Harry and Meghan embark on new life in Los Angeles

Every starry-eyed ingenue arriving in Los Angeles faces the same question: how to catch that big break in Hollywood? For Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, it’s far more complicated.

The pair, who formally stepped down as senior members of the British royal family this week, have reportedly already relocated to sunny California.

They are currently rumored to be hunkering down at a compound in Malibu, the exclusive beach community outside Los Angeles long favored by A-listers and movie moguls.

But how the couple will achieve their ambition of forging a new, “financially independent” life remains to be seen.

Meghan’s options would appear to be more straightforward.

It is a homecoming of sorts, she grew up in Los Angeles, her mother still lives here, and she has extensive contacts from her days as an actress.

“I think Meghan will continue to work in the entertainment world one way or another,” said celebrity branding expert Jeetendr Sehdev.

“It’s their unique selling point, Meghan, at the end of the day, has come from the entertainment industry. They don’t want to be denying that DNA.”

While Sehdev thinks it is “unlikely” she will go back into acting, Meghan “might present documentaries, she might do more voiceover work.”

Before she left Britain, Meghan had already narrated a wildlife documentary for Disney, a company that her royal background could make her uniquely suited to.

“The fact that she was a princess — people do like that idea,” said Los Angeles-based producer and journalist Simon Thompson.

“Even though they’re no longer part of the royal family, people will still put that brand on her, she’s ideal for alignment with things like Disney.”

Other entertainment giants including Netflix have already voiced interest in working with her.

But if she were to act again, Meghan will likely be wary of “stunt casting” and need to be selective in picking more substantive roles, Thompson added.

“I think she’ll get some big offers,” he said. “It really depends on whether she wants to continue to be seen as a celebrity or as an agent of change.”

‘Complete 180’
For Harry, the decision to sever family ties and move thousands of miles away is more of a plunge into the unknown.

“I don’t see a natural fit for somebody like Harry in Hollywood — but that’s not to say that he won’t adapt,” said Sehdev, bestselling author of “The Kim Kardashian Principle.”

“The royal family brand was programmed to be opaque. It’s so controlled, so contrived and so manufactured that we don’t really know who these people are.”

Speaking engagements, book deals and interviews, including on Hollywood’s famous red carpets — could be options to redress that, said Sehdev.

“He’s going to have to do a complete 180 and actually take a leaf out of the book of Kim Kardashian, those reality show influencers, and say I’m gonna actually open up my life. Let you in and show who I really am.”

The pair could also emulate the Obamas by forming a production company, suggested Thompson, a move that would allow both to highlight causes important to them such as veteran care, mental health and the environment.

‘Life of celebrities’
Another decision facing the couple is where to live.

With Meghan’s mother based in the city, gated communities and private streets in affluent neighborhoods such as Brentwood or Beverly Hills could appeal.

“I don’t think we’re going to see them out and around in the heart of Hollywood, living right in the thick of it,” said Thompson.

“That would be just a logistical nightmare for them,” he added, pointing to the security requirements and the couple’s young son Archie.

President Donald Trump has insisted US taxpayers will not pay their security bill, prompting a rare response from the couple’s spokeswoman, who said they had “no plans to ask the US government for security resources.”

Calabasas, a hilly suburban haven for the likes of the Kardashian clan, could be another option, said Sehdev.

“It’s fair to say that they want to live the life of celebrities.”



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Buttler auctions World Cup final shirt for hospitals combating coronavirus

England’s Jos Buttler is auctioning the shirt he wore in last year’s dramatic World Cup final win so that the proceeds can go towards hospitals combating the coronavirus.

The 29-year-old wicketkeeper-batsman played a key role in England’s thrilling win over New Zealand at Lord’s in July, scoring a fifty, batting in the Super Over and then running out Martin Guptill off the very last ball of the match.

In a social media video posted on Tuesday, the 29-year-old said he would be posting the jersey, signed by all members of the World Cup-winning squad, on eBay.

All proceeds will go to the Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals’ charity.

“As we all know, hospitals, doctors, nurses and the NHS are all doing quite an incredible job at the moment,” Buttler said. “And in the weeks and months to come they are going to need our support even more. Last week, the Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals’ charity launched an emergency appeal to provide lifesaving equipment for those two hospitals, specialising in lung and heart conditions in preparation for the COVID-19 outbreak. To help with their fundraising effort I’m going to be donating this shirt, which is the shirt I wore in the World Cup final last year, signed by all the players who were members of the squad.”

British television personality Piers Morgan submitted a bid of £10,000 but the value of the shirt had soon passed the £12,000 mark.

Cricket, in common with many sports, has seen its fixture programme brought to a shuddering halt by the global spread of the coronavirus.

Buttler was on England’s tour of Sri Lanka that was recently abandoned during a warm-up game.

There will be no cricket in England until May 28 at the earliest.



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1,700 ventilators bought for coronavirus patients: Firdous Ashiq Awan

Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan, the special assistant to the PM for information and broadcasting, has said the National Disaster Management Authority has bought 1,700 ventilators for coronavirus patients.

These ventilators, she said, will be brought to Pakistan very soon. The special aide was speaking on SAMAA TV’s morning show Naya Din on Wednesday.

So far, four shipments of medical supplies have arrived from China, which was once the epicentre of COVID-19 but has now contained the outbreak.

Dr Awan lauded China for playing an instrumental role in facilitating Pakistan’s efforts to control the virus.

She said China has donated 37 ventilators, while the NDMA has booked and paid for 1,700 more.

“The NDMA will set an initial target of purchasing 2,000 ventilators,” she said. “If the situation worsens, the benchmark can be risen to 10,000.”

When asked whether the Centre was on the same page as the Sindh government, she said Prime Minister Imran Khan was against the lockdown because of its impact on daily wage workers.

“The prime minister wished that a financial plan was devised for labourers before thinking of imposing a lockdown,” said Dr Awan.

As of Wednesday, more than 2,000 cases of the coronavirus have been reported across the country.



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Punjab private schools barred from charging consolidated three-month fees

All private schools in Punjab have been prohibited from charging consolidated fees for three months from parents, said Punjab Law Minister Raja Basharat.

During a meeting on Tuesday, he ordered advisories to be issued to give parents relief from paying school fees. Schools should reduce their fees by at least 20% for the months of April and May, the minister remarked.

Punjab Education Minister Murad Rass advised that none of the teachers or staff members of these schools should be fired during this period. Nor should their salaries be reduced, he said.

On the other hand, schools in Sindh have been ordered to charge monthly fees from students and bi-monthly and quarterly challans have been stopped.

