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South Asia eyes tourism revival with eased restrictions

Kathmandu (AFP)

Nepal has restarted visas on arrival for vaccinated tourists as South Asian nations attempt to revive tourism businesses devastated after 18 months of the pandemic.

A near travel shutdown has been in place in India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan and Sri Lanka for more than a year as successive waves of coronavirus took a deadly toll.

Nepal reopened to tourists and scrapped quarantine requirements for vaccinated foreigners on Thursday and its neighbours are expected to quickly follow as they seek to bolster linchpin industries in their economies.

“The resumption of on-arrival visas is aimed at reopening the tourism sector which is one of the mainstays of Nepal’s economy,” Tourism Ministry spokesman Tara Nath Adhikari told AFP.

All visitors must still take a pandemic test on arrival and unvaccinated travellers have to quarantine for 10 days.

The decision came just as monsoon clouds cleared for the autumn trekking season, and many are hopeful it will help drive up the arrivals.

“So many have lost jobs and livelihoods. This decision is crucial for all of us and we are hopeful that at least some visitors will return,” said Nabin Trital of the Trekking Agencies Association of Nepal.

Neighbouring India is soon to announce that it will give away 500,000 free tourist visas as it also starts to reopen after more than a year, officials told AFP.

The country had more than 12.5 million tourists in 2019 but lost hundreds of millions of dollars after the shutters came down in March last year.

New Delhi is negotiating with international airlines to get scheduled flights resumed from main markets in North America and Europe, the officials said.

Bhutan recently let in its first foreign tourist, an American who spent three weeks in quarantine.

The country has imposed draconian restrictions to minimize the impact of the pandemic, recording only three coronavirus deaths in the population of 700,000.

Vaccinated tourists began entering Sri Lanka in July, without having to quarantine if they test negative for Covid-19 on arrival.

South Asia is highly dependent on tourism, which accounted for some 47 million jobs in 2019, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.

But the pandemic left beaches and mountains deserted, from Everest to the Indian Ocean, and the fall in tourism played a major role in recessions seen by most of the countries last year.

UN chief highlights work required to help developing countries

BARBADOS — United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday stressed the urgent work required to help developing countries and accelerate global economic recovery at the 15th session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD15).

The UNCTAD15, hosted by Barbados, takes place online on October 3-7 under the theme “From inequality and vulnerability to prosperity for all”

“Like so many small island developing states, Barbados is also a country where the global challenges we

“So, this is a fitting place to discuss the urgent steps we need to take to ensure a strong, sustainable economic recovery for all. And that is a clear objective of UNCTAD,” he said.

The UN secretary-general called on all countries to follow through on their commitment to help developing countries adapt to the green economy, with at least USD 100 billion in climate finance annually in support of developing countries’ programs of mitigation and adaptation.

The quadrennial UN event comprises high-level segment and ministerial round-table discussions on scaling up financing for development, reshaping global and regional value chains, harnessing frontier technologies for shared prosperity and supporting productive transformation for greater resilience in a post-pandemic world.

The event sets priorities for the next four years and formulates global policy recommendations on trade and development. (ANI/Xinhua)

Pandora Papers leak prompts calls for action in Asia

Kuala Lumpur,  (AP) Malaysia’s main opposition leader called Monday for information found in the Pandora Papers data leak to be discussed in Parliament, after learning the country’s former finance minister and several current officials might have been involved with offshore firms set up in tax havens.

Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim asked for a debate of this urgent issue, as it has mentioned some big names in the country. He identified former Finance Minister Daim Zainudddin as well as current Finance Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz and three other politicians.

I believe this matter is in the interest of the people, because it is also mentions the names of government and opposition political figures, he wrote in a Facebook post to which he attached his formal request for a parliamentary debate.

Zafrul, a banker who was appointed finance minister last year, said in a statement that he had ended ties with the holding company and bank mentioned in the report by 2010.

He suggested he was considering suing online news portal Malaysiakini, the only Malaysian media organization that was listed as being involved in the leak of documents to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

I have referred the matter to my lawyers for further advice and appropriate action,” he said.

Media organizations around the world collaborated through the ICIJ to review and report on nearly 12 million files obtained by the consortium from 14 offshore entities.

