Man killed as fire engulfs shop in Karachi’s Saddar

A man was killed when a fire engulfed a store in Karachi’s Saddar Saturday night.

The fire broke out at a store on Akbar Road.

The victim has been identified as Waqas. He was a shopkeeper and according to witnesses, lived in the store as well.

Officials don’t know how the fire broke out yet. It was a sudden blaze that quickly engulfed the entire shop.

By the time rescue and fire brigade teams reached the scene it was too late to save Waqas.

He was critically injured and taken to the Burns Unit at Civil Hospital where he passed away.



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709 pilgrims from Iran reach Pakistan House at Taftan Border

Seven hundred and nine pilgrims from Iran reached Pakistan House at the Taftan Border on Saturday, according to the Balochistan Levies Force.

At least 510 pilgrims and students who came from Iran have been kept at the quarantine centre at the Pakistan House, whereas 199 traders and other residents left for Quetta after they were screened and cleared of the coronavirus.

An officer of the Levies Force said that of the 330 pilgrims who reached Quetta Saturday night, 221 were from Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and 11 were from Sindh.

The Balochistan government had closed the Taftan Border last week and banned the travel of Pakistani pilgrims to and from Iran amidst coronavirus fears. Residents of areas adjoining the border such as Gwadar, Turbat, Chagai, Panjgur and Nushki have also been barred from going near the border.

Screening of people crossing the Chaman border is also under way, the officer added.

The Ministry of Interior has decided to keep the Pakistan-Afghanistan border closed from March 2 to March 7.

According to the ministry’s notification, the decision has been taken in the wake of the global coronavirus outbreak.

Hundreds of pilgrims travel between the countries every day and there are fears that they might bring with them the highly contagious coronavirus. Pakistan has reported four cases of the virus so far and all the patients had a history of travel to Iran.



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Man who trafficked women abroad arrested in Lahore

A man who was part of a human trafficking group that tricked women into going abroad with them has been arrested in Lahore.

He and the other members of the four-member gang operated in Gujranwala. They lied to women and told them they would get them jobs abroad but when they got there, they sold them.

Adeel was arrested by the FIA. Three other members fled. One of the gang members was Adeel’s wife.

The case was highlighted when a woman fled captivity in Dubai and arrived at the Pakistani Embassy. She reported the case and said the group had told her they would get her a job at a beauty salon but instead sold her.

Another victim has also come forward. The FIA lodged a case on their complaint and has begun investigations.

The authorities say that they are working to rescue the other trafficked women on information obtained from the suspect.



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Two arrested in Karachi during Rangers crackdown on mask hoarders

Two men were arrested in Karachi Saturday night after the Sindh Rangers launched a crackdown against coronavirus protective mask hoarders across the city.

They raided multiple shops in Gulshan-e-Iqbal Block 13-D, PECHS Block II and Federal B Area. According to officers, more than 74,000 surgical masks were confiscated from these shops.

The Sindh government has said that all sellers involved in hoarding masks will be charged under Section 144 of the Pakistan Penal Code. Anyone found guilty will be sentenced to two years in prison.

The Drug Regulatory Authority Pakistan has also started taking action against pharmacies selling overpriced masks.

Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Zafar Mirza said the ministry is keeping a strict watch on such activities. Whoever is found to be selling medicines at inflated prices will be face severe action, he said.

Amidst panic over the coronavirus outbreak, residents have been reaching for pharmacies and shops to purchase masks as a protective measure to safeguard themselves from the virus.

Pakistan has reported a total of four cases of the coronavirus. All the patients had a history of travel to Iran.



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Naushero Feroz police claim arrest of MPA Shahnaz Ansari’s killers

The Naushero Feroz police have arrested two men whom they say are the killers of MPA Shahnaz Ansari.

Ansari, a member of the PPP, was gunned down in Darya Khan Marri village on February 15. She was attending her brother-in-law’s chehlum.

The Sindh IG has congratulated the Naushero Feroz SSP and his team for making the arrests and said that the investigation has been impartial and transparent.

He said the police is going to see the investigation through till the end.

The suspects have been identified as Waqar and Akhtar Khokhar.



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Islamabad police trainee hospitalised after instructor ‘tortures’ him with sticks

A police instructor was accused of allegedly an officer during training with ‘sticks’ and ‘rods’ at Islamabad’s police training centre.

A group of the federal police’s anti-terrorism squad was sent for training to a training centre at the Simly Dam in Rawalpindi.

According to the police, the instructor of the group tortured an under training officer, Shahzaib, at the centre. The constable was shifted to a hospital after his condition became critical.

The senior superintendent officer of the Counter Terrorism Department has taken notice and has ordered an inquiry of the incident.



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Karachi policemen filmed assaulting protesting women damage SAMAA TV’s camera

Action is being taken against Karachi policemen who used violence against a group of protesting women and the journalists who were covering the protest.

A protest broke out in Korangi’s Awami Colony Saturday after night the arrest of four young men. They have been accused of robbery.

But their families believe they are innocent. A group of women, all related to the young men, staged a protest outside the Awami Colony police station. When they entered the police station to continue their protest inside, the police beat them up.

The police then got angry at media persons filming the incident, including SAMAA TV, and attacked them. In the process, one police officer broke the SAMAA TV’s camera.

After journalists staged a protest outside the police station, the Korangi SSP took notice and ordered the DSP to take action against the police personnel involved.

The officer who broke SAMAA TV’s camera, Raja Jamshed of the 15 Madadgar Helpline, has been placed on quarter guard.



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New Malaysia PM sworn in amid crisis, Mahathir fights on

A former interior minister was sworn in as Malaysia’s premier on Sunday, marking the return of a scandal-mired regime to power after the last government’s collapse but ex-leader Mahathir Mohamad slammed the move as illegal.

Muhyiddin Yassin took the oath of office at the national palace in Kuala Lumpur, capping a week of political turmoil following the collapse of the former ruling coalition and Mahathir’s resignation.

The Southeast Asian nation was plunged into turmoil a week ago following the collapse of 94-year-old Mahathir’s reformist “Pact of Hope” alliance, which stormed to a historic victory in 2018 against a government mired in corruption allegations.

Mahathir — the world’s oldest leader — then quit and triggered a race for the premiership, which he lost to little-known Muhyiddin, who heads a coalition dominated by the country’s ethnic Malay Muslim majority.

The decision by the monarch to pick Muhyiddin on Saturday caused widespread anger that the democratically elected government was being ejected, while Mahathir insists he in fact had enough support to become leader again.

The king appoints the country’s prime minister, who must prove he has the support of the majority of MPs.



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First coronavirus death on US soil confirmed, Trump urges calm

The first fatality from the novel coronavirus has been confirmed on US soil, as President Donald Trump on Saturday urged Americans not to panic.

Health officials said the man who died in Washington state was one of a handful with no known links to global hot zones to have contracted the virus — indicating that the pathogen was now likely spreading in communities.

The death occurred in King County, the most populous in the state and home to Seattle, a city of more than 700,000 people, officials told AFP.

The victim was in his 50s and had “underlying health conditions,” said Jeff Duchin, public health officer for Seattle and King County.

“It is a sad day in our state as we learn that a Washingtonian has died from COVID-19,” Washington state Governor Jay Inslee said in a statement, sending condolences to the victim’s loved ones.

Inslee declared a state of emergency over coronavirus, freeing up funding for state agencies and allowing the use of the Washington National Guard, if necessary.

Speaking at a White House news conference Trump said that “additional cases in the United States are likely,” but added that “healthy individuals should be able to fully recover.”