The Sindh government had issued a notification that prohibited schools from firing workers and teachers during the lockdown. Failing to comply with these orders would result in cancellation of the school’s registration, it added.



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‘78% Pakistanis ready to sacrifice their rights to curb coronavirus’

Around 78% of Pakistanis are ready to sacrifice some of their human rights to curb the outbreak of coronavirus in the country, according to a survey conducted by Gallup International.

In the polls conducted in March, men and women from across the country were asked the following question: “How strongly do you agree or disagree with the following statement: I am willing to sacrifice some of my human rights if it helps prevent the spread of the virus?”

Seventy-eight percent agreed to compromise a portion of their rights, while 18% opted against it. The remaining 4% said they do not know or do not wish to respond.

Pakistan ranks 13th highest out of 28 countries where a similar survey has been conducted.

Austria ranks the highest with 95% ready to sacrifice human rights while Japans ranks lowest.

In Pakistan, more than 2,000 people have tested positive for the virus and 26 patients have died so far.



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Beef prices rise to Rs800/kilo in Karachi

The price of beef rose to Rs800 per kilo in Karachi after a lockdown was imposed in the city to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.

The government had set beef prices at Rs470 per kilogramme but butchers have been selling the meat for Rs600 to Rs700. They have blamed the price hike on animals.

“The cows and bulls we get have gotten very expensive,” butchers in Burnes Road and North Nazimabad said.

The price of chicken, on the other hand, decreased after which 1kg of chicken now costs between Rs250 and Rs280. According to shopkeepers, the reduction was due to decreased demand.

Eggs, however, have become more expensive as a dozen eggs now cost Rs130, almost 40% more than their actual price.

People have complained that price lists aren’t being followed at any of the shops and sellers have been selling these commodities at whatever prices they want.



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Court rejects petition to bring back Pakistanis stranded in Iran

The Islamabad High Court rejected on Wednesday a petition to bring back pilgrims stranded in Iran.

The court cannot interfere in policy matters, said Chief Justice Athar Minallah. He declared the request unfit for hearing.

Trust the government, he advised the petitioner, adding that the whole world is in the grip of the coronavirus.

The Parliament and executive is here, approach the correct forum with your petition, he said.

The petitioners’ lawyer argued that thousands of Pakistanis are stuck in Iran and their visas have expired. But Justice Minallah said this is an international matter that the court cannot intervene in.

The Pakistani government shut down all international flights and the border with Iran to curb the spread of the coronavirus in the country. The number of known cases in Pakistan crossed 2,000 on Tuesday.



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Sindh CM regrets not imposing lockdown a week earlier

Sindh has been under a complete lockdown due to a spike in coronavirus cases since March 23, but Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah regrets not imposing the lockdown a week earlier.

“Things would’ve been so much better had we imposed it on March 15,” Shah said while speaking on SAMAA TV’s programme Nadeem Malik Live on Tuesday night.

“We would be speaking of reopening businesses right now and the scenario with the Tablighi Jamat could’ve been avoided as well.”

Numerous people associated with the Tablighi Jamaat in Sindh have tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

The jamaat members go door-to-door to preach, one of the reasons the authorities fear that a huge number of people might have caught the virus.

Now, the chief minister says, cases of local transmissions are rapidly increasing.

Shah admitted that the lockdown cannot continue for more than a month. He said the only way of handing out rations to the deserving families was to deliver it to their doorsteps.

Giving rations on the roads defeats the purpose of isolation, he said.

Shah said 6,500 people have been tested for the coronavirus in Sindh so far and more than 600 have tested positive.

We have increased our capacity from 80 tests per day to 600 to 700 tests every day, he said.

He added that it was the moral responsibility of people to pay their domestic workers at least a month’s salary during these times, adding that he’ll ensure all labourers’ families are taken care of.

“The Sindh government has been working with many NGOs to provide cash and rations to needy families, but covering all families will take a lot of time,” he said.

With more than 42,000 deaths recorded across the globe, cases of the coronavirus are continuously emerging in many countries.

Studies conducted by several foreign universities suggest that the number of coronavirus cases will spike in April and May in the Americas and Europe.

The Sindh CM said a study foreseeing such a situation in Pakistan hasn’t been prepared yet, but he agreed that cases are going to increase at a higher rate in the next few days.

“Let it be 100 cases or 10 million cases, the only solution now is isolation and social distancing,” he stressed.

Shah said the lockdown in Sindh has definitely helped curbing the rapid spread of the virus. Although, for daily wage earners across Pakistan who aren’t able to make a penny due to suspension of business, he said he was in talks with the federal government. The following are some of the recommendations he has given to the Centre:

  • Give Rs15,000 each to the needy families.
  • Open grocery shops and supply chain countrywide.
  • Centre to either waive or bear the electricity and gas bills below Rs5,000 and Rs2,000

The Sindh CM, however, said the Centre is yet to give a concrete response to his suggestions.



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Climate change: Warming clips the nightingale's wings

Rising temperatures may be having a profound impact on one of the world's favourite songbirds.

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Coronavirus: Are loss of smell and taste key symptoms?

However, experts say a fever and a cough are still the main ones to look out for.

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Airplanes to be disinfected before boarding passengers: Civil Aviation Authority

All airplanes have to be thoroughly disinfected before boarding passengers, the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority announced.

The authority issued an advisory for all national and international airlines operating in Pakistan on Wednesday.

It ordered the companies to add coronavirus in their health declaration forms. “During the flights, all passengers and flight attendants should be provided face masks,” it stated.

The advisory added that basic medical tests of passengers should be conducted at airports. Screenings have been made compulsory too.

Pakistan had stopped international and domestic flights in a move to curb the spread of the coronavirus. As of Tuesday night, the tally of known cases had climbed to 2,025.



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GB governor approves civil award for late Dr Usama Riaz

Gilgit Baltistan Governor Raja Jalal Hussain has approved a summary granting the late Dr Usama Riaz a civil award for his sacrifices.

Dr Riaz died while working on the frontline against the coronavirus. He was the first doctor in Pakistan to pass away due to the virus and Pakistan’s fourth coronavirus death.

He was part of a 10-member team tasked with screening patients returning to Gilgit from the rest of the country. He also worked at the isolation centres set up for those patients.

He had a medical emergency after which he tested positive for the coronavirus. He passed away on May 22.

Azad Jammu and Kashmir Prime Minister Raja Farooq Haider announced on Friday the Nishan-e-Kashmir— the state’s highest official award—for Dr Riaz.