Elsewhere in the region, the periodical that collaborated on the document leak from Indonesia, the weekly Tempo magazine, reported that a government minister, Luhut Pandjaitan, had served as the CEO of a Panama-incorporated oil and gas company, Petrocapital SA.

His spokesman, Jodi Mahardi, confirmed that Panjaitan, the coordinating minister of maritime affairs and investment, had served in that role from 2007 to 2010, but said it was a time when the company had found no investment projects.

Along the way, there were various obstacles related to geographical location, culture, and investment certainty, so Mr. Luhut B. Pandjaitan decided to resign from Petrocapital and focus on his business in Indonesia, he told The Associated Press in a written statement.

In Australia, the Taxation Office said it would analyze the information to determine whether there were any relevant links, while stressing that it doesn’t rely on data leaks as it deals with offshore tax evasion year-round.

We are well connected locally and globally in our efforts to fight financial crime,” said Will Day, the Taxation Office’s deputy commissioner and the head of the Serious Financial Crime Taskforce. “We will certainly look at this data set and compare it with the data we already have to identify any potential connections.

In Malaysia, Malaysiakini’s report on the data leak focused primarily on former Finance Minister Daim, a businessman who served in that role from 1984 to 1991, and 1999 to 2001. It said he is implicated in setting up a firm in the British Virgin Islands for his sons, aged 9 and 12 at the time, among other things.

Having an offshore company is not necessarily illegal, and when contacted by Malaysiakini, Daim said all of his taxes had been fully paid in every jurisdiction where he did business and where income was earned.

He told the publication that not all the trusts linked to him in the documents were his, and that some belonged to his children.

I’ve retired from business for some time already, and trusts are part of estate planning, he was quoted as saying.

According to Malaysiakini, Daim’s sons were named joint shareholders with their mother of Newton Invest & Finance Limited in 2007, which held properties in London worth some 10 million pounds at the time.

Malaysiakini reported that by the time the brothers were in their early 20s, they were owners of several offshore firms set up in tax havens, including Splendid International Ltd., which held London properties then worth 12 million pounds.

Daim was quoted by Malaysiakini as saying that he had been buying overseas properties since the 1960s, well before entering politics, and suggested that the news portal’s constant reporting and implying wrongdoing by innuendos and speculation are totally unprofessional and looks like a never-ending mission to shame and discredit me.

I was a successful and wealthy businessman long before I entered politics, and this has been sufficiently documented, he was quoted as saying.

The two companies whose Singapore offices were most frequently mentioned in the Pandora Papers for helping set up a trust or company in a tax haven, Asiaciti Trust and Trident Trust, Malaysiakini reported.

Asiaciti said the Pandora Papers articles are based on incomplete and sometimes erroneous information, including some confidential information that was illegally obtained from Asiaciti Trust as part of a global attack on industry service providers.

The company stressed in a statement emailed to AP and posted on its website that it was committed to ensuring our operations comply with all laws and regulations.

We are bound by statutory confidentiality laws that restrict us from commenting on specific matters, and the ICIJ and its partners have been informed of this fact, the company said. In our view, it is clear that they have chosen to portray information in a way that suits a particular narrative.

Trident Trust did not respond to emails from the AP for comment.

Pakistan seeks ADB help for setting up natural disaster fund for risk reduction, mitigation

Islamabad — There is a need for establishing a natural
disaster fund for disaster risk reduction, mitigation and rehabilitation, said
Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives Asad
Umar during discussions with newly appointed Asian Development Bank (ADB)
Country Director for Pakistan Yong Ye.
He sought cooperation in setting up a risk management unit for public-private
partnership (PPP) ventures with the help of ADB, the Express Tribune reported.
Meanwhile, ADB is set to provide USD 6 billion over a three-year period to the country
in view of testing time for Pakistan’s economy.
Last month, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) President and Leader of
Opposition Shehbaz Sharif had slammed the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)
government saying that the ruling party has drowned the country’s economy under
debts.
He also lashed out at the Imran Khan government over the “unprecedented level” of
inflation in the country and added that during its three-year tenure, it did not build a
“single penny” project, The Express Tribune reported.
“Five million people have been rendered unemployed by the incumbent government, it
has become impossible for the poor to afford two square meals a day,” Shehbaz Sharif
had said while addressing a National Assembly session in Islamabad. (ANI)

Nepal and India review progress of Post-Earthquake Reconstruction Projects in Nepal

KATHMANDU: Nepal and India have held the Joint Project Monitoring Committee (JPMC) meeting on post-earthquake reconstruction projects in Kathmandu on Thursday.

