 fatalities, Bihar 40, Uttarakhand 24, Kerala 20 and Odisha 11.

    Jharkhand, Assam, Chhattisgarh and Himachal Pradesh have registered 8 deaths each while Chandigarh has reported 6, Puducherry 5, while Meghalaya, Tripura and Ladakh have reported 1 fatality each, according to the health ministry.

    More than 70 per cent deaths have happened due to comorbidities, the ministry said.

    Maharashtra has reported maximum number of cases at 1,10,744 followed by Tamil Nadu at 46,504, Delhi at 42,829, Gujarat at 24,055, Uttar Pradesh at 13,615, Rajasthan at 12,981 and West Bengal at 11,494, according to the health ministry’s data updated in the morning.

    The number of COVID-19 cases has gone up to 10,935 in Madhya Pradesh, 7,722 in Haryana, 7,213 in Karnataka and 6,650 in Bihar.

    It has risen to 6,456 in Andhra Pradesh, 5,220 in Jammu and Kashmir, 5,193 in Telangana, 4,158 in Assam and 4,055 in Odisha.

    Punjab has reported 3,267 novel coronavirus cases so far, while Kerala has 2,543 cases.

    A total of 1,845 people have been infected by the virus in Uttarakhand, 1,763 in Jharkhand, 1,756 in Chhattisgarh, 1,086 in Tripura, 592 in Goa, 556 in Himachal Pradesh, 555 in Ladakh and 490 in Manipur.

    Chandigarh has registered 354 COVID-19 cases, Puducherry has 202 cases, Nagaland has 177, Mizoram has 117, Arunachal Pradesh has 91, Sikkim has 68, Meghalaya 44, while Andaman and Nicobar Islands has registered 41 infections so far.

    Dadar and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu together have reported 36 COVID-19 cases.

    “Our figures are being reconciled with the ICMR’s,” the ministry said, adding 7,684 cases are being reassigned to states. State-wise distribution is subject to further verification and reconciliation, it added.

  • COVID-19 vaccine at least a year away, say scientists

    New Delhi: Vaccine design is still an empirical, trial and error process and a preventive against COVID-19 could be at least a year away, say scientists as information on developments in therapeutics to combat the infection flows in a steady trickle from across the world.

    While quelling the buzz of a quick breakthrough, the scientists also hold out hope that the process might be cut short by a few months if testing approvals and scale-ups in manufacturing happen simultaneously.

    According to the World Health Organisation, 10 candidate vaccines for COVID-19 are in the clinical evaluation and 126 are in the preclinical stage.

    Preclinical development is a stage of research during which important feasibility, iterative testing and drug safety data are collected, while clinical trials are research studies performed on people.

    There are different broad strategies by which SARS-CoV-2 vaccines are being developed the world over, explained immunologist Satyajit Rath.

    While all are well-known strategies — some almost two centuries old and some almost two decades old — none are ‘guaranteed’ to yield a usable vaccine, the scientist from the National Institute of Immunology (NII) in New Delhi told PTI.

    Vaccine design still remains mostly an empirical, trial and error process, rather than an innovative knowledge-driven one. This is why, while any of these approaches is being put through trial and error, it remains a ‘vaccine candidate’ rather than a ‘vaccine’, he added.

    According to Robert Gallo, director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland in the US, What’s being confused — and scientists and politicians are contributing to the confusion — is the difference between a candidate and a vaccine.”

    He was speaking at a virtual meeting earlier this month when scientists at the University of California (UC) Davis and from other institutes in the US gathered to lay out a full picture of the complexities of developing and distributing a COVID-19 vaccine — which they generally agreed won’t happen until some time in 2021.

    “We are not expected to return to a fully normal life until a vaccine is developed. But how long will that take? UC Davis Chancellor Gary S. May asked in the meeting.

    About a year, maybe more, was the consensus.

    In India, where the number of COVID-19 cases on Tuesday rose to 3,43,091 and the death toll to 9,900, scientists agreed with their counterparts abroad
    With at least six Indian companies working on a vaccine for COVID-19 and the Serum Institute of India last week announcing a deal with the company Astra Zeneca to supply one billion doses of vaccine for low and middle-income countries to combat the coronavirus, the buzz has been growing louder.

    “We finally have a deal signed with @AstraZeneca, to exclusively manufacture their product for India and @gavi countries, up to a billion doses annually. This will ensure supply and access to all Indians,” Adar Poonawala, the CEO of the Serum Institute, tweeted on June 13.

