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Recovery in East and South Asia gathers pace, but subject to rising downside risks: UN report

Bangkok — The recovery in East and South Asia remains moderately robust, according to the United Nations World Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) 2022, which was launched today.

The report notes that the global economic recovery is facing significant headwinds amid new waves of COVID-19 infections, persistent labour market challenges, lingering supplychain challenges and rising inflationary pressures. After expanding by 5.5 per cent in 2021, the global output is projected to grow by only 4.0 per cent in 2022 and 3.5 per cent in 2023.

“Without a coordinated and sustained global approach to contain COVID-19 that includes universal access to vaccines, the pandemic will continue to pose the greatest risk to an inclusive and sustainable recovery of the world economy,” noted Liu Zhenmin, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

Growth prospects in East and South Asia

The headline GDP growth in East Asia is estimated at 6.7 per cent in 2021 and projected at 4.9 per cent in 2022. East Asian economies have rebounded from the worst of the pandemic, supported by strong policy stimulus and external demand. However, the growth is projected to moderate, as a slow recovery of labour markets weigh on consumption and exports growth slows down. Subdued inflation and still low public debt levels offer room for policymakers to continue accommodative monetary and fiscal policies.

China’s economy is projected to expand by 5.2 per cent in 2022, following an estimated expansion of 7.8 per cent in 2021. Rapid recovery in the first half of 2021 has lost momentum amid new waves of COVID-19 infections and policy-induced cooling of the property market. China’s transition towards consumption-driven development and a low carbon economy is expected to lead to slower but more sustainable growth, the Report noted.

The recovery sustains its momentum in South Asia, amid contained COVID-19 infections, robust remittance inflows, and broadly supportive policy stances. After an estimated expansion of 7.4 per cent in 2021, regional GDP is projected to expand at a more moderate pace of 5.9 per cent in 2022. The recovery, however, is still fragile and uneven. A sustained recovery in economic activity and employment moving forward may prove challenging, as monetary and fiscal policy space become more constrained.

In India, the recovery is on a solid path, amid rapid vaccination progress, less stringent social restrictions, and still supportive fiscal and monetary stances. GDP is projected to expand by 6.7 per cent in 2022, after an expansion of 9.0 per cent in 2021. The growth outlook in Pakistan remains moderately robust. After an economic expansion of 4.5 per cent in 2021, GDP growth is projected at 3.9 per cent in 2022, driven by private consumption, record-high remittances, and fiscal support.

Downside risks

Global growth prospects face major risks. New waves of infections and the emergence of new variants of the COVID-19 virus threaten the recovery. The lingering pandemic entails other risks including prolonged supply-chain disruptions and rising inflation. A faster-than-anticipated tightening of global financial conditions could also raise concerns on financial stability, including risk of debt distress.

East and South Asian economies are also vulnerable to the uncertainties and risks imposed by the pandemic, especially those countries with low vaccination rates. In addition, accelerated global monetary tightening could increase volatility, trigger capital outflows and disrupt credit growth, especially in countries with elevated debt and large financing needs. In East Asia, a possible sharper-than-expected slowdown in China and the unresolved trade tensions between China and the United States could also constrain economic recovery.

Omicron threatens to overwhelm health systems in South Asia: IFRC

Kuala Lumpur/Delhi  —- The Omicron variant is fuelling a rapid surge of COVID-19 across South Asia that threatens to overwhelm health systems still reeling from a deadly wave of the Delta variant last year.

Countries across South Asia from India to Nepal and Bangladesh are reporting alarming increases in COVID-19 infections, with India alone reporting a 2,013 per cent increase in COVID-19 infections in the past month, with cases now topping 179,000 in a day.

The new wave is causing further misery for hundreds of millions of people across South Asia, already living in extreme poverty, exacerbated by COVID-19 over the past two years.

Udaya Regmi, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) Head of Delegation, South Asia, said:

“This latest surge of COVID-19 spells immense danger for millions of people and health systems across South Asia. Omicron is spreading fast and while vaccination rates have been soaring, after such tragic loss of life last year, fear is mounting of record infection rates.

“People everywhere want this pandemic to end but we must boost efforts to keep people safe with the basics, by wearing masks, avoiding crowds, and getting fully vaccinated where possible.”