“Our country is prepared for any circumstance,” Trump insisted, calling on “the media and politicians and everybody else involved not to do anything to incite panic.”

Trump identified the victim as “a wonderful woman,” but the CDC later said it had misinformed the president in an earlier briefing.

Washington state also reported on Saturday the country’s first case of coronavirus in a health care worker and the first possible outbreak in a nursing home. 

This comes after the states of Oregon and California confirmed late last week the first instances of infected US patients who had not traveled overseas or come in contact with anyone known to be ill.

“While there is still much to learn about the unfolding situations in California, Oregon and Washington, preliminary information raises the level of concern about the immediate threat for COVID-19 for certain communities in the United States,” the CDC said.

Trump said he would meet with leaders of big pharmaceutical groups at the White House on Monday to discuss treatments and efforts to develop a vaccine to combat the virus.

The president said the number of cases detected by the US public health system now stood at 22. Combined with patients who were repatriated from abroad, the overall number of infected on US soil is now about 70.

“We will see more cases,” Health Secretary Alex Azar told the White House press conference.

“But it’s important to remember, for the vast majority of individuals who contract the novel coronavirus, they will experience mild to moderate symptoms.”

Their treatment will be to remain at home and treat the symptoms as they would the flu, he added.

The president and other officials also announced a more complete ban on travel from Iran, which has seen a rapid spread of the disease, and encouraged Americans to avoid travel to hard-hit areas in Italy and South Korea.

Vice President Mike Pence, charged by Trump to lead efforts against the virus, said that an existing ban on travel from Iran had been expanded to include any foreign national who has visited the Islamic republic within the last 14 days.

Trump also said the United States was ready to assist Iran with its coronavirus outbreak and that “all they have to do is ask.”

An American citizen died of the new coronavirus in early February at the Chinese epicenter of the global outbreak, the city of Wuhan, the US embassy confirmed at the time.

Worldwide, the virus has hit about 60 countries across the globe, with more than 2,900 people killed and over 85,000 infected since it was first detected at an animal market in Wuhan late last year.



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Into the Wild: Why tourists are risking their lives to visit a bus

Five more tourists were rescued trying to reach a bus made famous by Into the Wild. Why do they do it?

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US election: Is this the best way to pick Trump's challenger?

The way Democrats pick a nominee takes months, costs a fortune and doesn't even lead to high turnout.

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Setomaa: The Estonia-Russia border tearing apart an ancient people

The Setos' ancestral home straddles Estonia's border with Russia and has become difficult to cross.

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War of words as Nigerian English gets Oxford recognition

Not everyone is happy that the Oxford English Dictionary now includes several unique Nigerian words.

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Your pictures on the theme of 'railways'

Each week, we publish a gallery of readers' pictures on a set theme. This week it is "railways"

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South Carolina primary: Joe Biden projected to win

It comes as a major boost to the former vice-president's flagging presidential campaign.

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Berlin International Film Festival: Iranian film about executions wins top prize

Director Mohammad Rasoulof is banned from leaving Iran and filmed There Is No Evil in secret.

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Afghan conflict: What will Taliban do after signing US deal?

A sense of cautious optimism is rising, but Afghanistan's political future is yet to be decided.

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Who has taken over Karachi’s skies?

Wherever you look in Karachi these days, you can always spot an eagle. But this wasn’t always the case.

Karachi was once home to a diverse range of birds. Sindh Wildlife Department incharge Javed Mahar says the reduction in trees and increase in garbage and dirt has impacted the number of birds living in Karachi. It has attracted eagles instead since they thrive on waste and dirt for food.



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Major Rs6 cut in petrol prices recommended by OGRA

Good news! The government is considering a major cut in the prices of petrol and diesel after it received a recommendation by the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority.

The summary advised a reduction of Rs6 per litre in petrol prices and a Rs7.50 per litre decrease in the price of diesel. If the recommendation is approved, petrol and diesel will cost Rs110.60 and Rs119.76 respectively.

According to officials, the drop in prices was because of a 20% fall in oil prices in the international market.

The recommendation will be reviewed by Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday (February 29). If approved, the new prices of petroleum products will be effective from March 1.

Over the past months, the government had increased petroleum prices to cover a major revenue shortfall faced by the Federal Board of Revenue.



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Saba is a hearing, speech impaired all rounder from Islamabad

Saba is 19 years old. She has speech and hearing impairments but her passion for cricket has made her the star of her cricket academy. She is an all rounder,  just like her idol Shahid Afridi.



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Sajal Ali, Ahad Raza Mir begin handing out wedding invites

Wedding bells are finally ringing for actors Sajal Aly and Ahad Raza Mir. The couple has been handing out their wedding invitations and one of the guests is British Deputy High Commissioner Mike Nithavrianakis.

Taking to Twitter, Nithavrianakis shared pictures with the couple and said that it was wonderful meeting Aly and Mir to receive an invitation to their wedding.

“They’ve been ‘married’ on-screen several times. Now for the real deal. Best wishes to them both” reads the caption.

Earlier, social media was abuzz over whether the much-loved celebrity couple’s wedding festivities had kicked off after a picture of a cake which had ‘Ahad aur Sajal ki dholki’ written over it went viral.

The lovebirds got engaged in July last year after dating for a while.

Their on-screen chemistry in drama serials Yakeen Ka Safar and Aaangan were appreciated by fans.



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Coronavirus: South Korea sees its largest rise in coronavirus cases

The country has almost 600 new confirmed coronavirus cases, bringing the total to 2,931.

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Body of 50-year-old man found in Larkana junk shop

The body of a 50-year-old man was found in his junk shop on Friday in Larkana, according to the police.

Rafiq owned a junk shop near the New Bus Stand for the last 20 years. “He used to live there as well,” his friend said.

His body was found at his shop by his neighbours and friends after which the police were called. “It looks like he was attacked with a knife repeatedly,” a police officer said. “We have shifted the body to the Chandka Hospital where a post-most examination will be conducted,” he added.

According to Rafiq’s friend, he hailed from Shikarpur. “We sent the news of his death to his hometown but none of his family members have called back yet,” he said.

Further investigations have begun, however, an FIR has not been registered yet.



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Amidst coronavirus outbreak, Hareem Farooq wants to spread another virus

Amidst the recent spread of coronavirus in Pakistan, actor Hareem Farooq wants to spread another ‘very contagious’ virus. Hint: this virus is good for your health.

Taking to Instagram on Friday, the Heer Maan Jaa actor said that the only kind of virus she wants to spread is ‘khush raho na virus [stay happy virus].

She went on to explain the elements of the virus that she wants to spread. “Its elements are joy, laughter, love, positivity and gratitude and it’s extremely contagious,” reads the post.

Farooq concluded that post by saying for her virus no prevention required. She also asked for help spreading it.

Earlier, she took to her social media to share the secret of her glowing skin. Farooq shared an adorable photo with the 2.2 million followers and wrote, “What is the secret to your glowing skin?’ They ask me, I say lots of water, healthy food, exercise and a big smile!”



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Khairpur man arrested for allegedly raping 10-year-old girl

A man accused of raping a 10-year-old girl was arrested on Friday in Khairpur, according to the police.

According to the family, the girl had a mental disability. “The man lured her in and then raped her,” her father said.

Doctors at a hospital examined the girl and took samples for forensic tests. A case has been registered against the suspect.

According to the police, further investigations are under way. “We are waiting for the medical report to come out so that further action can be taken against the suspect,” a police officer said.

The girl’s family has requested the government and the police to take strict action against the suspect.