The meeting was co-chaired by Anurag Srivastava, Joint Secretary (North), Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India and Sushil Chandra Tiwari, Secretary, National Reconstruction Authority, Government of Nepal.

The meeting carried out a comprehensive review of the progress of Government of India assisted post-earthquake reconstruction projects in housing, education, health and cultural heritage sectors in Nepal, the Embassy of India here stated in a press release.

Both sides expressed satisfaction on the successful completion of 50,000 houses in Gorkha and Nuwakot districts of Nepal, constructed under the Government of India’s assistance in the Housing sector.

Similarly, both sides also noted with appreciation the progress achieved in reconstruction projects being undertaken under education, cultural heritage and health sectors in Nepal. The co-chairs agreed to hold the next meeting of the JPMC on a mutually convenient date.

The JPMC Mechanism was set up in August 2017 to monitor the progress of Government of India assisted post-earthquake reconstruction projects in Nepal.

The meeting was attended by representatives of concerned Ministries, Departments and Agencies of Government of Nepal, Officers and officials of the Government of India, Consultants and other stakeholders engaged in implementation of the projects. The last JPMC meeting was held on 8th March 2020 in Kathmandu. (RSS)

US COVID-19 deaths cross 7,00,000-mark

Washington — The United Stateson Friday (local time) surpassed 7,00,000 deaths due to COVID-19.

According to data from Johns Hopkins University, 7,00,258 Americans have died and more than 43.61 million have been infected by the virus till now.
The Spanish flu pandemic from 1918 to 1919 killed about 6,75,000 people in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Researchers at the University of Washington project that an additional 100,000 Americans will die during the forthcoming winter, Sputnik reported. (ANI)

Krishna Dahal announces candidacy for the ACCA Council Member Election

London — A well-known Accountant, Krishna Prasad Dahal, has announced his candidacy for the post of ACCA Council Member in the elections being held later this year.

A passionate ACCA member, Krishna is a senior statutory auditor and managing partner in an established audit practice firm in London. He holds over 20 years’ experience in providing audit and advisory services to clients in the healthcare, communications, manufacturing, telecom, travel, mining, services, financial, trading and technology sectors. He advises many leading companies. He has extensive experience working with clients operating in the UK, Europe, Middle East and South Asia. He also has experience in dealing with corporate governance, listing of companies in the stock exchange and other issues impacting high net worth clients.

In addition to his portfolio of UK clients, Krishna’s international focus is on Nepal and India. He has very good networking with Professional Accountants around the globe and is always ready to volunteer for the community.

Since being qualified as an ACCA member in 2008, he is actively involved in ACCA community as ACCA advocate, ACCA mentor for many aspiring ACCA students, affiliates and members. He is involved in ACCA local and global committees including in Harrow, London Network Panel and as an invitee member in Global Forum, corporate reporting.

Prior to starting his career in the United Kingdom, Krishna worked as Chief of Internal Audit Department at a national level bank in Nepal and also served as an elected Council Member for The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nepal (2003-2006).

Krishna started his accountancy career in New Delhi, the capital of India and qualified as CA member from The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India in 2002. He is still actively involved in the Indian Accountancy body’s UK Executive Committee since 2015 and currently works as General Secretary in the UK Chapter of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India.

 

Talking to South Asia Time, Mr Dahal said,Our profession is facing ongoing and future global challenges such as artificial intelligence, digitalisation of accounting work, regulations, standards and many more. I am passionate about long-term strategic vision to drive the Association towards a globally leading accounting body to face global challenges, transferring uncertainties into opportunities, branding, recognition and making ACCA accessible to all entrants, students and members around the world.”

Collectively we should take a lead to formulate a strategy for upcoming global challenges and social expectations. I would like to contribute towards creating synergies to maximise use of the best practices and facilitate skill sharing with greater harmonization of the global accounting bodies and professionals, said Mr Dahal, adding, “We should further strengthen our system using online platforms, e- learning, digital books and employ local resources to make education more accessible and affordable. Simultaneously we must emphasise the continuous advancement of our course material to meet future expectations.”