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Sukkur quarantine police protest lack of basic facilities

Police officers stationed at the quarantine centre in Sukkur came out on the streets Tuesday night to protest against the government.

They claimed that they were “ill-treated” at the centre and weren’t provided precautionary clothing against the novel coronavirus.

The food that we are given is usually stale and stinks, a police officer said. “The management didn’t bother to give us sanitisers or masks,” he complained.

The officers added that they were underpaid and weren’t even provided petrol for traveling to and from home.

Thousands of pilgrims from the Taftan border have been quarantined at Sukkur’s Labour Colony after they tested positive for the virus. Sindh has reported a total of 676 cases so far.



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Milk shop with two children in it sealed in Quetta

A milk shop in Quetta was sealed on Tuesday for violating the government’s orders of a lockdown and two children were locked inside.

The Kacchii district administration sealed a milk shop in the area for remaining open despite government orders to shut down all businesses.

The two children minding the shop argued that milk shops had permission to stay open despite the lockdown.

The staff then sealed the shop with the children in it. People had to break the lock to get the children out.



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Karachi’s electronics markets to open Thursday: association president

The Karachi Electronics Dealers’ Association president has said all markets in the city will open on Thursday.

The Karachi commissioner had issued a 15-day lockdown notification and according to that, the lockdown ends on Thursday.

Muhammad Rizwan told SAMAA TV that shopkeepers have run out of money because of the lockdown. We can only run our houses if we sell our stock, he said, adding that they didn’t even have the money to pay their employees.

He asked the government for permission to continue trade if they take precautionary measures.

Sindh had imposed a total lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus. As of Tuesday evening, Pakistan had reported 2,025 known cases of the coronavirus, with 676 cases being reported in Sindh.



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Seal Karachi neighbourhoods with high coronavirus cases, CM advised

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah has been advised by medical experts to seal neighbourhoods in Karachi where high numbers of coronavirus cases being reported.

This includes DHA’s Phase V and VI, where seven and 14 cases have been reported respectively.

Ten cases have been reported near Bilawal House (Clifton Block 2) and one near CM House.

Five cases each have been reported in Saddar and Garden, while three have been reported in Lyari and one in Aram Bagh.

Medical experts have advised the chief minister to take strict measures to control the virus, including sealing areas off.



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Today’s outlook: PM Khan summons National Coordination Committee on COVID-19

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

  • Prime Minister Imran Khan will chair a National Coordination Committee to discuss strategies to counter the coronavirus in Pakistan. The committee will decide whether the countrywide lockdown will be extended or called off.
  • Funeral prayers for Jang Group publisher Mir Javedur Rahman, who passed away on Tuesday, will be held after Zuhr prayers. He will be buried in the Society graveyard in Karachi’s PECHS. Political leaders are expected to attend the funeral.
  • As of Wednesday, 2,025 people have tested positive for the coronavirus in Pakistan while 26 have died of it. Around 65 people have recovered.
  • The lockdown in Sindh has entered its 10th day. NADRA and telecommunication companies haven’t yet provided the Sindh government with the data needed to locate and help poor families.
  • The lockdown has been intensified across Punjab. The provincial government has directed that all shops open by 9am and close by 5pm. The order doesn’t apply to medical stores.
  • The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has imposed a ban on congregational prayers of more than five people.
  • ICYMI: Sindh now has its first drive-thru coronavirus testing facility in Karachi.It has been set up at the parking area of Bagh Ibne Qasim near the Bahria Icon Tower. Click here to read the full story.


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Raiwind completely locked down as Tablighi Jamaat coronavirus cases rise

The Punjab government has completely locked down Raiwind over fears that the coronavirus may spread from there.

Vegetable and food staple shops have been shut down and the police and Rangers have been deployed to ensure no one leaves their homes. The only stores that remain open are pharmacies.

The Raiwind Tablighi Centre has been declared a quarantine centre for foreigners.

Multiple members of the Tablighi Jamaat have tested positive for the coronavirus, with 94 cases being confirmed in Sindh, 32 in Punjab and 16 in Islamabad. Members of the Jamaat are being tested.

Rescue officials are disinfecting the city’s streets and markets with a chlorine-water mixture.



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China lockdown may have blocked 700,000 virus cases: researchers

China’s decision to lock down the city of Wuhan, ground zero for the global COVID-19 pandemic, may have prevented more than 700,000 new cases by delaying the spread of the virus, researchers said Tuesday.

Drastic Chinese control measures in the first 50 days of the epidemic bought other cities across the country valuable time to prepare and install their own restrictions, according to the paper by researchers in China, the United States and the UK, published in the journal Science.

By day 50 of the epidemic — February 19 — there were 30,000 confirmed cases in China, said Oxford fellow Christopher Dye, one of the paper’s authors.

“Our analysis suggests that without the Wuhan travel ban and the national emergency response there would have been more than 700,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases outside of Wuhan by that date,” he was quoted as saying in a press release.

“China’s control measures appear to have worked by successfully breaking the chain of transmission — preventing contact between infectious and susceptible people.”

The researchers used a combination of case reports, public health information and mobile phone location tracking to investigate the spread of the virus.

The phone tracking provided a “fascinating” new stream of data, said another of the report’s authors, Penn State biology professor Ottar Bjornstad.

The time period they studied encompassed China’s biggest holiday, the Lunar New Year. 

The researchers “were able to compare patterns of travel into and out of Wuhan during the outbreak with cell phone data from two previous spring festivals,” Bjornstad said.

“The analysis revealed an extraordinary reduction in movement following the travel ban of January 23, 2020. Based on this data, we could also calculate the likely reduction in Wuhan-associated cases in other cities across China.”

The Wuhan shutdown delayed the arrival of the virus in other cities, their model showed, giving them time to prepare by banning public gatherings and closing entertainment venues, among other measures.

Nearly half of humanity has now been told to stay home to curb the spread of the virus, and lockdowns are rapidly becoming normalized. 

But when Beijing first shut down Wuhan more than two months ago, the decision was seen as a dramatic escalation in the fight against infection.

With the restrictions in the city slowly being lifted and life inching closer to normal, the question for China — and other countries around the globe — is what will happen once movement resumes. 

“We are acutely aware that resident or imported infections could lead to a resurgence of transmission,” said another of the report’s authors, Huaiyu Tian, an associate professor of epidemiology at Beijing Normal University.



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Coronavirus: Zoom under increased scrutiny as popularity soars

The New York attorney general has written to the videoconferencing company about its security measures.