Last year, health systems were boosted by IFRC with increased supplies of oxygen equipment across South Asia, helping health authorities to be prepared for this latest COVID-19 surge.

Several million Red Cross and Red Crescent volunteers are working hard to provide people most at risk with access to lifesaving medical care, testing and vaccinations.

In South Asia, a majority of countries have vaccinated less than 50 per cent of their population, putting people at greater risk of developing severe illness and requiring hospitalisation. India has fully vaccinated 45 per cent of its population, while Pakistan has 32.8 per cent and Bangladesh 33 per cent who have received two jabs, according to Oxford University’s Our World in Data.

Dr Abhishek Rimal, IFRC’s Asia Pacific Emergency Health Coordinator, said:

“The Omicron variant appears to have milder symptoms than the Delta variant, but it is more infectious, so high case numbers are still leading to thousands of people being hospitalised and hundreds are dying.

“We must accelerate efforts to get everyone vaccinated, and it’s critical to wear masks and avoid crowds, to keep families, friends and people most vulnerable safe.

“To avoid endless waves of this deadly virus, we need vaccines to be available to everyone, in every country, especially for people who have not yet had their first dose and those most at risk, including older people and healthcare workers.”

Prince Dahal from Nepal ranked No. 1 in world’s junior badminton

Kathmandu —  Prince Dahal of Nepal has made a history in badminton by climbing to a top ranking in world’s junior badminton.

The 19-year-old Dahal ascended to the top position for the first time as per the ranking of men’s junior announced by the Badminton World Federation. He has secured 10,500 points to clinch the top position in junior badminton. This is the biggest success Nepali badminton has ever gained at the international level.

According to the ranking results announced by the Federation, the second top is Justin Whoha of Malaysia. He gained 9,590 points.
Talking to RSS after being announced the top badminton player towards junior, Dahal said his dream has materialized. He further explained he has been effortful to become the number one in badminton and was delighted enough to realize his dream.

“My further attention will go to keep the title and also continue to perform well even in senior badminton tournament in future”, he shared. Dahal commented that there are limited tournament opportunities and training in Nepal.

He urged the state agencies to enable proper environment for the players to grow in the country. Dahal further shared he was deprived of attending tournaments and training for long due to coronavirus pandemic.

Dahal has been playing badminton since he was five. Dahal’s maternal uncle and manager Kamalesh Niraula said the top global ranking Prince achieved is the remarkable achievement for him and the country as well.

Badminton coach Jayanta Shrestha said Dahal’s success has also enthused other Nepali badminton players and overall sports lovers in Nepal.

Dahal climbed to the 32nd position in the world ranking first time in 2019. In 2020 global ranking, he ascended to the 10th position. Later, he climbed to the seventh position in 2019 and third position in 2021. The World Badminton Federation announces the ranking of senior and junior badminton players in every week.

Prince is now studying in grade 11 in Lagankhel, Kathmandu. Likewise, Nepal’s women player Rasila Maharjan has reached 19th position in the ranking published by the Federation towards women junior category.

– RSS

Study finds youngsters who self-identify as multilingual perform better at school

Cambridge —  A new research has found that young adults who consider themselves multilingual tend to perform better across a wide range of subjects at school, regardless of whether they are actually fluent in another language.


The study has been published in the ‘Journal of Language, Identity & Education’.
The study, of more than 800 pupils in England, found a positive relationship between GCSE scores and ‘multilingual identity’: a reference to whether pupils felt a personal connection with other languages through knowledge and use.


Those who self-identified as multilingual typically outperformed their peers not just in subjects such as French and Spanish, but in non-language subjects including maths, geography, and science. This applied whether or not they actually spoke a second language fluently.


Perhaps surprisingly, however, not all pupils who were officially described by their schools as having ‘English as a Second Language’ (EAL) thought of themselves as multilingual, even though the term is used by schools and Government as a proxy for multilingualism.
Correspondingly, these pupils did not necessarily perform better (or worse) as a group at GCSE than their non-EAL peers.


The results indicated that encouraging pupils to identify with languages and to value different styles of communication could help them to develop a mindset that supported academic progress overall.
Other recent research has argued for broadening the scope of language lessons so that, as well as studying vocabulary and grammar, pupils explore the importance of languages and their significance for their own lives.