 

Full recognition and expansion to all regions

ACCA should play an intelligent role and put forward a solid marketing strategy to liaise with local accounting regulatory bodies to achieve the full recognition of our members in their respective countries for further expansion, said Dahal.

“Our Association must consider providing competitive and affordable fee with respect to local body in the developing economies to motivate high caliber students and continue as members of the ACCA. This step will not only help in galvanizing the local economies, but also ensure that ACCA continues to be recognised as a global brand around the world,” he added.

What is ACCA?

Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) was founded in 1904 in the United Kingdom. ACCA is the global professional accounting body offering the Chartered Certified Accountant qualification (ACCA), having its head-quarters in London, United Kingdom.

ACCA is a global accounting body for more than 700,000 qualified members worldwide. It currently has more than 233,000 active members. The Association currently has 536,000 students and 1404 staff members all around the world.

ACCA works through a network of over 104 offices and centres in 52 countries – with 323 Approved Learning Partners (ALP) and more than 7,300 Approved Employers worldwide, who provide employee development. The term ‘Chartered’ in ACCA qualification refers to the Royal Charter granted in 1974 in the English Law for the professional registered accountants and registered auditors for United Kingdom.

 

Election for the Global ACCA Council

If elected, Mr Dahal will serve as non-executive director of Board of ACCA, also known as the Global ACCA Council. Every year election is held for approximately one third of the positions being vacant in the Global Council.

Elected ACCA Global council members remain in the ACCA council for a period of 3 years.

Online and postal voting for 2021 AGM and Council elections will open for active ACCA members on 7 October 2021. Online and postal voting will close on 11 November 2021 at 13:00 GMT.

Pratishtha Raut flaunts Benve dress in Milan Fashion Week

London- Model Pratishtha Raut, from London, has had an opportunity to cat walk in the Milan Fashion Week.

She attended an event hosted by Elena Savo in Milan who hold Opening Milan Fashion Week twice a year under ‘Event SAVÓ’ where designers from all around the world come and showcase their designs.

Miss Raut can be seen flaunting green dress by Benve whose designer Ana Banvenuto is from Spain. Secondly she can be seen flaunting a casual simple t-shirt and skirt set by Designer Valentina Poltronieri who is from Italy.

Miss Raut, a floorpan architect who graduated from University Of Brighton and also a strong advocate for Mental Health, had reached the finale of Miss Universe Great Britain 2021 in London. She is currently preparing for it as the finale will be held in Wales on 16th October 2021.

In 2019, she was crowned Miss England 2nd Runner Up and received the  prestigious award ‘Beauty With A Purpose’ for raising £9,999.

To vote for her for Miss Universe Great Britain 2021 please follow the link below and click on her name ‘Pratishtha Raut’ number 21, first vote is free – https://www.missuniversegb.co.uk/voting.html

Gurkha Memorial with the depicts of VC Kulbir Thapa unveiled in Aldershot

London — A Gurkha Memorial with the depicts of VC Kulbir Thapa, has been unveiled in Princes Gardens Aldershot.

The statue was unveiled on Saturday (September 25) in the Princes Gardens at an official ceremony which took place exactly 110 years after the brave actions of the Gurkha depicted in the artwork.

In 1915, Kulbir Thapa found a wounded English soldier behind the first-line German trench.

The depicts of Kulbir Thapa Magar carrying a wounded soldier from the Leicestershire regiment off the battlefield during World War One.
He was the first Nepalese Gurkha recipient of the Victoria Cross.

The unveiling ceremony also included prayers of dedication.
Greater Rushmoor Nepali Community commissioned the memorial.
It highlights a bond between Nepal and the UK dating back more than two centuries.

 

UK government is expected to ease visa rules for truck drivers to help fix supply-chain

London, AP — In a U-turn, the British government is expected to ease visa rules for truck drivers to help fix supply-chain problems that have triggered long lines at gas stations and some shuttered pumps.

The government said late Friday it was looking at temporary measures to avoid any immediate problems. It said any action it took would be very strictly time-limited.

The haulage industry says the UK is short tens of thousands of truckers, due to a perfect storm of factors including the coronavirus pandemic, an aging workforce and an exodus of foreign workers following Britain’s departure from the European Union.