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Coronavirus: Zoom under increased scrutiny as popularity soars

The New York attorney general has written to the videoconferencing company about its security measures.

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Coronavirus: Mandatory quarantine in a five-star Sydney hotel

Australians who return from overseas are now required to spend 14 days in quarantine in hotels.

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Coronavirus: Stock markets suffer worst quarter since 1987

The Dow Jones and FTSE 100 have fallen more than 20% since the start of the year.

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Van Gogh painting stolen from Dutch museum during virus shutdown

Thieves stole a painting by Dutch master Vincent van Gogh early Monday in a daring heist from a museum that was closed to the public because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The 1884 painting, titled the “Parsonage Garden at Neunen in Spring”, was taken during a pre-dawn break-in at the Singer Laren Museum near Amsterdam.

The criminals smashed through a glass door and then took the painting, which is valued at up to six million euros ($6.6 million).

“I am shocked and unbelievably annoyed this theft has happened,” Jan Rudolph de Lorm, one of the museum’s directors, told a press conference.

“Art is there to be seen, to be enjoyed, to inspire and to bring solace, particularly in these troubled times in which we find ourselves,” De Lorm said.

The theft happened on what would have been the 167th birthday of the brilliant yet troubled artist.

“Parsonage Garden at Neunen in Spring” comes from relatively early on in Van Gogh’s career, before the prolific artist embarked on his trademark post-impressionist paintings such as “Sunflowers” and his vivid self-portraits.

The painting was on loan from its owners, the Groninger Museum in the north of the Netherlands, as part of an exhibition.

The Singer Laren museum closed two weeks ago in compliance with Dutch government measures aimed at tackling the spread of COVID-19.

Dutch police said the criminals had broken in at around 3:15 am (0115 GMT).

“Police officers immediately rushed to the scene but the perpetrators had escaped,” Dutch police said in a statement, appealing for witnesses.

‘Hunt is on’
The painting has an estimated value of between one million and six million euros, Dutch art detective Arthur Brand said.

“The hunt is on,” said Brand, who is known for recovering stolen Nazi art including “Hitler’s Horses”.

It was the third time the famous Dutch master’s works have been targeted in the Netherlands since the 1990s, Brand said.

“To me this looks like the work of a copycat,” Brand told AFP, adding the modus operandi was similar to the other two cases.

“The thieves only went for a Van Gogh, while there are other works too in the museum,” he said.

Asked whether he thought there was enough security at the museum Brand said “it is very difficult to say.”

“Securing a painting is very difficult. It is something that has to be displayed for people to see,” he said.

The museum’s 3,000 pieces also include works by Dutch abstract master Piet Mondrian and Dutch-Indonesian painter Jan Toorop, as well as a casting of “The Thinker” by Auguste Rodin.

Singer Laren was targeted in 2007 when thieves stole a number of castings from its gardens including “The Thinker,” Dutch media reports said. The castings were recovered two days later.

Two Van Gogh masterpieces went back on display at Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum last year after they were stolen from the museum in 2002.

The paintings, the 1882 ” View of the Sea at Scheveningen” and the 1884/5 “Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church at Nuenen”, were recovered by Italian investigators in September 2016 when they raided a home belonging to an infamous mafia drug baron near Naples.

Previously three Van Goghs that were stolen from the Noordbrabants Museum in 1990 later resurfaced when a notorious Dutch criminal made a deal with prosecutors.



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Houseparty offers $1m reward for proof of sabotage

The company says claims it exposed users data were part of a commercial smear campaign.

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Trump on coronavirus: Heated response to 'snarky, nasty question'

The US president launches an attack on a CNN journalist who questioned his coronavirus response.

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Houseparty offers $1m reward for proof of sabotage

The company says claims it exposed users data were part of a commercial smear campaign.

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Who are you calling a Kanjar on Instagram, Ali Sethi?

If you have lived in Pakistan, it is quite likely that you would have heard the word “kanjar” almost always used to shame someone. This word is often used as a slur to denigrate people working in the entertainment industry. Pakistanis are still uncertain about their relationship with entertainment. They will sing along to your songs, laugh at your jokes, watch your movies—but then call you a kanjar. Perhaps they do it to tell themselves that they are still more dignified than you.
Kanjars have a long history of being social outcasts. During the colonisation of India, Kanjars were listed under the Criminal Tribes Act, 1871, as a tribe “addicted to the systematic commission of non-bailable offences.” The colonizers were too lazy to scrutinize crimes, and for the sake of convenience criminalized entire communities by designating them as habitual criminals.
By 1947, thirteen million people in 127 communities faced search and arrest if any member of the group was found outside their prescribed area. The recent humorous exchange on Ali Sethi’s live show on Instagram brought the word, kanjar into the spotlight. Someone called Sethi a Kanjar and he responded by saying, “Your whole family is Kanjar.” Though the artist later explained the origins of the word and how he wants to reclaim it, for many people in society it is still an insult to call someone a Kanjar.
As with any community, there are myths around the origins of this one and their identity as a tribe. According to some researchers, the word Kanjar is derived from the Sanskrit kanana-chara, which means ‘wanderer in the jungle’. There is reasonable consensus that the Kanjar were a nomadic tribe in India, who used to be folk entertainers.
In post-colonial times, Kanjar is more exclusively associated with prostitution than entertainment. There is the legend of an outstanding Kanjari dancing girl named Majori. She was so adept that she could effortlessly dance on a tightrope. A king made her an offer: he would raise her status to queen and give her half of his kingdom, if she could dance on a tightrope blindfolded and catch the bangles he threw up in the air. Majori took on the challenge and was going to catch the bangles when another dancing girl severed the rope. Majori came crashing down and was severally injured. Before she succumbed to her death, she cursed her community by saying their progeny would be condemned to see their women prostituted.
In Pakistan, there was a considerable number of the Kanjar community in the Shahi Mohalla (also known as Heera Mandi) to the extent that it was also referred to as the Kanjar Mohallah. The women were sex workers and their men were pimps. The Kanjar prostitutes tended to think of themselves as occupying a higher status than other prostitutes because of their community’s long association with the profession.
And so this word, which is used as a slur today, used to give women within a profession a sense of pride.
Kanjar is a community, not an adjective and thus it is incorrect to call someone that if they are not of that tribe. The people who are entertaining you might not necessarily be Kanjar and not all the people from the Kanjar tribe are entertainers or involved in prostitution. It is the year 2020 and about time that we stop using someone’s identity as an insult, for no one can choose the community of their birth.