This new study was the first, however, to examine the relationship between multilingual identity and attainment.
Dr Dee Rutgers, a Research Associate at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, said, “The evidence suggests that the more multilingual you consider yourself to be, the higher your GCSE scores. While we need to understand more about why that relationship exists, it may be that children who see themselves as multilingual have a sort of ‘growth mindset’ which impacts on wider attainment.”
Dr Linda Fisher, Reader in Languages Education at the University of Cambridge, said, “There could be a strong case for helping children who think that they can’t ‘do’ languages to recognise that we all use a range of communication tools and that learning a language is simply adding to that range. This may influence attitude and self-belief, which is directly relevant to learning at school. In other words, what you think you are maybe more important than what others say you are.”


The study’s authors argued that being multilingual meant far more than the official EAL definition of being ‘exposed to a language at home that is known or believed to be other than English’. They suggested that even young people who see themselves as monolingual possessed a ‘repertoire’ of communication.

For example, they may use different dialects, pick up words and phrases on holiday, know sign language, or understand other types of ‘language’ such as computer code.
The study involved 818 Year-11 pupils at five secondary schools in South East England. As well as establishing whether pupils were officially registered as EAL or non-EAL, the researchers asked each pupil if they personally identified as such.


Separately, each pupil was asked to plot where they saw themselves on a 0-100 scale, where 0 represented ‘monolingual’ and 100 ‘multilingual’. This data was compared with their GCSE results in nine subjects.
Students who spoke a second language at home did not always personally identify either as EAL or multilingual. Conversely, pupils who saw themselves as multilingual were not always those earmarked by the school as having English as an additional language.


“The fact that these terms didn’t correlate more closely is surprising considering that they are all supposedly measuring the same thing,” Rutgers said.
“Just having experience of other languages clearly doesn’t necessarily translate into a multilingual identity because the experience may not be valued by the student,” Rutgers added.
School-reported EAL status had no impact on GCSE results, although pupils who self-identified as EAL generally did better than their peers in modern languages. Those who considered themselves ‘multilingual’ on the 0-100 scale, however, performed better academically across the board.
The strength of this relationship varied between subjects and was, again, particularly pronounced in modern languages. In all nine GCSE subjects assessed, however, each point increase on the monolingual-to-multilingual scale was associated with a fractional rise in pupils’ exam scores.


For example, a one-point increase was found to correspond to 0.012 of a grade in Science, and 0.011 of a grade in Geography. Students who considered themselves very multilingual would, by this measure, typically score a full grade higher than those who consider themselves monolingual. Positively identifying as multilingual could often, therefore, be enough to push students who would otherwise fall slightly short of a certain grade up to the next level.
The findings appeared to indicate that the positive mentality and self-belief which typically developed among pupils with a multilingual identity has spill-over benefits for their wider education.


The authors added that this could be cultivated in languages classrooms: for example, by exposing young people to learning programmes that explore different types of language and dialect or encouraging them to think about how languages shape their lives both inside and outside school.


“Too often we think about other languages as something that we don’t need to know, or as difficult to learn,” Fisher said.
“These findings suggest that if pupils were encouraged to see themselves as active and capable language learners, it could have a really positive impact on their wider progress at school,” she concluded. (ANI)

Three South Asian countries passports are in the weakest list in the world

Kathmandu — According to a survey conducted by Henley & Partners, a global citizenship and residence advisory firm based in London, Passport of the three South Asian countries Nepal, Pakistan and Afghanistan are ranked among the weakest passports in the world.

Japan and Singapore have the most powerful passports in the world. The survey report released is based on the data by the IATA for 2022. Passports from Japan and Singapore do not require a visa before traveling to 192 countries.

The weakest passport in the world is from Afghanistan. Similarly, Iraq is in second place, Syria in third, Pakistan in fourth, Yemen in fifth and Somalia in sixth while Nepal comes seventh in the world’s weakest passports list.

Henley & Partners is a global citizenship and residence advisory firm and its Henley Passport Index is based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Authority (IATA).