Post-Brexit immigration rules mean EU citizens can no longer live and work visa-free in Britain, as they could when the UK was a member of the trade bloc.

Trucking companies have been urging the Conservative government to ease immigration rules so drivers can more easily be recruited from across Europe.

Britain’s farming and food processing industries, which are short of fruit-pickers and meat-packers, have made similar requests.

The government has resisted, saying British workers should be trained up to take the jobs. It has stressed that Britain is not short of fuel, but that has not stopped motorists forming lines at gas stations to fill up just in case.

Sporadic supply chains at supermarkets and other shops starting several weeks ago also were attributed to a lack of delivery drivers.

BP and Esso shut a handful of their stations in Britain this week because there were not enough truckers to get gas to the pumps. EG Group, which operates about 400 U.K. gas stations, said it was limiting purchases to 30 pounds ( 41).

In a statement, the government said Britain had ample fuel stocks.

But like countries around the world, we are suffering from a temporary COVID-related shortage of drivers needed to move supplies around the country, it said, not acknowledging Brexit as a factor.

The head of the Confederation of British Industry, Tony Danker, said the driver shortage was in part a Brexit hangover.

We had several drivers go home that we wouldn’t have wanted to go home, and I think there is this bigger question of the immigration system, and it’s a complicated one, he told the BBC.

Danker said easing visa rules would be a huge relief.

It’s a shame the government needed queues at the pumps to move, but move I hope they have, and it will help, he said.

Indian PM Modi holds first in-person meeting with US Vice President Kamala Harris

Washington —  Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday met with US Vice President Kamala Harris here, a day ahead of his highly anticipated bilateral meet with US President Joe Biden.

This was Modi’s first in-person meeting with Harris after she made history by becoming the first Indian-origin person to become the Vice President of America.

Earlier in June this year, Modi held a telephonic conversation with Harris and discussed the US’ strategy for global vaccine sharing and the Quad vaccine initiative to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a statement before leaving for the US, the Indian Prime Minister had said he is looking forward to meeting Vice President Kamala Harris to explore opportunities for cooperation between our two nations particularly in the area of science and technology.

Earlier in the day, Modi met US Vice President Kamala Harris, Australian PM Scott Morrison and held meetings with five global CEOs for potential investment in India.

These talks were part of series of meetings that Prime Minister Modi undertook with select heads of corporates that have the potential to invest significantly in India.

Earlier on Wednesday, Prime Minister Modi arrived in Washington for his much-touted US visit. He had earlier addressed the Global COVID-19 Summit called by US President Biden.

Biden is scheduled to host Modi at the White House on September 24. This is going to be the first in-person meeting between the two leaders after Biden took over as the US President on January 20.

Biden will host the first-ever in-person Quad Leaders’ Summit, which will be joined by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

Indian PM Modi’s US visit will conclude on September 25 with an address at the United Nations General Assembly focusing on the pressing global challenges including the Covid-19 pandemic, the need to combat terrorism, climate change, and other important issues.

This is Indian Prime Minister Modi’s first visit abroad beyond the neighborhood since the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak.

Indian PM Modi is accompanied by a high-level delegation comprising National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, and senior officials. The high-level session of the UNGA began on Tuesday in New York.

The theme for this year’s General Debate is ‘Building Resilience through hope to recover from COVID-19, rebuild sustainably, respond to the needs of the planet, respect the rights of people, and revitalize the United Nations. (ANI)

Sri Lankan president says reducing greenhouse gas emissions, promoting sustainable energy solutions essential for planet

Colombo — Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa said that reducing greenhouse gas emissions and promoting sustainable energy solutions were essential to ensure the health of the planet, the President’s Office said in a statement on Saturday.

According to the statement, Rajapaksa expressed these views while speaking at the United Nations (UN) High-Level Dialogue on Energy on Friday, under the theme of “ensuring everyone has access to affordable, reliable and sustainable energy.”

Addressing the dialogue, Rajapaksa said the global community should give the highest priority to maintain the health of the planet while fulfilling human needs.

“The threats posed by human-induced climate change to the planet can no longer be ignored. Transitioning to cleaner energy globally is essential if we are to mitigate this threat in the decades to come, I request countries that have the required capabilities to support developing nations as they attempt this transition to more sustainable energy generation and usage,” Rajapaksa said.