    Earlier this month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi pledged USD 15 million as India’s contribution to the vaccines alliance GAVI at the Global Vaccine Summit hosted by the UK.

    But that does not translate into a vaccine anytime soon, scientists said.
    My guess for that is, not before the middle of the next year, Rath said.

    However, he noted that the time estimates might be pruned by a couple of months with simultaneous movements on testing-approval and manufacturing scale-up, and also by exception-shortcuts from regulatory authorities.

    He explained that there are several challenges that will arise once such vaccines are ready to go into the market, since ‘going into the market’ and going into the ‘public health system’ are not the same thing.

    Questions will remain on the ‘availability’ at a large scale, especially to the poor.
    One limitation, of course, is the scale of manufacturing. Huge numbers of doses will have to be manufactured in very short times to reach everyone. A number of governmental and non-governmental organisations are trying to set up industrial partnerships to address this issue,” he said.

    A second issue, the scientist said, will be the cost of vaccines, with the linked issue of intellectual property rights.
    A final issue, he noted, is of actual implementation and delivery of vaccination.

    “The resources and the technical-administrative structures needed for such a vaccination campaign are massive. It is not clear if any national governments have the understanding and the practical commitment to them. That might end up being the biggest roadblock of all, Rath said.

    Umashankar Singh, assistant professor, Biological Engineering, IIT-Gandhinagar, said he is hoping a candidate vaccine may be available by the end of 2020, even if it is for a limited set of the population.

    Two facets of vaccine production, in his view, need to be considered mass production of the lab product and also ensuring that the product is actually effective enough to justify mass production.

    There are other challenges too, he said, adding that there is evidence for a range of virulence, variable infection rates and asymptomatic infections and emergence of multiple strains.

    The uncertainty posed by these issues is likely to throw spanner in the works towards mass production of vaccines. This vaccine development is like chasing a moving target, a target we don’t know well enough. The question we should be asking is, even if a vaccine were to be available, how long would its effectiveness last? he told PTI.

    Singh noted that the emergence of a vaccine may or may not allow real protection against a rapidly evolving pathogen, but it would certainly allow us a psychological relief of being immune to the virus.

    “That would allow us to move on to the issues of economy, social interactions and ease of governance, he said.
    Even if by end of the year 2020 a candidate vaccine gets regulatory approval, mass production and supply chain is going to be a challenge, added an Indian virologist who didn’t wish to be named.

    If it is a single dose vaccine, the world will need at least eight billion doses, a task that might several months and maybe years. If it is a two dose vaccine, the challenge becomes bigger. (PTI)

  • ‘Imagine how escalated situation must be’: Omar Abdullah

    On killing of three Indian soldiers in Galwan Valley

    Srinagar: National Conference leader Omar Abdullah on Tuesday said if the Chinese can “shoot dead” three Indian soldiers during the ‘de-escalation process’, one can imagine how serious the situation must have been in the first place.

    Earlier in the day, the Indian Army said an officer and two soldiers were killed in a violent confrontation with Chinese troops in eastern Ladakh’s Galwan Valley on Monday.

    According to official sources, there was no firing between the two sides.

    “If the Chinese shoot dead an Indian army colonel and two jawans during a ‘de-escalation process’ imagine how escalated the situation must be in the first place,” Abdullah said in a tweet. “This is what happens when the media propagates the government line that asking questions is anti-national,” he added.

    When pointed out by a Twitter user that there was no firing at Galwan Valley, the National Conference leader said, “So they were beaten to death? That’s even more horrific.” The Army said there were casualties on the Chinese side as well but the extent of it was not immediately clear.

  • Facebook | Basant Rath, Former IG Traffic

    https://twitter.com/TheKashmirToday/status/1272873141069475841?s=19

  • Post Article 370 abrogation, 78 militants killed in January-May this year

    The number of militants killed in operations in the first five months of 2019 and 2020 has shown only a small dip

    Belying the Centre’s claims that shredding Articles 370 and 35-A would help end militancy in the freshly minted Union Territory of Jammu & Kashmir, the number of militants killed in operations in the first five months of 2019 and 2020 has shown only a small dip.

    Seventy-eight militants were killed in January-May this year as opposed to 101 being killed in the same period in 2019. The number of militant incidents, however, dropped from 223 to 78 in the same period.