According to the firm, the index includes 199 passports from different countries. The Henley Passport Index is updated quarterly and is considered the standard reference tool for global citizens and sovereign states when assessing wher :

The ‘best passports’ to hold in 2022 are:

1. Japan, Singapore (192 destinations)
2. Germany, South Korea (190)
3. Finland, Italy, Luxembourg, Spain (189)
4. Austria, Denmark, France, Netherlands, Sweden (188)
5. Ireland, Portugal (187)
6. Belgium, New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States (186)
7. Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, Greece, Malta (185)
8. Poland, Hungary (183)
9. Lithuania, Slovakia (182)
10. Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia (181)

The ‘worst passports’ to hold are

Several countries around the world have visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to fewer than 40 countries. These include:

104. North Korea (39 destinations)
105. Nepal and Palestinian territories (37)
106. Somalia (34)
107. Yemen (33)
108. Pakistan (31)
109. Syria (29)
110. Iraq (28)
111. Afghanistan (26)

Nepal bans big public gatherings amid COVID spike

Kathmandu — Officials in Nepal have banned large public gatherings and closed schools across the Himalayan nation for nearly three weeks after a spike in coronavirus cases.

Nepal reported 1,357 new cases on Monday, the biggest single-day jump since September last year, taking its total to 833,946 since the pandemic began. Its death toll from the coronavirus is 11,606.

Home Ministry spokesman Pradip Kumar Koirala said public gatherings such as political rallies and religious functions involving more than 25 people had been prohibited.

“Entry to hotels, restaurants, cinema halls and public offices as well as parks from January 21 will be given to those providing proof of being vaccinated against the coronavirus,” Koirala said.

Earlier, the government ordered schools to close for almost three weeks until January 29.

Hospitals have been ordered to maintain adequate supplies of oxygen and keep staff at the ready. Nepal has reported 27 cases of infection with the Omicron but no deaths from it.

Nepal has provided two shots of COVID-19 vaccines to 37 percent of its population of 30 million since an inoculation drive began a year ago. ( Agencies)

Nepal must scrap aging diesel buses and trucks

By scidev.net

The rapidly deteriorating air quality in Nepal demands an overhaul of its over a quarter million diesel-powered buses and trucks as well as a drastic revision of the country’s vehicles mass emission standards, says a new study.

On the morning of 5 January, the capital, Kathmandu, registered 438 on the Air Quality Index (AQI)—12 times more than the WHO’s suggested maximum limit of 35. The composite measurement takes into account particulate matter, carbon monoxide, sulfur, nitrogen dioxide and ozone.

“Using experiment-based emission factors measured on the roadside, we were able to build a comprehensive diesel vehicle emission inventory for the country (Nepal) covering the period from 1989 to 2018,” said Bhupendra Das, main study author and researcher at the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, in Potsdam, Germany, and at Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu.

During that period, Nepal’s diesel consumption in the transport sector went up 13 times to 892,770 kilolitres annually, according to the study published online last month in Science of the Total Environment.

In building an emissions inventory for Kathmandu, Das and his team encountered large uncertainties due to differing emission factors based on vehicle category, fuel quality and maintenance. “We took into account factors like total distance traveled, fuel consumed, mileage, driving conditions, climatic factors, load and the age of the diesel-powered vehicles that were studied,” he said.

The team focused on four major pollutants—carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, black carbon and PM2.5 (particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns). The researchers found most diesel-powered buses and other public transport vehicles deployed in Kathmandu are old and poorly maintained. Low vehicle speeds, below 20 kilometers per hour, old vehicles with high mileage, the narrow and hilly roads of the Kathmandu Valley, and poor fuel quality were significant contributors to carbon monoxide and other pollutants.

Fuel quality tests showed that 80 percent of the diesel sampled exceeded the sulfur limits of 350 milligrams per liter as laid down by the public sector Nepal Oil Corporation.

Alok Sagar Gautam, assistant professor at the physics department of the HNB Garhwal University in Uttarakhand state, India, said that while landlocked Nepal imports diesel and other petroleum products from India, “the origins of sulfur and other contaminants in retail fuel are totally different in India and Nepal.”

India has ordered the scrapping of all diesel vehicles older than 10 years from the start of the year. Such a drastic move may be difficult for Nepal to follow. But Das suggests a lowering of the present upper limit of 20 years to 15 with emphasis on strict monitoring of older vehicles for emissions.