The president said sustainable energy development continues to be a high priority for Sri Lanka, and the country aimed for 70 percent of the country’s energy requirements to be obtained through renewable sources by 2030.

He said the Sri Lankan government has made plans to transition away from fossil fuels, promote de-carbonization, and make Sri Lanka a carbon-neutral country by 2050.

Rajapaksa said Sri Lanka’s commitment not to construct any new coal power plants is reflected in its Nationally Determined Contributions to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and added Sri Lanka was happy to be a co-lead of the Energy Compact for No New Coal Power.

“Sri Lanka is encouraging entrepreneurs, small businesses, and community organizations to invest in 7,000 small-scale solar projects throughout the country,” the president said, adding that the country’s largest wind power farm was also recently inaugurated.

Rajapaksa also said Sri Lanka further welcomes large-scale investments in renewable energy, particularly in solar, wind, and biomass, over the coming decades. (Xinhua)

Virendra Sharma MP supports Organ Donation Week

London — Virendra Sharma MP supports Organ Donation Week and encourages constituents to talk about organ donation with their loved ones. 

Although the law around organ donation has changed to an opt out system in many parts of the UK, families will still be consulted if organ donation is a possibility. 

Each year, hundreds of opportunities for transplants are missed because families aren’t sure what to do. Families will always be consulted about whether their loved ones wanted to be an organ donor or not, and clinicians will never proceed with organ donation if the family or loved ones object. Ealing Southall MP urges his constituents to have an open conversation to discuss family member’s preferences and concerns. 

On average British Asian patients wait up to six months longer than white patients for a kidney transplant. Patients from the African Caribbean and African communities wait up to twelve months longer than white patients for a kidney transplant. Although people can receive a transplant from someone of any ethnicity, the best transplants come from donors of the same ethnicity. 

Virendra Sharma MP said: 

Many of my constituents are of BAME origin and those from BAME backgrounds are more likely to develop conditions that result in the need for organ transplants and those requiring bone marrow donations are more likely to find a match with someone from a similar ethnic background. Although there has been a fantastic increase in the number of donors overall in the past ten years, the number of BAME organ and tissue donors has only increased by a small fraction of the community and this translates directly into more deaths in our community. 

Speaking at a previous Parliamentary debate on organ donation, the Ealing Southall MP pressed for further education for families to encourage donations. He addressed the sensitivity around this issue and said that when the wishes of the deceased are unclear, and emotions are cloudy immediately after their death, it can be difficult to make the decision to donate at that time. He said, “discussing your wishes with family well in advance can mean that you will save a life. Further education on organ donation and debunking myths about religious exclusion from the practice is necessary to save more lives, as is discussion with family members prior to death regarding organ donation.  Awareness must be raised within our schools and communities here in the UK if we wish to save lives and increase quality of life for countless individuals. 

If you have recorded an organ donation decision on the NHS Organ Donor Register and want to update your details, or change or reaffirm your decision, you can amend your details on https://www.organdonation.nhs.uk/register-your-decision/donate/ or call 0300 123 23 23.  

The recovery rate of COVID-19 patients in India increased to 97.75 percent

NEW DELHI — The recovery rate of COVID-19 patients in India increased to 97.75 percent on Tuesday, the country’s federal health ministry said, as 32,749,574 patients have been cured.

According to the federal health ministry, the constant increase in recoveries has ensured the reduction in actual caseload with the total positive cases in the country standing at 0.92 percent.

The country has been witnessing a continuous fall in the active caseload.

The country’s active caseload on Tuesday stood at 309,575, the ministry said. A total of 34,469 patients recovered during the last 24 hours and the active cases are now only 0.92 percent of the country’s total positive cases.

During the last 24 hours, 26,115 fresh positive cases were reported in the country.

“While 26,115 persons were found positive in the past 24 hours, India has registered 34,469 new recoveries during the same period,” the ministry said.

Officials said testing has been enhanced across the country, with a continued decline in weekly positive cases.

“Weekly positivity rate remains below 3 percent for last 88 days, currently at 2.08 percent,” the ministry said. “Daily positivity rate at 1.85 percent, less than 3 percent for last 22 days and below 5 percent for 105 consecutive days now.”