The writer is pursuing Masters in Public Policy at Central European University. He tweets @@jasirshahbaz



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Mahira recalls binge-watching Aangan Terha with tub of ice cream

When almost half the nation is glued to Netflix during the self-isolation period because of coronavirus outbreak all around the world, here is what Mahira Khan has been binge watching.

Taking to her Instagram on Monday, Khan shared a clip from the Pakistani satirical series Aangan Terha and said that she took its DVD to her college.

“When I was in college I brought a few things with me from back home, one of them was a DVD of Aangan Terha. Every Sunday (if I wasn’t working) or whenever I found time I would take out my tub of ice cream, sit on my dirty couch and watch it!” reads the caption.

She remarked that it gave me so much joy and a feeling of being home. “Please watch it or rewatch it….it’s one of the best shows Pakistan has produced. Saleem Nasir, Bushra Apa and Shakil Sb.. kyaaaa baat hai inn sab ki! Written by the genius Anwar Maqsood,” said Khan.

Aangan Terha was a satirical Pakistani that aired on PTV in 1984. The show starred Salim Nasir, Shakeel, Arshad Mehmood, Durdana Butt and Bushra Ansari in lead roles. It was directed by Qaiser Farooq and written by Anwar Maqsood.



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Balochistan industrialists should help people amid coronavirus outbreak: CM Khan

Balochistan Chief Minister Jam Kamal Khan has claimed that the industrialists and factory owners the province are not lending a helping hand despite his repetitive appeals to help people amid the coronavirus outbreak.

“I have been requesting top industrialists and factory owners of Balochistan for the last two weeks to help people with the situation at hand,” CM Kamal said while speaking to a delegation of journalists on Monday.

Whenever the industrialists have any reservation, the government is always there to sort it out, but they are now not responding to the government’s call in such grave times, he added.

The chief minister said the Chinese companies operating in Chaghi and Lasbela had reached out to him and aided supplies necessary to help people combat the virus spread.

There is only one laboratory in Quetta that has five medical kits that are being used to test people for the coronavirus. “The kits have the ability to conduct only 500 tests in a day,” the chief minister added.



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Thomas Becket: Alpine ice sheds light on medieval murder

Ancient air pollution, trapped in ice, reveals details about life and death in 12th Century Britain.

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Coronavirus: I'm in lockdown with my abuser

The BBC has spoken to two women who are currently under lockdown with men who have abused them.

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Four suspected robbers arrested in Pakpattan

The Pakpattan police arrested on Tuesday four suspected robbers. They claimed that the suspects were wanted in over 60 cases.

The Hariwala police said that the suspects were part of a six-member gang involved in robberies. The police recovered Rs1 million in cash, jewellery, mobile phones among other items from them.

Weapons from seized from them too.



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Mianwali surgeon killed in a targeted attack: police

A surgeon, identified as Dr Aftab Niazi, was killed after unknown men opened fire at him on Mianwali’s Eidgah road on Monday.

According to the police, he was immediately shifted to the DHQ Hospital by a Rescue 1122 team. He, however, succumbed to his injuries at the hospital.

“A post-mortem examination was conducted after which we sent the body back to Niazi’s home,” a police officer said. We are waiting for the reports, he added.

The district police officer has taken notice of the murder and has formed an investigation team.



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Salman Khan’s nephew Abdullah passes away at 38

Bollywood superstar Salman Khan’s nephew Abdullah Khan passed away on Monday at Mumbai’s Lilavati Hospital. He was 38 years old.

Taking to his social media, Dabangg actor Salman mourned the death. The actor shared a picture with Abdullah Khan along with the caption, “Will always love you.”

View this post on Instagram

Will always love you…

A post shared by Salman Khan (@beingsalmankhan) on Mar 30, 2020 at 11:48am PDT

There was also speculation that the cause of Abdullah’s death is a coronavirus, however, sources from the family denied the rumours and said that he died because of heart-related issues.

According to Republic, Abdullah passed away after suffering from a lung infection.

Abdullah was not connected with Bollywood, however, he often appeared in numerous pictures and videos posted by Salman Khan on social media. Abdullah Mirza Khan was the son of Salman’s father and scriptwriter Salim Khan’s sister. 

Bollywood actors Daisy Shah and Zareen Khan conveyed their condolences to the family.



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Karachi men arrested for allegedly trying to kidnap a couple

Ten men were arrested after they allegedly tried to kidnap a couple from Karachi’s Boat Basin on Monday, the police said.

They had received news from Madadgar 15 about the planned abduction after which a rescue operation was conducted. “We found fake uniforms and media cars from their possession,” an officer said.

The suspects hailed from Lahore. According to the police, it is suspected that there was an ongoing money dispute between the couple and the suspects.

A case has been registered and further investigation is under way.



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Sindh withdraws cases against people who violated congregational prayers ban

The Sindh government has decided to withdraw the cases against all the people who violated the ban on the congregational prayers in the province.

The decision was taken during a meeting of the provincial government’s officials and Muslim scholars.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah said that banning congregational prayers was one of the toughest decisions he had to take but it was necessary to do so in order to contain the coronavirus outbreak.

Sindh, Balochistan, Punjab and Islamabad have banned prayers inside mosques after a spike in the virus cases. It was feared that the virus would spread through Friday prayers.

People across Karachi, however, crowded outside mosques last Friday.

Gurumandir’s Sabeel Mosque, Binoria Town Mosque and Memon Mosque violated the government’s instructions and held Friday prayers and sermons.

Personnel of the police and Rangers kept telling people to stay at home and pray indoors. They read out the government orders on microphones and megaphones as well.

After the public did not abide by the instructions, the authorities swung into action against them. Around 88 FIRs were lodged and 38 people were detained.



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PML-N criticises the government’s response to coronavirus pandemic

The PML-N has criticised the response of the government towards the coronavirus pandemic.

The party leaders held a meeting on Monday via video link. It was chaired by Opposition Leader Shehbaz Sharif.

Shehbaz said that the prime minister cares more about the opposition and media than the country’s people.

They expressed their concerns over the way the funds for coronavirus are being distributed among the people. The PML-N has asked for the formation of a parliamentary committee to look into the distribution of funds.

Shehbaz remarked that the Corono Relief Tigers Force is nothing but a sham. The government should’ve asked the relevant authorities to come into force, he added.

At a time of crisis, the PM has dissolved the country’s biggest authorities on medicine, he said while referring to the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council.