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Afghanistan’s future in the balance as US, Taliban sign deal

Washington and the Taliban are set to sign a long-sought deal in Doha on Saturday that would see the two foes agree to the withdrawal of thousands of US troops from Afghanistan in return for insurgent guarantees.

The agreement, which could herald the start of a new era for Afghanistan after decades of conflict, is expected to also lead to a dialogue between the Kabul government and the Taliban that, if successful, could ultimately see the Afghan war wind down.

But the position of the Afghan government, which has been excluded from direct US-Taliban talks, remains unclear and the country is gripped by a fresh political crisis amid contested election results. 

The deal, drafted over a tempestuous year of dialogue marked by the abrupt cancellation of the effort by US President Donald Trump in September, is expected to lay out a timetable for a US force withdrawal.

“There’s been so much speculation about the contents of the deal… we know the broad outlines but it’s not even clear whether the full terms of the deal will be made public,” said Andrew Watkins, senior analyst at the International Crisis Group consultancy.

While Kabul will not be represented at the Doha signing, set for around 1100 GMT (4pm PST), it will send a six-person taskforce to the Qatari capital to make initial contact with the Taliban political office, established in 2013.

Qatar, a peninsula nation protruding from the Arabian desert into the Gulf and better known for its gas riches and controversial 2022 World Cup bid victory, was a seemingly unlikely choice to host negotiations.

But by providing neutral space for talks on ending the conflict it has boosted its international profile and helped it defy a painful regional embargo enforced by Saudi Arabia, which accuses it of being too close to Islamist movements.

Talks have taken place in a plush members’ club in Doha, where turbaned Taliban fighters-turned-negotiators and suited American officials have rubbed shoulders with club-goers in Hawaiian shirts and swimwear.

As many as 30 nations are expected to be represented at Saturday’s signing in the Qatari capital. Pakistan will be represented by Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi. The US will stage a separate ceremony in Kabul with the Afghan government at 1215 GMT, an Afghan source told AFP.

The inking of the deal will come after a week-long, partial truce that has mostly held across Afghanistan aimed at building confidence between the warring parties and showing the Taliban can control their forces.

While isolated attacks have continued in rural areas, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Tuesday that the truce period was “working”.

“We’re on the cusp of an enormous, enormous political opportunity,” he said.

The US, which currently has between 12,000 and 13,000 troops in Afghanistan, could draw that number down to 8,600 within months of the agreement being signed.

Further reductions would depend on the Taliban’s engagement with the government of President Ashraf Ghani, whom they have until now dismissed as a US-backed puppet. 

“This is just a precursor to get that process started, it’s not a cause for celebration among the government or its allies,” Watkins said.

Ghani has been declared winner of last year’s elections, but his main rival, Abdullah Abdullah, is refusing to recognise the win and has vowed to set up a rival government.

Any insurgent pledge to guarantee Afghanistan is never again used by jihadist groups such as Al-Qaeda and Islamic State to plot attacks abroad will be key to the deal’s viability.

The Taliban’s sheltering of Al-Qaeda was the main reason for the US invasion following the 9/11 attacks. 

The conflict has cost the US taxpayer more than $1 trillion in military and rebuilding costs since the US-led invasion of 2001. 

More than 100,000 Afghan civilians have been killed or injured over the past decade, according to the United Nations. 



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Body of two-year-old girl found outside house in Mardan: police

The body of a two-year-old girl was found outside her house on Friday in Mardan’s Garhi Kapura, according to the police.

Her family said she had been missing for three days. “She had gone out to play but never came back home,” her father Constable Laiq Zada said.

The family had registered a missing persons complaint and were looking for her.

“We have formed a joint investigation team which will look into the case and investigate it thoroughly,” DPO Sajjad Khan said. The girl’s body has been shifted to the RHC Hospital.

Her uncle, however, claimed that the doctors on duty refused to conduct a post-mortem examination of the two-year-old after which the police had to intervene.

According to the police, the cause of death will be revealed after the post-mortem reports come out.



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WHO raises global coronavirus risk to maximum level

The World Health Organization raised on Friday its global risk assessment of the new coronavirus to its highest level after the epidemic spread to sub-Saharan Africa and financial markets slumped.

The virus has proliferated around the globe over the past week, emerging on every continent except Antarctica, prompting many governments and businesses to try to stop people from travelling or gathering in crowded places.

It has killed more than 2,800 people and infected over 84,000 worldwide — the vast majority in China — since it emerged apparently from an animal market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December.

But it is its rapid spread to new zones that has authorities concerned — in the past 24 hours, it has affected nine new countries, from Azerbaijan to Mexico to New Zealand.

“We have now increased our assessment of the risk of spread and the risk of impact of COVID-19 to very high at global level,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

“We do not see evidence as yet that the virus is spreading freely in communities. As long as that’s the case, we still have a chance of containing this virus.”

Global investors nevertheless ran scared, with world markets suffering their worst week since the 2008 financial crisis.

The chair of the US Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, said the central bank stood at the ready to intervene if needed, given the “evolving” risks to the world’s largest economy posed by the deadly outbreak.

New drastic measures were put in place: Switzerland cancelled all gatherings of more than 1,000 people, and Saudi Arabia banned Gulf citizens from its holy cities of Mecca and Medina.

“This is not a time for panic. It is time to be prepared — fully prepared,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said.

Those efforts come as the number of deaths and new infections has been tapering off in China, following unprecedented quarantine efforts locking down tens of millions of people in the worst-hit cities.

But infections elsewhere have started to surge, with Iran, Italy and South Korea becoming the major new hotspots and cases being confirmed in around 50 countries.

“We see a number of countries struggling with containment,” said Michael Ryan, head of the WHO’s health emergencies programme.

The WHO has voiced particular concern about Africa’s preparedness, warning that the continent’s health care systems were ill-equipped to respond to a COVID-19 epidemic.

Cases had previously been reported in Egypt and Algeria, but not in the sub-Saharan region until Friday when Nigeria reported its first case: an Italian man in densely populated Lagos.

In Iran, unnamed health system sources told the BBC that at least 210 people had died of the coronavirus — far beyond the official death toll of 34, but a health ministry spokesman angrily denied that figure.

The coronavirus crisis is affecting everything from global production to schools to sporting events, with FIFA warning Friday that international football matches could be postponed.

Several companies have said they expect the virus to hit their earnings because of weaker demand.

Oil prices also slipped again, with Brent oil for April delivery sinking as low as $50.05 a barrel.

Analysts have warned that China, the world’s second-largest economy, will see a major cut in growth this quarter as the country remains largely paralysed by quarantines and containment measures.

Still, signs in China offered hope that the outbreak could be contained.

China reported 44 more deaths on Friday, raising its toll to 2,788, with 327 new cases — the lowest daily figure for new infections in more than a month.

The virus has mostly killed the elderly or people with pre-existing health conditions.

South Korea also now has the most cases outside China, with more than 2,000 infections and 13 deaths.

The virus has had wide-ranging impact, even forcing K-pop megastars BTS to cancel four Seoul concerts scheduled for April.

In Japan, the health ministry said a British man who was on board a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship quarantined near Tokyo had died. More than 700 others on the ship have tested positive.

The governor of Japan’s rural northern island of Hokkaido urged people to stay at home this weekend in a desperate effort to contain the outbreak.

In Europe, the largest epicentre is Italy with 650 cases and 17 deaths — mostly in cities in the north.

Wide-ranging measures to halt the spread of the virus have affected tens of millions of people in northern Italy, with schools closed and cultural and sporting events cancelled.

Experts said the virus had probably “circulated unnoticed for several weeks” before the first confirmed cases — possibly since January.