    Two experts in the field of counter-insurgency expressed concern about the spurt in killings and the continued recruitment of locals in militant ranks. Another official said a coherent strategy was required post 370, adding that the euphoria over the number of militants killed would not win over the people of Kashmir.

    Stopping recruitment

    J&K Director General of Police Dilbag Singh, however, told The Hindu that the number of new recruits joining terrorist ranks had been at a record low this year and the police was engaging with families and communities to wean them away from militancy.

    The officer said the recent increase in encounters and operations by security forces was not unusual and should not be seen in isolation as the focus was on stopping young boys from joining the militant ranks.

    So far this year we have been successful in stopping 20 boys who could have joined militant groups. Pakistan is leaving no stone unturned by pushing fake propaganda and old messages to recruit them. Just a few days ago, three boys from Awantipora, who had almost joined the militancy were persuaded to return as we involved their family members and counselled them,” Mr. Singh added.

    Vappala Balachandran, former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, said, “J&K police is pathetically trying to connect the alarmingly high number of militants killed this year with their elevated operational efficiency to justify Union Home Ministry’s claim that Article 370 abrogation had brought peace. However, the serious increase in insurgency despite the heaviest deployment of security forces in recent memory after the August 5, 2019 lockdown would be evident with the killing of 89 militants, mostly local, this year compared to 29 during the second half of 2019”.

    ‘Anger against govt.’

    Avinash Mohananey, a former Director General of Police who has also worked in Kashmir, said the most significant part of continued militancy was the ongoing local recruitment. “It does not matter if you have killed a certain number of militants…the conditions for local recruitment are still there. The anger against the government is still there. Security forces are able to kill more militants as these people are poorly trained and equipped,” Mr. Mohananey said.

    Officials said that Pakistan continued to push militants and weapons from across the border and it did not wait even a single day as the snow melted around March 31 to send infiltrators. Mr. Singh said around 40 militant associates and 240 overground workers who formed the support system of militants had been arrested this year.

    We have intercepted chatter of militant operatives where they discussed a retaliation after several commanders were killed in the past two weeks. The killing of Kashmiri Pandit sarpanch Ajay Pandita is a result of that, he added.

    UAPA cases

    Post August 5, around 400 cases under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) were registered and around 300 people were booked under the Public Safety Act.

    Another official, who did not want to be identified, said, “Article 370 was neither the problem nor a solution to militancy, the source is Pakistan. A clear-cut strategy is required as Kashmiris did not react violently react to 370. The next step is how to win the people over, but it cannot be done by killing them and without reviving the political process. The solution does not lie in violence.”

    The number of small arms recovered from militants in the first five months stood at 77 while the recovery in the entire 2019 was 71. Already 50 AK-47 rifles have been recovered this year, compared to 101 such sophisticated weapons recovered in the whole of 2019.

    It may be recalled that J&K was placed under unprecedented restrictions and a communication lockdown after August 5 last year. High speed 4G internet connectivity is yet to be restored in the newly carved Union Territory. The J&K administration asserted that there had been multiple militancy related acts, including attacks on security forces, by uploading provocative videos and false propaganda, justifying its continued orders to restrict internet speed.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • CBI alerts police on online advance payment scams, spurious sanitisers

    It follows inputs from Interpol.

    The CBI has alerted the police in all States and Union Territories on online advance payment scams and use of methanol for making spurious sanitisers. The alert follows inputs from the Interpol.

    “Such scams involve instances of criminals approaching as vendors of PPE and other protective equipment related to the COVID-19 pandemic and entering into business transactions with clients online”, the CBI said.

    After receipt of payment via bank transfers, the fraudulent vendors do not make any delivery of items. Besides, there have been instances in other countries wherein methanol has been used for preparing spurious hand sanitisers. The modus operandi has been devised to exploit the huge demand for sanitisers.

    “Methanol can be highly toxic and dangerous for the human body,” said the CBI in a statement.

    Based on information received from the Interpol, the CBI last month sent alerts to all the States, Union Territories and the Central agencies, cautioning them against a malicious software threat that used messages purportedly related to the pandemic.

    The banking Trojan, Cerberus, sent SMS using the lure of coronavirus (COVID-19) related content to download the embedded malicious link. It deployed its application usually spread via phishing campaigns to trick users into installing it on their smartphones.

    The Trojan also tricked the victims into providing personal information and could capture two-factor authentication details of online accounts.

    With inputs from The Hindu