“Because this study covers both the historical emission factors as well as recent ones, it is valuable for the development of an emission inventory for India and other countries in the South Asia region,” Gautam said. “What is needed is a scaled-up project covering the whole region.”

Previous studies, such as one published in 2020 in Aerosol and Atmospheric Chemistry, had also shown that poor quality fuel, high traffic congestion, old and poorly maintained diesel vehicles were responsible for a large increase in transport-related emissions in recent years.

The 2020 study found that timely servicing and maintenance of diesel vehicles could lower black carbon emission by 1.4 times and PM 2.5 by almost three times. It recommended a policy of mandatory, routine maintenance of the diesel fleet to systematically reduce emissions in the Kathmandu Valley.

Das suggests a different approach, however. “The present scenario in Kathmandu and in the rest of Nepal, a least-developed country, demands practical, cost-effective solutions to quickly cut emissions. These could start with repair and maintenance of roads, improvement of fuel quality and switching the aging diesel fleet to at least Euro IV standards,” he said.

Nepal’s nationally determined contribution submitted to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change envisages promotion of advanced, electric, hybrid, hydrogen-powered, and other types of vehicles running on clean fuels. By 2025 at least 25 percent of all private passenger vehicles sales and 20 percent of all public transport vehicles will be electric-powered, the commitments say.

“The concept of climate-resilient economic growth through an improved transport sector is being taken seriously,” said Das. “It is now inescapable that highly polluting and obsolete transport vehicles burning diesel be phased out through scrappage policies that involve compensations or other schemes with incentives for vehicle owners.”

More information: Bhupendra Das et al, Emission factors and emission inventory of diesel vehicles in Nepal, Science of The Total Environment (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152539

Journal information: Science of the Total Environment

US surgeons successfully implant genetically altered pig heart in human

The “historic” procedure took place Friday, the University of Maryland Medical School said in a statement on Monday. While the patient’s prognosis is far from certain, it represents a major milestone for animal to human transplantation.

The patient, David Bennett, had been deemed ineligible for human transplant — a decision that is often taken when the recipient has very poor underlying health.

He is now recovering and being carefully monitored to determine how the new organ performs.

“It was either die or do this transplant. I want to live. I know it’s a shot in the dark, but it’s my last choice,” the Maryland resident said a day before the surgery.

Bennett, who has spent the last several months bedridden on a heart-lung bypass machine, added: “I look forward to getting out of bed after I recover.”

The Food and Drug Administration granted emergency authorization for the surgery on New Year’s Eve, as a last ditch effort for a patient who was unsuitable for conventional transplant.

“This was a breakthrough surgery and brings us one step closer to solving the organ shortage crisis,” said Bartley Griffith, who surgically transplanted the pig heart.

“We are proceeding cautiously, but we are also optimistic that this first-in-the-world surgery will provide an important new option for patients in the future.”

Muhammad Mohiuddin, who co-founded the university’s cardiac xenotransplantation program, added the surgery was the culmination of years or research, involving pig-to-baboon transplants, with survival times that exceeded nine months.

“The successful procedure provided valuable information to help the medical community improve this potentially life-saving method in future patients,” he said.

10 unique gene edits 

Bennett’s donor pig belonged to a herd that had undergone genetic editing procedures.

Three genes that would have led to rejection of pig organs by humans were “knocked out,” as was a gene that would have led to excessive growth of pig heart tissue.

Six human genes responsible for human acceptance were inserted into the genome, for a total of 10 unique gene edits.

The editing was performed by Virginia-based biotech firm Revivicor, which also supplied the pig used in a breakthrough kidney transplant on a brain dead patient in New York in October.

But while that surgery was purely a proof-of-concept experiment, and the kidney was connected outside the patient’s body, the new surgery is intended to save a person’s life.

The donated organ was kept in an organ-preservation machine ahead of the surgery, and the team also used an experimental new drug made by Kiniksa Pharmaceuticals along with conventional anti-rejection drugs to suppress the immune system.

About 110,000 Americans are currently waiting for an organ transplant, and more than 6,000 patients die each year before getting one, according to official figures.

To meet demand, doctors have long been interested in so-called xenotransplantation, or cross-species organ donation, with experiments tracing back to the 17th century.

Early research focused on harvesting organs from primates — for example, a baboon heart was transplanted into a newborn known as “Baby Fae” in 1984, but she survived only 20 days.