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Fish oil supplements offer 'little or no benefit' against cancer

Research suggests omega-3 supplements may not be as beneficial as previously suggested.

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Slovakia election: Double murder haunts voters

The murder of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancée convulsed Slovak politics.

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Free transport in Luxembourg, but what's the cost?

One aim is to get cars off the road and ease traffic congestion but critics see it as a PR stunt.

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The boss who put everyone on 70K

A tech boss introduced a $70,000 minimum salary for all his staff - by cutting his own wages. Five years, on he has no regrets.

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Could deepfakes be used to train office workers?

A consultancy that makes business training videos is advertising for a "deepfake expert".

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Delhi riots: Muslim women recall horror of Molotov cocktails and arson

Religious violence in the Indian capital has left thousands staring at a bleak future.

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Syria war: Refugees eye Europe as Turkey hits breaking point

Turkey says it is no longer preventing Syrians from leaving for Europe - and the refugees want to move.

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Five reasons why Canada's 'shutdown' is a big deal

Justin Trudeau is under pressure, companies are getting spooked and farms are running low on fuel.

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Kizito Mihigo: The Rwandan gospel singer who died in a police cell

Rwandan genocide survivor Kizito Mihigo, hailed as a national talent, was later accused of treason.

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Walkout as Polanksi wins 'best director' at Césars

The Polish-French director is wanted in the US for the statutory rape of a 13-year-old in the 1970s.

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Leap Year: What it's like being born on 29 February?

People around the world tell us what it's like being born on 29 February.

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Latvia railway: Why I love living in an old train station

Milda Romanova's home is an old rail station, and at 88 she still loves all things trains.

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Today’s outlook: Two PSL matches, rain expected in Punjab

Here are some of the stories we are expecting to follow today (Friday):

  • The Pakistan Super League has two matches in store for fans today. Peshawar Zalmi take on the Lahore Qalandars at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium and the Multan Sultans will lock horns with the Karachi Kings in their backyard.
  • According to the Met Office, fresh showers are expected in most areas of Punjab and a cold breeze will blow across the country.
  • An Islamabad accountability court will hear the Narowal Sports Complex case against PML-N leader Ahsan Iqbal who was granted bail in the case two days ago. He will appear before the court.
  • An accountability court in Lahore takes up the money laundering and Ramzan Sugar Mills cases against PML-N leader Hamza Shahbaz. He will head to court to attend the hearing.
  • Saudi Arabia has placed a temporary ban on pilgrims from 24 countries over coronavirus fears. Three hundred Pakistani passengers were off-loaded from flights going to the Kingdom from Sialkot, Karachi and Lahore.
  • Pakistan has suspended flight operations to Iran where coronavirus has claimed 26 lives and has reported 245 positive cases. Two people in Pakistan have also tested positive and both had travelled to Iran for pilgrimage.
  • Ambulances and patients at Karachi’s Abbasi Shaheed Hospital are facing trouble after a water pipeline in front of the facility burst.
  • Today is the last day to submit income tax returns.
  • Federal Science Minister Fawad Chaudhry has said the first of Ramazan will fall on April 25. He made the announcement in a Twitter post.
  • The Awami Rickshaw Union Pakistan will protest against inflation and price hikes. They say they will take to streets against extortion.
  • ICYMI: An army of Chinese ducks is going to help Pakistan with its locust problem. Click here to read the full story.


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‘Extortionists’ set clinic on fire in Karachi’s Old Sabzi Mandi

A clinic was set on fire in Karachi’s Old Sabzi Mandi. The police believe the suspects were extortionists.

The assailants first opened fire to scare people inside and then threw flaming items at the clinic, causing the exterior to catch fire.

The clinic has been closed ever since the attack.

The police say the suspects had been extorting money from the clinic owner.

No one was hurt in the attack.



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Muzaffargarh man accused of killing daughter, grandson for ‘honour’

A man was arrested on Thursday for allegedly killing his daughter and 40-day-old grandson in the name of honour in Muzaffargarh’s Kot Addu, according to the police.

The woman had married a man of her choice a year back. “On February 9, her mother-in-law had filed a missing persons complaint for the woman and her grandson after which we took the woman’s father and brother into custody,” a police officer said.

The suspects admitted to their crime in police custody. “During interrogation they told us that they had hidden the bodies in the neighbouring fields,” the officer added.

The bodies have been sent for post-mortem examinations. The police are still investigating the case.



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Body of 11-year-old found in under-construction house in Rawalpindi

The body of an 11-year-old boy was found in an under-construction house in Rawalpindi’s Wazir Town on Thursday, according to the police.

The boy had gone missing on February 21. “He had left the house to go kite flying with his friends,” his father said. When he didn’t come back home that day, his father started searching for him and then registered a missing persons complaint at the Potohar police station the next day.

According to the police, the complaint was converted into an FIR on February 25. After the body was found on Thursday, the police arrested seven suspects and have kept other neighbours on its radar.

“The forensic team has collected evidence from the crime scene,” Potohar SP Syed Ali said. “We have taken seven people into custody and are interrogating them,” he said.

The body has been sent for a post-mortem examination. “As soon as the reports come back, the reason of death will be revealed,” SP Ali added.



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Nigeria confirms coronavirus case, first in sub-Saharan Africa

Nigeria on Friday announced the first confirmed case of the novel coronavirus in sub-Saharan Africa.

The case is an Italian citizen who works in Nigeria and returned from Milan earlier this week, Health Minister Osagie Ehanire said in a statement on Twitter.

“The patient is clinically stable, with no serious symptoms, and is being managed at the Infectious Disease Hospital in Yaba, Lagos,” Ehanire said.

Italy has become a hotbed of infection in recent days, with the largest outbreak in Europe.

But the low number of cases across Africa, which has close economic ties with China, the epicentre of the deadly outbreak, has puzzled health specialists.

Prior to the case in Nigeria, there had been just two cases across the continent — in Egypt and Algeria.

The World Health Organization warned earlier this week that African health systems were ill-equipped to respond should cases start to proliferate on the continent.

However, Ehanire said the government had been working to ensure an outbreak is “controlled and contained quickly”.

“I wish to assure all Nigerians that… we have been beefing up our preparedness capabilities since the first confirmation of cases in China,” he said.

“We have already started working to identify all the contacts of the patient since he entered Nigeria.”

The outbreak, which began in December, has already killed more than 2,800 people and infected more than 78,000 in China.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the spread of the virus to countries with weaker health systems was “our biggest concern”.

“These patients require intensive care using equipment such as respiratory support machines that are, as you know, in short supply in many African countries and that’s a cause for concern,” he said.

Several African carriers including Kenya Airways have suspended flights to China, although the continent’s biggest airline Ethiopian Airlines has kept its China routes open.



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The envoy and the fighter: the duo behind US-Taliban deal

The path to the US-Taliban deal came down largely to two Afghan men — one working for the US, the other for the militants, their lives shaped by decades of conflict.

On one side was Zalmay Khalilzad — a leading US diplomat who spent the prime of his career attempting to restore order as an envoy in Afghanistan and Iraq following successive US invasions.

Across the table was Mullah Baradar, the seasoned jihadist who spent most of his life as a fighter, first with the mujahideen during the anti-Soviet jihad and again as the Taliban’s co-founder.

More than 18 years after being toppled from power, it appears Baradar and the Taliban — with Khalilzad’s help — are again on the verge of returning to Kabul as arguably the most united force in Afghanistan’s chaotic political arena.

Here’s a quick look at the two men:

Khalilzad, the Afghan hawk

Born in northern Afghanistan’s Mazar-i-Sharif, Khalilzad learned the tough realities of Afghan life from an early age. In his memoir, he recounted seeing future president Daoud Khan bite off a man’s ear during a brawl.