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Tom Hanks and wife back in US after contracting virus

Hollywood megastar Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson are back home in Los Angeles after two weeks in hospital and self-isolation in Australia where they contracted the coronavirus.

“Hey, Folks… We’re home now and, like the rest of America, we carry on with sheltering in place and social distancing,” the multiple Oscar-winning actor tweeted at the weekend.

“Many, many thanks to everyone in Australia who looked after us,” he added. “Their care and guidance made possible our return to the USA. And many thanks to all of you who reached out with well wishes. Rita and I so appreciate it.”

Hanks was on Australia’s Gold Coast to film an Elvis Presley biopic when he and Wilson, both 63, came down with the disease.

The pair were admitted to hospital, where they were treated before being released into self-isolation.

Wilson took to Instagram on Sunday to celebrate being a “Covid-19 survivor,” saying she was taking time to reflect on her good fortune and her continued good health after suffering from cancer and kicking the disease five years ago.

“I am celebrating the beauty of this life, the blessings God has given, and my continued good health, even now as a COVID 19 survivor,” she wrote. “Please take a moment today to acknowledge the amazing creation your bodies are and to thank it for doing so much.”



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Coronavirus death toll in the US surpasses 3,000

The US death toll from the coronavirus pandemic passed 3,000 on Monday, according to the running tally compiled by the Johns Hopkins University, with more than 163,000 confirmed cases.

The United States has recorded 3,008 deaths, according to the tally, while its 163,429 cases are by far the highest national number ahead of Italy, Spain and China.

President Donald Trump has been criticized for an initially slow response by the federal government to the now-accelerating pandemic spread.

Harrowing scenes from hospitals in New York and elsewhere revealed a health system unprepared with basic supplies such as face masks, as well as life-saving devices like respirators.

On Sunday, Trump cancelled his plans to re-open much of the country by Easter — April 12 — and extended social distancing guidelines until the end of April after his top scientists confronted him with data on the rising coronavirus crisis.

Trump said America’s death rate was likely to increase for two weeks, describing as “horrible” a prediction by senior scientist Anthony Fauci that COVID-19 could claim up to 200,000 lives.



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Panama to restrict movement by gender during virus quarantine

The government of Panama on Monday announced strict quarantine measures that separate citizens by gender in an effort to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

From Wednesday, men and women will only be able to leave their homes for two hours at a time, and on different days.

Until now, quarantine regulations were not based on gender.

Men will be able to go to the supermarket or the pharmacy on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and women will be allowed out on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

No one will be allowed to go out on Sundays.

The new measures will last for 15 days.

“This absolute quarantine is for nothing more than to save your life,” security minister Juan Pino said at a press conference.

According to Pino, more than 2,000 people were detained last week for not abiding by the quarantine.

Since the first case was reported on March 10, Panama has confirmed 1,075 cases of the coronavirus, 43 of which are in intensive care, and 27 deaths.



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Coronavirus: American Airlines to seek $12bn in state aid

The US carrier says it will ask for government help to survive during the coronavirus downturn.

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Lagos lockdown over coronavirus: 'How will my children survive?'

Nigeria's commercial hub and the capital have gone into lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus.

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Coronavirus: Has the virus brought borders back to Europe?

The BBC’s Gavin Lee took a road trip in Europe's Schengen area to see how free movement has changed.

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Coronavirus: Italy extends lockdown amid hopes of turning corner

The number of new daily coronavirus infections is 1,648, down from 3,815 on Sunday.

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Coronavirus: US death rates v China, Italy and South Korea

The US has seen its cases spike dramatically in recent days and these graphs show what could be in store.

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54 people caught illegally travelling to Mohmand in a truck

A total of 54 people were caught after they tried to illegally travel from Karachi to Mohmand in a dumper truck on Monday, the police said.

“The dumper was stopped near the Yakagand Gate and these people were found sitting inside,” said Assistant Commissioner Qaiser. The driver had taken huge amounts from them for the journey.

The police has taken all of them into custody. Their coronavirus tests have been taken and they have been sent to a quarantine centre. Forty people hailed from Mohmand and the rest were from Bajaur.

The government has placed a ban on inter-city and inter-province travel after the number of coronavirus cases increased in the country.



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Sindh reports two more coronavirus deaths, provincial toll reaches 5

Two more people have died of the coronavirus in Karachi, taking Sindh’s death toll to five.

Sindh Health Minister Azra Pechuho confirmed the deaths. The patients were 52 and 66 years old and had been diagnosed with COVID-19 three days ago.

The 66-year-old patient had renal issues and was on dialysis regularly and the 52-year-old had a respiratory problem.

Sindh has reported 502 of Pakistan’s 1,578 coronavirus cases.



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Junaid Khan, Hira Mani to star in Kashf

Actors Junaid Khan and Hira Mani will be appearing together once again. After starring together in Mohabbat Na Kariyo, they will share the screen again in Kashf on Hum TV.

The TV show narrates the story of a man named Wajdaan (Khan) who is madly in love with Kashf (Hira) and is willing to go to any limits to win her heart.

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#kashf

A post shared by Junaid Khan (@calljunaidkhan) on Mar 24, 2020 at 8:35am PDT

According to Khan, the drama serial has a unique storyline and is unlike anything he has done before. “Playing this character was an exhilarating experience for me,” he said. “Getting to work with Hira is always amazing, so we hope that you guys would love this story as well.”

Kashf has been directed by Danish Nawaz, who previously directed the duo in Sun Yaara.



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Rain forecast across Pakistan this week

The Pakistan Meteorological Department has predicted rain in various parts of Pakistan this week.

Balochistan is expected to witness showers on Monday and while the rain spell will continue in the Southern Punjab and rural areas of Sindh.

Northern Punjab, Azad Kashmir and KP will also be hit by rain till Wednesday.

Karachi may experience drizzling and light rain on Tuesday and Wednesday as well.



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Shahid Khaqan Abbasi gets bail in illegal appointment case

The Islamabad High Court approved the pre-arrest bail of former prime minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on Monday.

A Karachi court issued warrants for his arrest on March 27 in an illegal appointment case. This is the second reference NAB has filed against him.

The Islamabad High Court granted him bail for four weeks with the provision that he appear before the Karachi court within four weeks. The Karachi court had summoned him on April 10.

Abbasi, who is currently out on bail in the LNG terminal case, has been accused of hiring people illegally while he was serving as the petroleum minister during PML-N’s tenure.

NAB claimed that he illegally appointed Pakistan State Oil’s managing director and deputy managing director.