The national Case Fatality Rate (CFR) at present is 1.32 percent, and 252 deaths were reported across the country during the last 24 hours.

According to the health ministry, the number of recovered patients has overtaken active cases by more than 105 times.

Meanwhile, the Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) on Tuesday morning said a cumulative total of 555,035,717 COVID-19 tests were carried out and 1,413,951 samples were tested on Monday alone.

The inoculation drive against COVID-19 is underway. According to the health ministry, over 818 million COVID-19 jabs have been administered and 9,646,778 jabs were administered on Monday.

The Indian government aims to vaccinate all people above the age of 18 years by the end of this year.

The ministry said the number of COVID-19 cases in the country has reached 33,504,534 and the death toll rose to 445,385 on Tuesday(Xinhua).

US to drop travel ban for vaccinated international travelers

WASHINGTON,  (AP) — In a major easing of pandemic travel restrictions, the U.S. said Monday it will allow foreigners to fly into the country this fall if they have vaccination proof and a negative COVID-19 test — changes replacing a hodgepodge of rules that had kept out many non-citizens and irritated allies in Europe and beyond where virus cases are lower.

The changes, to take effect in November, will allow families and others who have been separated by the travel restrictions for 18 months to plan for long-awaited reunifications and allow foreigners with work permits to get back to their jobs in the U.S.

Airlines, business groups and travelers cheered — though they also called the step long overdue.

The new policy will replace a patchwork of travel bans first instituted by President Donald Trump last year and tightened by President Joe Biden that restrict travel by non-citizens who have in the prior 14 days been in the United Kingdom, European Union, China, India, Iran, Republic of Ireland, Brazil or South Africa.

White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients announced the new policies, which still will require all foreign travelers flying to the U.S. to demonstrate proof of vaccination before boarding, as well as proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken within three days of flight. Biden will also tighten testing rules for unvaccinated American citizens, who will need to be tested within a day before returning to the U.S., as well as after they arrive home.

The tougher rules for unvaccinated Americans come as the White House has moved to impose sweeping vaccination-or-testing requirements affecting as many as 100 million people in an effort to encourage holdouts to get shots, AP writes.

Fully vaccinated passengers will not be required to quarantine, Zients said.

There will be no immediate change to U.S. land border policies, which restrict much cross-border travel with Mexico and Canada.

The travel bans had become the source of growing geopolitical frustration, particularly among allies in the UK and EU. The easing comes ahead of Biden meeting with some European leaders on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly this week.

Announcements on COVID-19, clean energy, climate change likely at Quad summit

Washington — Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) leaders will “make announcements relating to COVID-19, clean energy and climate change” following their meeting on Friday, a senior US administration official has said.
“President Joe Biden has made the Quad a priority, as we all saw through the first Quad leaders-level engagement in March, which was virtual, and now this summit, which will be in person,” a US administration official said in a statement.
The official also said that there will be announcements on COVID-19 as well in the following Quad leaders meeting.
“So the main areas where you will see both consultations and then some announcements will be on COVID-19. And, you know, in March, there was a commitment to producing a billion vaccines through the Quad, by the end of 2022. And there’ll be some announcements about moving that forward, as well as other forms of COVID-19 assistance,” the official said.
“In addressing the climate crisis — and there will be clean energy and climate-related announcements coming out of the Quad,” the official said.
President Joe Biden will be hosting the first in-person Quad leaders’ summit comprising Australia, India, Japan and the US.
“Hosting the leaders of the Quad fundamentally is a demonstration of the priority of engaging in the Indo-Pacific, including through new multilateral configurations designed to focus on 21st-century challenges,” the official said.
“Partnering on emerging technologies in cyberspace, promoting high-standards infrastructure, and, of course, an overarching commitment at the core of the Quad to promoting a free and open Indo-Pacific,” the official added.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is all set to travel United States to attend the first in-person Quad Leaders Summit and address the UN general debate.
During the significant visit to the US, PM Modi would on September 24 participate in the Leaders’ Summit of the Quadrilateral Framework in Washington along with his US, Japanese and Australian counterparts.
The bilateral meeting with the US President is also scheduled for the day. Moreover, this is PM Modi’s first visit to the US since Joe Biden became the President.
He will address the General Debate of the High-Level Segment of the 76th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on September 25 in New York. (ANI)