His life changed after he travelled to America for a high school exchange programme, widening his horizons.

Leaving Afghanistan before the Soviet invasion of 1979, Khalilzad studied at the American University of Beirut and later received a doctorate at the University of Chicago, paving the way for a life in America, US citizenship, and a career as a top diplomat and advisor in George W. Bush’s administration.

Fluent in Pashto and Dari, Khalilzad held a commanding position as US ambassador to Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005 and was instrumental in forming the new government in Kabul.

He was also seen as having heavy influence over Afghan President Hamid Karzai, shepherding him through the 2005 elections, while being criticised for cutting deals with brutal warlords.

Following Afghanistan, Bush tapped Khalilzad to serve as ambassador in Iraq as US forces struggled to prevent sectarian civil war while fighting a sprawling insurgency.

After the Bush years, Khalilzad became a harsh critic of President Barack Obama’s handling of the Afghanistan war as well as the Pakistani security establishment’s alleged support to the Taliban.

In 2018, Khalilzad was again hand-picked to patch up things in Afghanistan, this time by President Donald Trump to lead negotiations with the Taliban.

The process has not gone without criticism, particularly for sidelining Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s administration, sparking comparisons to the Americans’ withdrawal from Vietnam in the 1970s.

Baradar, the fighter

Abdul Ghani Baradar was born in the arid badlands of southern Afghanistan’s Uruzgan province and later raised in Kandahar — the future birthplace of the Taliban movement.

Like most Afghans, Baradar’s life was forever altered by the Soviet invasion of the country in the late 1970s, transforming him into an insurgent believed to have fought side-by-side with the one-eyed cleric Mullah Omar.

The two would go on to found the Taliban movement in the early 1990s amid the chaos and corruption of the civil war that erupted after the Soviet withdrawal.

The Taliban eventually seized the southern capital of Kandahar almost without a fight before capturing Kabul in 1996 and installing a hardline Islamist regime.

Following the Taliban’s collapse in 2001, Baradar is believed to have been among a small group of insurgents who approached interim leader Hamid Karzai — who hails from the same tribe — with a letter outlining a potential deal that would have seen the militants recognise the new administration.

The reconciliation efforts failed and Baradar is believed to have returned to the battlefield, where his experience as a military commander and strategist likely helped rebuild the Taliban.

Arrested in Pakistan in 2010, Baradar was kept in custody until pressure from Khalilzad saw him freed in 2018 and relocate to Qatar where he was appointed head of the Taliban’s political office in Doha in January.

Baradar is believed to be widely respected by the Taliban’s various factions and experts say his presence would help garner support for any deal from insurgents on the frontlines.



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Tokyo Disney parks closing for two weeks over coronavirus fears

The operator of Tokyo’s two Disney resorts, Disneyland and DisneySea, said Friday the parks would be closed for around two weeks on fears over the outbreak of the new coronavirus.

“Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea have decided to proceed with an extraordinary closure from Saturday, February 29, 2020, through Sunday, March 15” after the government urged measures to limit the spread of the virus, the operator said in a statement.

The operator Oriental Land said it currently hoped to resume operations from March 16.

“Currently, we plan to reopen on March 16. But we’ll decide when to open by looking at the situation and developments. We’ll also consult (official) agencies concerned,” a spokesman told AFP.

More than 30 million visitors flood into the two parks per year, and they are among the most popular destinations for tourists coming to Tokyo.

The move comes as the Japanese government steps up measures to tackle the outbreak of the virus, which has been linked to at least four deaths in the country and nearly 200 infections.

On Thursday night, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe urged schools across the country to close for around a month, though nurseries and after-school clubs are exempt.

And the government has urged people to work from home and commute during off-peak hours, as well as avoid large gatherings.



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Army of Chinese ducks to combat Pakistan’s locust problem

An army of Chinese ducks is going to help Pakistan with its locust problem.

Locusts have been attacking crops in Pakistan, causing huge financial losses. The government has tried sprays and pesticides but the locusts are still attacking the crops.

China has decided to lend a helping hand by sending over 100,000 ducks to fight the problem.

Twenty years ago, it used the same method to control a locust attack in its northwestern Xinjiang territory. Using ducks to control the locust population is more cost-effective and environmentally friendly than using pesticides or sprays.

According to Chinese researchers, ducks eat 200 locusts a day. In comparison, chickens eat just 70.



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Jimmy Lai: Pro-democracy media tycoon arrested

The 71-year-old multi-millionaire is the founder of Apple Daily, a critic of the Hong Kong government.

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Coronavirus: Shares face worst week since global financial crisis

Asian stock markets continue falling, as the coronavirus spreads across the globe.

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Scientists detect biggest explosion since Big Bang

The blast in the Ophiuchus galaxy cluster left a cavity 15 times bigger than our Milky Way galaxy.

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Plans for first US 'safe injection site' derailed again

The addiction management method used in Europe and Canada has met determined opposition in the US.

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How making a violin brought these two together

When Nashville musician Amanda asked violinmaker Ray to make her one, little did she know where it would lead.

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Afghanistan conflict: US-Taliban deal raises hope for peace

A long-awaited accord between the US and the Taliban is greeted cautiously by a war-weary population.

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The crisis forcing mothers to give away their babies

Venezuela's economic crisis is driving some mothers unable to feed their children to drastic measures.

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Greta Thunberg: Who is the teenage climate change activist?

The Swedish teenager started a climate change protest that grew into a global movement of millions.

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Protecting whales from the noise people make in the ocean

Oil drilling and construction is creating a din for sealife - new tech is hoping to turn the volume down.

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West Midlands to get access to ultrafast home broadband

The West Midlands gigabit switch-on is the largest in the UK, says Virgin Media, but comes at a price.

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Protecting whales from the noise people make in the ocean

Oil drilling and construction is creating a din for sealife - new tech is hoping to turn the volume down.

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Philippines volcano: Residents allowed to visit island

Philippines residents briefly allowed to return to homes near the Taal volcano find haunting scenes.

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Leap years and why we need them

It's a leap year which means there's an extra day in the calendar - 29 February 2020. But why do we need it?

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Coronavirus: On the front line in Wuhan

The BBC speaks to a Chinese doctor who has been on the front line of fighting Coronavirus in Wuhan.

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Burst water main leaves drivers stranded

Flooding in Houston led to cars being submerged and people having to take refuge on their roofs.

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Three Lahore labourers killed in madrassa wall collapse

Three labourers were killed after the wall of an under construction madrassa in Lahore’s Gujar Colony collapsed on Thursday.

The deceased have been identified as Arshad, Nadeem and Kareem Buksh.

Five people have been injured and they have been shifted to a hospital.

The police said that the labourers were working on extending the madrassa.

The hospital said that the bodies will be handed over to the heirs after the postmortem examinations.



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Delhi riots: Anger as judge critical of violence removed

Delhi high court judge S Muralidhar castigated police over the violence which left more than 30 dead.

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Government launches app for property tax

The government has launched an to curb corruption in departments concerned with tax collection. The application is very easy to use and requires users to enter a few details to find out about their property tax.



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Welsh singer Duffy says she was abducted, raped

The Welsh soul singer Duffy on Tuesday attributed her long musical hiatus to a violent assault that saw her “raped and drugged and held captive over some days”.

The Grammy winner, who in 2011 said she was “taking a break” from the public spotlight, said in an emotional Instagram post that “I am ok and safe now” but that recovery “took time”.