Today, pig heart valves are widely used in humans, and pig skin is grafted on human burn victims.

Pigs make the ideal donors because of their size, their rapid growth and large litters, and the fact they are already raised as a food source.

(AFP)

Several dead as heavy snow traps drivers in their vehicles in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD —  At least 21 people have died after heavy snow trapped them in their vehicles in northern Pakistan, BBC has said.

As many as 1,000 vehicles were stranded as would-be tourists reportedly rushed to view the winter snowfall in the hilltop town of Murree, it said.

A policeman, his wife and their six children, as well as another family-of-five, are among the dead, according to local emergency services Rescue 1122.

The military is attempting to clear roads and rescue those still trapped.

Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid said the crisis had been caused by the number of people travelling to the area, north of the capital Islamabad. More than 100,000 cars had arrived in the colonial-era town in recent days, with social media in Pakistan flooded with pictures of people enjoying the snow.

But by Friday, local media reported that tourists were getting stranded. On Saturday, the heavy snow and increase in vehicles prompted authorities to declare the region a disaster zone.

Pictures and video on social media show cars trapped bumper to bumper, snow piled onto their roofs.

At least 21 people have died, including 10 children, according to emergency services. Police said at least six had frozen to death in their cars. Asphyxiation after inhaling fumes has been given as a possible reason for the others.

(Source: BBC)

Sri Lanka could go bankrupt this year as inflation rises to record levels: Report

Colombo — Sri Lanka is facing a deepening financial and humanitarian crisisthat could lead it to bankruptcy in 2022 as inflation rises to record levels, said a media report.
Earlier, on August 30 last year, the Sri Lankagovernment announced a national financial emergency after a steep fall in the value of the country’s currency which caused a spike in food prices.
Writing in Colombo Gazette, Suhail Guptil said, Sri Lanka is continuously facing twin deficits, that is, fiscal deficit and trade deficit during a major part of the last decade. Since 2014, the foreign debt level of Sri Lanka has been on the rise and reached 42.6 per cent of GDP in 2019.
Guptil explained that the cumulative foreign debt of the country was estimated at USD 33 billion in 2019, which puts a huge burden on the country for debt servicing.
After this, several credit rating agencies including Standard and Poor’s, Moody’s and Fitch downgraded Sri Lanka’s credit rating to B from C, which makes it difficult to obtain funds through International Sovereign Bonds (ISBs), Guptil said.
The financial crisis in Sri Lanka is primarily caused by a low growth rate, currently at four per cent and huge debt service repayment obligations and the situation is worsening.
As of November 2021, available foreign currency reserves were just USD 1.6 billion while in the next 12 months, the government and private sector of Sri Lanka will have to repay an estimated USD 7.3 billion in domestic and foreign loans, including a USD 500 million international sovereign bond repayment in January 2022, the report said.

It further added that one of the most pressing problems for Sri Lanka is its huge foreign debt and debt service burden, in particular to China. It owes China more than USD 5 billion in debt and last year took an additional USD 1 billion loan from Beijing to wean off its acute financial crisis, which is being paid in installments.
It is estimated that the foreign currency reserves of the country would completely deplete by January 2022 and it would need to borrow at least -USD 437 million for necessary payments. The major problem facing the country now is how to manage foreign debt service of USD 4.8 billion being due during February-October 2022, the report said.
Inflation hit a record high of 11.1 per cent in November and escalating prices have left those who were previously well off struggling to feed their families, while basic goods are now unaffordable for many.
After Rajapaksa declared Sri Lanka to be in an economic emergency, the military was given the power to ensure essential items, including rice and sugar, that was sold at set government prices – but it has done little to ease people’s woes.
The former central bank deputy governor, WA Wijewardena warned that the struggles of ordinary people would exacerbate the financial crisis, which would in turn make life harder for them. The World Bank estimates 500,000 people have fallen below the poverty line since the beginning of the pandemic, Guptil said.
Guptil further stated that in an “attempt temporarily to ease the problems and stave off difficult and most likely unpopular policies”, the government has resorted to temporary relief measures, such as credit lines to import foods, medicines and fuel from its neighbouring ally India, as well as currency swaps from India, China and Bangladesh and loans to purchase petroleum from Oman.”
The Sri Lankan government also plans to settle its past oil debts with Iran by paying them with tea, sending them USD 5 million worth of tea every month in order to save “much-needed currency”.
Moreover, Colombo has decided to close three overseas diplomatic missions from December 2021 to cut down expenditure in the face of the ongoing financial crisis and dollar crunch. However, these measures will provide only short-term relief and the loans will have to be paid back at high-interest rates, adding to Sri Lanka’s debt load, Guptil added. (ANI)