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Three arrested for mugging in Karachi’s Sachal

Karachi police arrested on Monday three people for mugging in the city’s Sachal area.

The thieves were on the run after snatching a cell phone and other valuables from a person when the police intercepted them.

The police reportedly swung into action right away after being informed about the crime.



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Court displeased over the government’s failure to make PMDC functional

The Islamabad High Court expressed its displeasure with the federal government over its failure to revive the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council.

On October 21 last year, the president signed the Pakistan Medical Commission Ordinance 2019 for the regulation of the medical profession. The PMDC was dissolved and replaced by the Pakistan Medical Commission.

On February 11, the Islamabad High Court declared the federal government’s decision to dissolve the PMDC null and void. The court also issued contempt notices to the federal government and health department for not implementing its orders.

Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani resumed hearing the contempt case on Monday. He said the PMDC should be made functional today. The authorities should break the lock on its building and make its registrar sit there. “A report should be submitted to the court in one hour,” the judge said.

The health secretary will be sent to jail for six months if the building is not opened in an hour, he remarked. “I have given you three dates already and you haven’t done anything.”

Not implementing court’s orders is contempt, the judge remarked. “This is a slap on the court’s face.” Such a behaviour does not suit the federal government, said Justice Kayani, adding that the government should be ashamed.

The court asked if the PMDC employees are getting their salaries or not. The lawyer of the employees said that the they haven’t been paid in over five months.



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French chefs cook up antidote to virus confinement

“Today it’s not chef Lignac talking, it’s Cyril who like all French people has to do his shopping near where he lives,” says Cyril Lignac, the nation’s current gastronomic media star. On prime-time television, he sports a T-shirt to prepare dinner from his home on his new show Everyone in the Kitchen.

The show focuses on everyday cooking and the travails of the public in a time of national emergency. The coronavirus crisis has enabled chefs “to play a different tune in the kitchen”, he tells AFP. “It’s very interesting to improve people’s daily lives by cooking just from the cupboard and the fridge.”

‘No fuss’ cuisine
The show, which opened on France’s M6 channel on Tuesday, is scheduled to last only as long as the public’s confinement in their own homes. Lignac says he wants to help his compatriots by proving how easy, good and well-priced it can be to cook at home.

Other chefs are following a similar path. “There are no tricks,” says Paris chef Amandine Chaignot during an online class explaining how to prepare asparagus. “I have a tiny kitchen, if I can do it, you can too.”

Chaignot may be more used to serving up prestigious banquets but here she’s whipping up a dish with one pot, asparagus and eggs bubbling away before runny yolks are mixed with butter and poured over chopped-up white stalks.

Her video was made for mates who often eat in restaurants, she says.

“You can miss so much if you tell yourself ‘I don’t know how to do the simplest of things,'” she tells AFP. “It has to be easy, quick and not involve a lot of equipment or ingredients you cannot source.”

‘Dad’ cooking
In the Mediterranean city of Marseille, two-star Michelin gourmet Alexandre Mazzia describes himself as a “dad” who does homework, sport and cooking with his children.

In a rare moment of downtime, he posted on social media some recipes adapted to a time of quarantine.

They include a chocolate cake that is “made like an omelette” with no need to whip up egg whites or sift flour, and a green Puy lentil salad that swaps kumquat for green apple and cashews for any nut.

“I received 350 text messages asking me what to do with Puy lentils,” says the award-winning chef.

Triple Michelin star Christophe Bacquie has also taken to social media to help the nation to get cooking.

He wants to put Mediterranean tastes on our plates, endives in orange, honey and rosemary, lemon and olive oïl cake.

“It was my wife who convinced me to go on Instagram,” he says.



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4,256 fishermen screened for coronavirus in Karachi

A total of 4,256 fishermen in Karachi have undergone screening for the novel coronavirus, according to authorities.

Of these, four people who were suspected of having the virus have been shifted to a hospital in Gwadar. They are under treatment there.

On the other hand, the Balochistan government has started distributing rations to fishermen in Gwadar, Pasni, Jiwani and Manora. The livelihood of these people was affected after a lockdown was imposed across the country.

The decision was taken to make people stay at home as a precautionary measure to contain the coronavirus spread. Sindh has reported a total of 502 cases so far.



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Kobe Bryant’s towel fetches $33,000 at auction

The towel that Kobe Bryant wore over his shoulders during his farewell speech after his final National Basketball League game has fetched over $33,000 at auction, the US media said on Sunday.

With the towel draped around him to help mop up his sweat, the Los Angeles Lakers superstar closed his speech with his signature phrase, “Mamba Out.”

The towel ended up in the hands of a fan as Bryant walked off the court and was then sold several times before the latest online auction.

The winning bid on Sunday was $33,077. The buyer also received two used tickets to the April 13, 2016 Lakers game.

Bryant scored 60 points in the Lakers’ 101-96 win over the Utah Jazz that night.

Jeff Woolf, president of Iconic Auctions, told American news broadcaster CNN that the winning bidder is famous for having a large Lakers memorabilia collection.

“He is a devoted Lakers fan,” Woolf said. “His long-term plan is to create a museum in southern California.”

Bryant died in January at age 41 in a helicopter crash near Los Angeles that killed eight others, including his daughter Gianna.

Bryant played his entire 20-year NBA career with the Lakers. The superstar guard led the club to five NBA titles during his stay.

He was an 18-time NBA All-Star and the 2008 NBA Most Valuable Player and also helped the United States capture Olympic gold in 2008 at Beijing and 2012 in London.



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Today’s outlook: ECC meets, Sindh petrol pumps close at 5pm

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

  • Adviser to Prime Minister on Finance and Revenue Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh will chair an Economic Coordination Committee meeting in Islamabad. The meeting will approve a Rs1.2 trillion relief package for the public amid the countrywide lockdown.
  • Petrol pumps across Sindh will be closed by 5pm. The provincial government had already announced closure of grocery and medical stores by 5pm.
  • Prime Minister Imran Khan will announce how the Youth Tiger Force will distribute rations among needy families during lockdown.
  • So far, 1,578 known cases of the coronavirus have surfaced across Pakistan. Seventeen people have died of it.
  • A six-month-old girl has tested positive for the novel coronavirus in Gujarat.
  • ICYMI: Authorities sealed the Imtiaz Super Market branch in Karachi’s Korangi area on Sunday for failing to take precautionary measures against the coronavirus spread. Click here to read the full story.


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Sindh’s private companies obliged to pay employees until March 31

All private companies and factories in Sindh have been ordered to pay their employees until March 31, the government announced on Monday.