“There’s no light way to say it. But I can tell you in the last decade, the thousands and thousands of days I committed to wanting to feel the sunshine in my heart again, the sun does now shine,” the 35-year-old posted. 

“You wonder why I did not choose to use my voice to express my pain? I did not want to show the world the sadness in my eyes. I asked myself, how can I sing from the heart if it is broken? And slowly it unbroke.”

Photo: AFP

The singer-songwriter found global fame after releasing her debut album “Rockferry” in 2008, which won a Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Album.

In 2009, the artist born Aimee Anne Duffy also won three Brit awards.

She said in Tuesday’s social media post that she had decided to break her silence over her trauma after giving an interview to an unnamed journalist last summer, and would begin “posting a spoken interview” in the weeks to come.

“If you have any questions I would like to answer them, in the spoken interview, if I can,” she said. “I have a sacred love and sincere appreciation for your kindness over the years. You have been friends.”

In 2013 the singer performed in an Edith Piaf tribute concert in New York, and contributed music to and played a role in the 2015 film “Legend”.



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Hira Mani doesn’t age, she just upgrades

Meray Paas Tum Ho starlet Hira Mani celebrated her 30th birthday on Wednesday night with husband Salman Saqib Sheikh aka Mani.

She took to Instagram to share photos from her midnight celebration. “Not ageing just upgrading,” she wrote.

Hira thanked her family and friends including Anoushey Abbasi for “making my birthday so special.” She went onto say that she is lucky to have Mani in her life.

In another post, the Do Bol actor shared a blissful photo with her partner and thanked him for a special gift. “Thanks for the gajra mani I love you… is Se best gift tou koi hou hi nahi sakta,” she wrote.

The actor has recently returned from the Maldives after her shoot for designer Zainab Chootani.



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Sindh monitoring 1,500 travelers from Iran for coronavirus symptoms: CM

There were 1,500 people who came to Sindh from Iran in the past few weeks, Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah announced during a press conference on Thursday morning.

He was addressing the media a day after the first two coronavirus cases were confirmed in Pakistan, one of which was confirmed in Karachi. The 22-year-old victim is currently isolated at the Aga Khan University Hospital.

The chief minister said the government has got the data of 150 people and is contacting them. We are asking them to stay home for 15 days, he said. If they develop symptoms within those 15 days, we will test them and then isolate them if it is confirmed, Shah said.

Private hospitals, such as AKUH and the Indus Hospital, will be helping the government train UC medical officers on what to do in these cases. “If someone has symptoms, our teams will go visit and if they don’t show symptoms for 15 days, we can rule some out.” A protocol and SOP has been developed, he said.

Shah said the reason they shut down schools in the province for two days was not to spread panic. There were 1,500 people who came from Iran, he said. There is a possibility that they might have contracted the virus and come in contact with their children and other people, and we don’t want other children to be infected. We will be checking children, he said.

Shah said they hope to get a grip on the virus in the next 48 hours. He said the steps they are taking are needed so that the virus doesn’t spread.

A control room is also being set up at the Karachi Commissioner Office. A meeting will be held every day at 7pm where a core group will report on daily developments and the next day’s plan. The media will be briefed on the contents of the meeting afterwards.

Don’t spread panic, cautioned Shah. However, he said steps need to be taken at home, in offices and in schools.

We need medicine, masks and equipment he said. He has told the police, Karachi administration and Rangers to pick up these things wherever they are available. We will then sell them at the right price to make sure no one can make money off them. Action will also be taken against people creating an artificial shortage and seeking to gain from selling equipment at higher prices.

Shah announced that an entire hospital has been designated as a special coronavirus isolation unit. He didn’t disclose the name of the hospital but said they are currently getting equipment for it. To circumvent the procurement process, Indus Hospital is purchasing ventilators for the hospital that the government will pay for in cash.

We’ve told people who have had possible exposure to the coronavirus to isolate themselves but we will quarantine them if they test positive for the virus.

We’re doing this on war footings and hope to have the hospital ready in three to four days, said Shah. But they need expertise. Private sector hospitals have also offered their doctors’ help.

Shah said all government owned public places must have hospital strength sanitisers available. He also wants private spaces like shopping malls or offices and factories to have them too.

An issue with these sanitisers is that they’re not all approved by the DRAP and then cannot be bought. We are telling the federal government to relax this rule so the government can procure the sanitisers, he said.

This is a national emergency and we need to work responsibly, said the chief minister. So far, flights to and from Iran have not been banned, he said, calling it a central point of the virus.

The Karachi airport is a port of entry, he said, adding that he is asking the federal government to shut down flights from Iran and do more at the airport till the situation is controlled.

Airport screening is the federal government’s job but if they don’t have enough resources, we can help, said Shah. We will talk to the private sector to find out how to detect cases and how to handle them, he said.

We need to control these cases as we don’t need more people coming into the country with the virus, he said.

He urged the federal government to put aside government and party lines. Let’s do this together, he said, we’re ready to provide what little expertise we have. I hope better sense prevails and you don’t go into trivialities, he added.

Shah also urged people to protect the privacy of patients. Confidentiality is key, he said, adding that if he leaked the data or revealed it in some way, he was asking for forgiveness. The details of the 22-year-old admitted at AKUH were circulated online. If you see or hear me revealing confidential information, tell me I’m a fool for not taking care, he said.

He was flanked by Dr Faisal Mehmood, an infectious diseases specialist at AKUH, Dr Abdul Bari Khan of Indus Hospital and Dr Naseem Salahuddin among others.

Dr Mehmood said while wearing a mask isn’t necessary, washing your hands is. The symptoms show up in 14 days, he said.



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Japan woman tests positive for virus after ‘recovery’

A woman in Japan who contracted the new coronavirus and was released from hospital after recovering has tested positive again, officials said Thursday.

The case is the first time a patient apparently cleared of the virus has subsequently tested positive for it, a local official in Osaka said.

The woman in her 40s was first confirmed as infected with the coronavirus on January 29.

She was working as a guide on a tour bus with tourists from Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, in January. The driver of the bus was also diagnosed with the virus.

After being discharged from hospital she tested negative for the virus on February 6, although she still had a cough at the time.

She had no symptoms a week later, but returned to the doctor on February 21 complaining of a sore throat and chest pains.

On Wednesday, she tested positive for the coronavirus for a second time, officials said.

At least 186 people in Japan have so far contracted the virus, with three deaths in the country linked to the outbreak.

Aside from domestic cases, at least 705 people have been diagnosed with the virus on board a cruise ship that was quarantined off Japan, including passengers who were allowed to leave the boat after testing negative.

There have been four deaths linked to the virus from the ship.

The government has come under pressure for a relatively hands-off approach to the virus, but on Thursday the Osaka prefectural government said it would expand screening of patients to a broader group than currently stipulated by central guidelines.

“We will make sure that people who should be tested, get tested, and will avoid a worst-case scenario by preventing these people from developing symptoms and serious conditions,” Osaka governor Hirofumi Yoshimura said.



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Jane Austen’s pride and prejudice and East India Company connection

Jane Austen’s family had connections with the highest echelons of the East India Company, and Company money likely paid for the publication of her novels—yet India is airbrushed from her novels. Why might this be, asks Catriona Luke…

Early in 1752 a vivacious but not entirely happy young woman joined the East India Company ship the Bombay Castle and began a six-month journey from England, around the coast of Africa, to India. Her name was Philadelphia, she was known as Phila, and being orphaned, she had trained as a milliner at the age of fifteen. Pretty, intelligent, but equally impecunious and vulnerable, she was part of the “Fishing Fleet” of young women who were sent out to India to provide English wives for East India Company husbands.