SONEUK organises a webinar on Renewable Energy Scenarios for Sustainability

London : The Society of Nepalese Engineers in UK (SONEUK) organised a webinar entitled “Future Energy Scenario: Sustainability with Renewables” on Saturday. More than 45 engineers and managers from all around the UK, Nepal and the USA took part in the webinar. The webinar was delivered by Dr Roshan Bhattarai, Lead Planning Engineer, Grid Planning and Renewable Integration at NEOM, Saudi Arabia. Dr Bhattarai is also one of the office bearers as the Secretary of SONEUK Executive Committee and the coordinator of Social and Entertainment Sub-Committee.

 

Opening the event, SONEUK General Secretary Dr Bidur Ghimire welcomed all the participants and introduced the webinar agenda with the participants. The webinar was coordinated by SONEUK Executive Committee member Prabin Limbu. Treasurer Rashmi Singh Rana provided a brief introduction of Dr Bhattarai as the resource person.

 

In the webinar, Dr Bhattarai discussed about the future of energy especially one with zero carbon footprint. Dr Bhattarai highlighted on how increased electric system flexibility, required for electricity supply and demand balance with high levels of renewable generation, can be achieved through a portfolio of Future Renewable Grid, Energy Storage, Green Hydrogen and Micro-grid Management. Dr Bhattarai also deliberated the challenges and opportunities of flexible energy market and its sustainability in the upcoming days. Dr Bhattarai also emphasised the significance of renewal energy mix to achieve the multidirectional smart energy distribution.

 

All the participants actively and enthusiastically engaged in exploring more about the topic during the Q&A session. All of the participants, including senior members of the society, appreciated the webinar’s content and delivery, emphasising how renewable energy is a promising alternative solution while being clean and environmentally safe. All participants were excited to know how renewable energy has been considered as energy source for the concept of first cognitive and smart city by NEOM in Saudi Arabia.

 

Vice-Chairperson of SONEUK, Narad Bhandari, conveyed vote of thanks to the resource person and the participants; whereas Chairperson of SONEUK, Sanyukta Shrestha, concluded the event highlighting the activities of the organisation.

India requires 7-day mandatory home quarantine for all international arrivals

New Delhi — India’s federal health ministry Friday said all international passengers arriving in the country would have to undergo mandatory seven-day home quarantine starting from Jan. 11.

The order has been issued in the wake of rising COVID-19 cases in India driven by the highly transmissible Omicron variant.

“All travellers (including those 2 percent who are selected for random testing on arrival and found negative) will undergo home quarantine for seven days and shall undertake RT-PCR test on the eighth day of arrival in India,” read the order.

“They should upload results of the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RTPCR) test done on the eighth day on the Air Suvidha (civil aviation) portal, which will be monitored by the respective state governments,” said the directive.

If the COVID-19 test results come negative, passengers will be advised to self-monitor their health for the next seven days. However, if found positive, their samples will be further sent for genomic testing at the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium laboratory network.

“They shall be managed at isolation facility and treated as per the existing standard protocol,” the guidelines said.

Passengers seated near them and cabin crew will be treated as contacts.

As per the new rules, all passengers will now have to submit a self-declaration form and a negative RT-PCR report on the online Air Suvidha portal before their journey. They also have to pre-book a COVID-19 test, which would be done on arrival.

Thermal screening will be carried out in respect of all the passengers by the health officials present at the airport.

“The passengers found to be symptomatic during screening shall be immediately isolated and taken to a medical facility. If tested positive, their contacts shall be identified and managed” in accordance with relevant protocols, said the order.

Travellers coming from “at-risk” countries will have to submit samples for COVID-19 testing at the point of arrival. They will be required to wait for their test results at the arrival airport before leaving or taking a connecting flight, the directive said.

( Agencies )

Sri Lankan tea exports earned 1.3 bln USD in 2021

COLOMBO — Sri Lanka’s tea industry performed well in 2021 earning 1.3 billion U.S. dollars despite lower yields and higher costs of production, state media reported on Thursday.

Chairman of the Sri Lanka Tea Board Jayampathy Molligoda was quoted by the state-owned Daily News as saying that Sri Lanka earned approximately 1.3 billion U.S. dollars from the export of 288 million kilos of tea in 2021.

Molligoda said the cost of production of Sri Lankan tea is among the highest in the global market and tea production peaked in 2013 and has declined since then. He said auction prices in Kenya and India are cheaper than in Colombo.

The chairman said Sri Lanka needs to “focus more on the front end of the value chain” by marketing the clean, sustainable and wellness aspects of Ceylon Tea.

Tea is Sri Lanka’s top agricultural export and accounted for 10.9 percent of total merchandise export revenue in 2021. (Xinhua)

Philippines bans child marriage

MANILA: Child marriage became illegal in the Philippines on Thursday as a law banning the practice took effect in a country where one in six girls enters wedlock before the age of 18.
The impoverished Southeast Asian country has the 12th highest number of child marriages in the world, according to Britain-based rights group Plan International, with long-held cultural practices and gender inequalities hindering change.
But the new law, signed by President Rodrigo Duterte and released to the public on Thursday, lays out prison terms of up to 12 years for marrying or cohabiting with anyone under 18.
People arranging or solemnizing underage unions also face the same penalty.
“The state … views child marriage as a practice constituting child abuse because it debases, degrades, and demeans the intrinsic worth and dignity of children,” the law states.
The government says the law is consistent with international conventions on the rights of women and children.
However, some portions of the legislation have been suspended for one year to allow for a transition period for Muslims and indigenous communities in which child marriage is relatively common.
A report last year by the United Nations Children’s Fund said more than half a billion girls and women worldwide were married in childhood, with the highest rates found in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.
But recent data indicates the practice is generally in decline on average across the globe. (AFP)

India reports 90,928 COVID-19 cases, 325 deaths

New Delhi — India’s COVID-19 cases have reached 35,109,286 with 90,928 new infection cases in the last 24 hours.

Similarly, 325 have died in a single day taking the tally to 882,876, according to the latest figures collated by the Worldometers.

The number of infections was 35,886 yesterday.  Currently, 284,155 people are undergoing treatment in various hospitals across the country while 34,342,255 have returned home following recovery.

The government on Wednesday asked the private offices to make arrangements for regular work with the help of 50 percent employees in the capital city New Delhi.

The government has instructed the remaining 50 percent to take leave or work from home. (Agencies)

IOM expresses concern over millions of displaced people in Afghanistan

GENEVA — The International Organization for Migration (IOM) on Monday raised the alarm over millions of displaced Afghans post the Taliban takeover.

As per IOM, there are “664,000 newly displaced by conflict in 2021,” reported Tolo News.

“There are now an estimated 5.5 million Internally Displaced Persons in Afghanistan (IDPs), including those living in protracted situations, and 664,000 newly displaced by conflict in 2021,” IOM said. “This is in addition to more than 924,744 undocumented Afghan returnees who returned from Iran and Pakistan between 1 January and the end of September, and the more than 2.2. million refugees and 3.5 million undocumented Afghan nationals already in neighbouring countries, primarily Iran and Pakistan,” added IOM.

Afghanistan is going through a severe humanitarian crisis, and many countries and humanitarian organizations have voiced their concerns, reported Tolo News. The situation turned volatile in the aftermath of dried funds from the international community after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in mid-August.

Narmi, a mother of five children, living in Kabul is one of hundreds of thousands of displaced Afghans who are struggling with difficult conditions. “Life is passing. The government didn’t help me. We don’t have food at home,” she said. “We have left our homes due to war and poverty. I am working to find food,” said Mohammad Afzal, a displaced person.

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation said it has been trying to gain more humanitarian assistance from international donors to support the displaced people, reported Tolo News. A former media officer for a UN office in Afghanistan, Naseer Ahmad Haidarzai, said, “We are in a condition that both the international organizations and the Afghan government are incapable of solving.” (ANI)