Also on board was Margaret Maskelyne, the future wife of Robert Clive (Clive of India), and with little else to do, the women formed a friendship. In Madras, where the Bombay Castle arrived in August 1752, Phila was married, effectively by contract, to an English surgeon and East India Company man, Tysoe Saul Hancock, some twenty years her senior.

Some forty years later, the sixteen-year-old daughter of a country parson in Hampshire began a short story entitled
Catharine, or the Bower. The following passage tells the story of an orphan girl, given the character name Miss Wynne:

“The eldest daughter had been obliged to accept the offer of one of her cousins to equip her for the East Indies, and tho’ infinitely against her inclinations had been necessitated to embrace the only possibility that was offered to her, of a Maintenance; Yet it was one so opposite to all her ideas of Propriety, so contrary to her wishes, so repugnant to all her ideas of Propriety, so contrary to her Wishes, so repugnant to her feelings, that she would almost have preferred Servitude to it, had Choice been allowed her. Her personal Attractions had gained her a husband as soon as she had arrived in Bengal, and she had now been married nearly a twelvemonth. Splendidly, but unhappily married. United to a man double her own age, whose disposition was not amiable, and whose Manners were unpleasing, though his Character was respectable.”


The young woman who wrote this, just emerging from childhood, was Jane Austen. It was a direct account of her Aunt Philadelphia, her father’s sister, who had been sent off to India at the age of twenty-one.


What is so fascinating about it is the frankness on family matters that Jane Austen would never address with such openness again. Clear too from this family experience is the profound influence on Jane’s direction of travel which informed all her books: don’t allow yourself to be sold in marriage for society’s pleasure, don’t marry someone you don’t love, listen to your inner self and if all else fails remain unmarried. In an age of money, money, money and marriage, marriage, marriage, Aunt Phila’s experiences made Jane Austen a feminist, and a very careful one at that.


An East India Company man, John Mowbray, in conference with his banian, 1790. He was a merchant who did business out of Bengal. Credit: The East India Company – Trade and Conquest from 1600

Jane Austen rarely refers to the Indian subcontinent in her novels. In her first published novel, Sense and Sensibility, a character, Marianne Dashwood, speaks of the country in passing, “the climate is hot and the mosquitos are troublesome”, but that is about it. Mansfield Park is a story underpinned by the corrupt and vast wealth of the British in the West Indies which funded country houses back home—but no mention is made of Bengal.

These omissions are puzzling as Jane Austen’s writing is, as she described it herself, “that little bit (two inches wide) of ivory, in which I work with so fine a brush as produces little effect after much labour”, or as she wrote to a niece, “3 or 4 families in a country village is the very thing to work on”. But her work is conspicuously silent about the major events of her time, such as the French Revolution of 1789, the war with England that increased with Napoleon’s hostilities and threats of invasion of England from 1793 until his defeat at Waterloo in 1815 just two years short of Jane’s death. And she is particularly silent about India.


This is problematic because in 1811 when her first novels began to be published, the funding for this—£150, a vast sum, close to £10,000 today—came from her family’s and notably her brother Henry’s association with Warren Hastings. It was probably at its core Indian money.


Allow me to present another way to look at this. It was Indian opium, salt, and timber workers that brought Jane Austen’s novels to the world two hundred years ago. Her novels went on to become one of the world’s great literary legacies only because of the salt workers, the timber transporters, the opium poppy cutters of Bihar and Bengal.


The Warren-Hastings connection
Jane Austen had a phuppi, Aunt Philadelphia, her father’s sister, who had been sent off to India at the age of twenty-one. She was married to an English surgeon and East India Company man, Tysoe Saul Hancock, who was about twenty years her senior.

Clive of India

In 1759, Jane Austen’s aunt’s husband, Tysoe Saul Hancock, obtained a Company post at Fort William, Calcutta through the connection with Robert Clive. (Clive of India or the Commander-in-Chief of British India established the military and political supremacy of the East India Company in Bengal).

Mr Hancock
went into a business partnership with Warren Hastings of the East India Company, trading salt, opium, carpets and rice for personal wealth. Jane’s Aunt Philadelphia had moved north from Madras first, and stayed in the Clive household in Calcutta for several months. In February 1760, the Clives, after a bankruptcy scandal, sailed for England. Margaret Clive kept in touch with Aunt Philadelphia, writing to her friend Major John Carnac on 16 September 1761, “I flatter myself your Opinion of my friends Mr & Mrs Hancock is the same as mine. I have indeed a great Regard for her & I am pleased to find by her Letter that you were so much attached to her Family, & thought my Voyage worth relating to her”.

Major John Carnac from Calcutta, in return, kept Margaret Clive informed of Phila in Calcutta. He wrote two months later, “Would You believe it, Madam, Mrs. Hancock is pregnant. The scandalous chronicle gives the credit thereof to Hastings . . .”


Warren Hastings, who would become Governor General of Bengal and then the most powerful man in India, was as far as Calcutta society concerned, the father of Philadelphia Austen Hancock’s child.


Warren Hastings’s first wife had died in 1759. His little daughter Eliza and his son George were about to be sent back to England for schooling. Philadelphia Austen Hancock’s daughter was born in December 1761 and christened Elizabeth. Just like Warren Hastings’s lost daughter, she was known as Eliza.


The greatest portrait painter of the late eighteenth century, Sir Joshua Reynolds, paints Warren Hastings, but he also receives a commission to paint Philadelphia, Eliza as a toddler, Clarinda her Indian ayah and Tysoe Saul Hancock.


Warren Hastings

The Austen-Hastings connection
The closeness of the Austen-Hastings family ties was even more incredible. In England, just after their wedding, the Rev George Austen (Jane Austen’s father) and his new bride (her mother) took care of Warren Hastings’s little son George, who had been sent to England. It seems not to have affected relations at all that little George Hastings caught a fever and died “of a putrid throat” in the Austen home in 1764. Aunt Philadelphia and cousin Eliza continued to be regular visitors to the Steventon rectory when Jane was growing up.

In 1771, when Warren Hastings was appointed governor of Bengal, he had settled £5000 on Eliza Hancock, as his “god-daughter” when she was just ten years old, and frequently sent money to Philadelphia. Eliza married a minor French noble in France before the Revolution and then on being widowed returned to England. The Hancock and Austen domiciles again became interchangeable.


The impeachment of Warren Hastings for corruption in 1785 and his eventual acquittal revealed his enormous wealth. In June 1797, Eliza had £10,000 which had been put in trust for her by Warren Hastings. She had it removed from the trustees, one of whom was Rev George Austen, and made available to her. Then on 31 December 1797, Eliza married her first cousin Henry, Jane Austen’s brother. Two years previously, Henry, at that time at Oxford, had written flatteringly to Warren Hastings after his acquittal and to thank him for “many instances of your kindness shown to me”. As Jane Austen well knew, it wasn’t just women who made compromises for financial reward.


Funding the novels
After their wedding, Eliza and Henry lived in grand style in Upper Berkeley Street, off Portman Square, later in Hans Place in Knightsbridge. Henry Austen, older than Jane by four   years, and previously on an income as regimental paymaster and captain in the army of £300 per year, began to use both his military and East India contacts, including Warren Hastings to establish a bank, one branch in London and one in Alton in Hampshire. His financial affairs fluctuated wildly.

If anything, more puzzles flow from this. At the time of Henry and Eliza’s marriage, Jane had three novels in first draft written down.
First Impressions, which became Pride and Prejudice, was begun in 1795, Sense and Sensibility in 1796, Northanger Abbey in 1798. It was 1811 before Henry and Eliza provided the funding of £150 to publish Sense and Sensibility privately, with Pride and Prejudice following in 1813. Their contacts took them so close to the top of society that when Emma was published in 1816 Henry had managed a royal patron for Jane: the Prince Regent asked that the book be dedicated to him (which it was, by his “obedient, humble servant the Author”). But why were they not published sooner?

Taylor’s Emporium in Calcutta.

Censorship?
It would be nice to think that there were aspects of Pride and Prejudice in its earliest draft that had the spirit and family detail of Aunt Phila’s being sent off into the marriage trade. It is tempting to think Jane Austen’s father and brother Henry bullied or insisted, “Jane, you must not mention India in your novels – think of our family connections”, or that when she “lop’d and crop’d” the manuscript of Pride and Prejudice for publication in 1812 it was to remove sensitive material. But with so much of her letters and journals destroyed at the end of her life by her family, there is no evidence for this.

On the other hand, for the best part of ten years, until 1809 when Jane settled at Chawton, the censorship practised by the Austen family after her death was more severe than at other times. We cannot know why there were such long gaps between the novels being first written and being published, but censorship has played a part in that.


What is clear is that Jane Austen found subtle ways to make her views come through her novels: the marriage markets operated just as pervasively in rural England as they did in India. In her novel
Mansfield Park, the exploitation in the West Indies is deplored and therefore by extension the East India Company in India too. It is so difficult, for women and for men, to not do as society wishes.

Beneath the surface of her novels are the testing individual choices that women and men must make for their integrity and happiness, which can be so at odds with society’s expectations and politics. Jane Austen recognises that to be in society is to be a performer of many roles, and that for most people it is easier to go along with performance. Thinking for oneself is not only difficult to achieve, but actively threatening to society and its smooth running, and you are not going to be treated well for doing so.


Jane Austen, like many women of her time, had a tough life. Never being free, either of debt, or dependency or simply of the way things are, was something she shared with the workers of India whose hard labour lay behind the colonial finances that brought about the publication of her books. Not being free meant being compromised and owned in tangible and intangible ways.


Jane writes wearily in 1813 about the publication of
Pride and Prejudice, “I suppose in the meantime I shall owe dear Henry a great deal of money for printing…”

Today, happily, no one remembers Henry, or her other brother Francis who became Admiral of the Fleet and was knighted, or Edward or James her older brothers, or Jane’s father the Rev George Austen, or her mother’s maiden name, or much cares about Cassandra, her sister.


We remember Jane because everything in the society and times she lived in rejected individuality and freedom of thought, and she had the bravery to believe in these things. And best of all, to write about them.

This story was first published on Dec 17, 2018 



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Today’s outlook: PM heads to Qatar, Sindh CM calls meeting

Here are some of the stories we are expecting to follow today (Thursday):

  • Prime Minister Imran Khan will embark on a one-day official visit to Qatar. He will meet various investors.
  • Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah has called an emergency meeting after it was learnt that a man from Karachi has tested positive for the coronavirus.
  • PM’s Special Assistant on Health Dr Zafar Mirza has confirmed two cases of coronavirus in Pakistan. One patient is from Karachi while the other is from Islamabad.
  • All private and government education institutions in Sindh will remain closed on February 27 and February 28, while those in Balochistan will be closed till March 15 due to coronavirus fears.
  • On this day in 2019, the PAF brought down an Indian fighter jet and arrested its pilot Abhinandan Varthaman. Pakistan later sent him back to India via Wagah Border as a gesture of peace.
  • At least 30 people have been killed in protests in India’s capital New Delhi against the new Citizenship Amendment Law. At least three mosques, scores of homes and businesses have been torched.
  • ICYMI: PML-N leaders Ahsan Iqbal and Shahid Khaqan Abbasi were released on Wednesday from Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail. Click here to read the full story


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Just call me Harry, prince says as royal exit looms

Prince Harry asked to be introduced as just “Harry” at an event on Wednesday, kicking off a final round of public engagements before he and wife Meghan step back from their royal duties.

The Duke of Sussex, a grandson of Queen Elizabeth II, will stop using “His Royal Highness” from the end of March when the couple stops being working royals.

But at a conference in Edinburgh for his sustainable tourism project Travalyst, it emerged he was already adopting a more informal approach.

“He’s made it clear that we are all just to call him Harry, so ladies and gentlemen — please give a big, warm Scottish welcome to Harry,” host Ayesha Hazarika said in her introduction.

The 35-year-old prince has faced accusations of hypocrisy for using private planes while advocating action to combat global warming but he insists he mostly travels via commercial flights.

He used his remarks in Edinburgh to warn of the risks of huge increases in tourists at key locations, which he said could cause pollution, overwhelm local communities and drive out wildlife.

As sixth in line to the throne, Harry’s announcement in January that he and his wife wanted to step back from their royal positions rocked the monarchy.

The pair revealed plans to split their time between Britain and Canada, after complaining about media intrusion and expressing a desire to be financially independent.

Harry arrived in Edinburgh by train on Tuesday evening without Meghan or their baby son Archie.

On Friday, he will be in London to meet US rock singer Jon Bon Jovi, who is recording a special song for the prince’s Invictus Game Foundation for military veterans.

They will meet at Abbey Road Studios, where The Beatles recorded most of their albums and where Bon Jovi is also recording his song with a choir made up of wounded veterans and serving personnel.

In a BBC interview this week about the event, the singer quipped that following his exit from frontline royal life, Harry should be known as “the artist formerly known as Prince”.

The musician Prince took this title after eschewing his name in favour of a symbol.

Harry and Meghan will join the queen on March 9 for a Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey, which is expected to be their last official appearance as working royals.



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Johnny Depp appears in UK court for libel case

Hollywood star Johnny Depp made a surprise appearance at England’s High Court on Wednesday for a hearing in his libel case against The Sun newspaper.

The “Pirates of the Caribbean” actor is suing the tabloid and its executive editor Dan Wootton over a 2018 article which accused him of abusing former wife Amber Heard.

The 55-year-old sat in the court in London wearing a suit and blue-tinted glasses for the pre-trial review hearing.

Depp accuses Heard, 33, of being the “aggressor” in the rocky relationship, which ended in 2016.

His lawyer David Sherborne told the court he had evidence that “diametrically opposed” claims in the article.

“There is such a contrast between the version of events that is provided by Ms Heard and that provided by Mr Depp,” he said.

“It is black and white. One person, one side, is lying, and one is not.”

The 10-day case is due to start on March 23, and is expected to hear from witnesses over a video-link from California.

Depp has brought separate libel proceedings against Heard in the United States.



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‘PAF may not always exercise restraint when responding to aggression’

Chief of Air Staff Chief Air Marshal Mujahid Anwar Khan has warned that Pakistan may not always exercise restraint when responding to acts of aggression.

Speaking at an event to mark the one-year anniversary of ‘Operation Swift Retort’ on Thursday, he said the air force is a fully integrated force.

The Pakistan Air Force is one of the most well-respected and responsible air forces of a peace loving country, he said.

He also reiterated the message of February 27, 2019 and said “no misadventure would go unresponded”.

“To respond to that aggression was our compulsion,” he said, calling the response measured. But we may not always exercise restraint, he warned.

He said the air force supports the people of Kashmir and their right to self determination.

It’s time human rights violations and the longest curfew ever in Kashmir must come to an end, he said.



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Fake vintage wine gang busted in France and Italy, police say

The group is alleged to have made fake labels from famous French vineyards, using them to sell cheap wine. from BBC News https://ift.tt/4s...