According to the Payments Act Notification passed by the province, the organisations have been obliged to ensure payments to daily wage workers, contractors and permanent employees.

An emergency cell has also been created where employees can lodge complaints against all those companies failing to comply with the notification.

The development came after the number of coronavirus cases spiked in the country. A lockdown has been imposed across Sindh to prevent the spread of the virus and most offices and workplaces have been shut down. Amid this, people have complained that companies are refusing to pay salaries.



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Mardan policeman who contracted coronavirus has a message for you

The Mardan operations SP, Waqar Azeem, announced in a video message that he had tested positive for the coronavirus.

He has placed his entire team in self-isolation and is also isolating himself.

I didn’t have a choice, I had to go out to do my duty, said the SP. But if you can stay home, then please do, he urged. The doctors, policemen and other officials going out in the field have to do it to keep the people safe, but the people can keep them safe by staying home, he said.

He said to curb the spread of this virus, people must stay home and practice social distancing. Do it for your children and families, he said.



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North Korea hails 'super large' launcher test as virus timing condemned

South Korea's army issued a stern statement saying that testing comes at a "very inappropriate" time.

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Trump says US won’t pay Harry and Meghan security

President Donald Trump said Sunday that the United States would not pay security costs for Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, appearing to confirm that the royal couple have moved to live in California.

They reportedly flew by private jet from Canada to Los Angeles before the border between the two countries closed because of the deadly coronavirus outbreak.

The couple, who had been living in Canada for several months, rocked the royal family earlier this year with their decision to no longer represent the British monarchy and to pursue a new, independent life.

“I am a great friend and admirer of the Queen & the United Kingdom,” Trump tweeted.

“It was reported that Harry and Meghan, who left the Kingdom, would reside permanently in Canada. Now they have left Canada for the US however, the US will not pay for their security protection. They must pay!”

Meghan grew up in Los Angeles and her mother, Doria Ragland, still lives in the city.

The one-time actress has a network of friends and work contacts in Los Angeles, where she could now restart her career.

Disney announced on Thursday that she will narrate a new film about a family of African elephants.

Harry was reportedly caught in a hoax telephone call recently in which he attacked Trump for his stance on climate change.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will formally step back from royal duties on March 31.



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Coronavirus: 28 Sukkur pilgrims test positive after ignoring social distancing

A total of 28 more pilgrims tested positive for the novel coronavirus at the Sukkur quarantine on Sunday after they failed to practice social distancing.

According to medical superintendent Dr Tasleem Akhter, all these people had previously tested negative. “But they kept meeting their friends who had contracted the virus and did not isolate themselves,” he said.

The new people who were infected have been quarantined for five days. “They will be tested twice after a week and sent home if their results are negative,” Akhter added.

Sindh Transport Minister Awais Shah called this “carelessness of the pilgrims”. “The management of the centre is responsible but these people violated the rules of social distancing,” he said.

All the pilgrims who have recently arrived from Iran are being kept at the quarantine centre in Sukkur’s Labour Colony. Pakistan has reported more than 1,500 cases of the virus so far. Seventeen fatalities have taken place across the country.



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UAE opens drive-through coronavirus testing site

The United Arab Emirates said it has launched a drive-through coronavirus testing facility as part of the Gulf state’s efforts to fight the disease.

The facility, inaugurated by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, will provide screenings within five minutes, using state-of-the-art equipment and a medical team, the Abu Dhabi government’s media office said. 

“A new drive-through testing facility for COVID-19 has launched … to offer safe testing procedures,” the office said Saturday on Twitter.

According to official state news agency WAM, the facility can serve 600 people a day, with priority given to senior citizens, pregnant women and those with chronic illnesses.

The media office said people should book an appointment in advance.

Tests “for the wider community for reassurance only” would cost 370 dirhams ($100), according to government advice on Twitter.

The UAE, which on Sunday had 570 officially declared COVID-19 cases, including three deaths, has imposed restrictions on night movements and taken steps to sanitise outdoor areas and public transport.

The Gulf state has halted passenger flights, closed its borders to foreigners and asked people to go outdoors only if necessary.

UAE Attorney General Hamad Saif al-Shamsi has issued a list of fines ranging from $272 to $13,600 for those violating regulations imposed to contain the virus.



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Six-month-old tests positive for coronavirus in Gujarat

A six-month-old girl has tested positive for the novel coronavirus (COVD-19) in Gujarat.

She and her father arrived in Pakistan two weeks ago from Spain.

She is being treated at the Aziz Bhatti Shaheed Hospital.

As of Sunday, Punjab reported 570 known coronavirus cases. Pakistan’s tally as of Sunday evening was 1,578.



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Coronavirus could claim up to 200,000 US lives: top scientist

Senior US scientist Dr. Anthony Fauci issued a cautious prediction Sunday that the novel coronavirus could claim as many as 200,000 lives in the United States, as state and local officials described increasingly desperate shortages in hard-pressed hospitals. 

And with stress, uncertainty and exhaustion rising across the country, House speaker Nancy Pelosi squarely blamed President Donald Trump for unnecessary loss of life by initially playing down the pandemic.

“His denial at the beginning was deadly,” she told CNN’s “State of the Union.” She added, “Don’t fiddle while people die, Mr. President.”

Dr. Fauci, who leads research into infectious diseases at the National Institutes of Health, played down worst-case predictions of one million or more deaths, instead offering a rough estimate of 100,000 to 200,000 deaths and “millions of cases.”

But Fauci, a leading member of Trump’s coronavirus task force and for many Americans a comforting voice of authority, quickly added, “I don’t want to be held to that … It’s such a moving target that you can so easily be wrong and mislead people.”

By way of comparison, a US flu epidemic in 2018-19 killed 34,000 people.

COVID-19 has hit the US with explosive force in recent weeks, following a path seen earlier in parts of Asia and Europe.

It took a month for the US to move from its first confirmed death, on February 29, to its 1,000th. But in two days this week that number doubled, to nearly 2,200 on Sunday. The case total of 124,763 — as tallied by Johns Hopkins University — is the world’s highest.

“This is the way pandemics work, and that’s why we all are deeply concerned and why we have been raising the alert,” Dr. Deborah Birx, the response coordinator for the White House task force, said Sunday on NBC.

“No state, no metro area will be spared.”

In the US, the epicenter has been New York City, with 672 deaths so far. Hospital staff have issued desperate pleas for more protective equipment.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday that his city’s hospitals have enough protective equipment for only another week. He said he had made a direct request to Trump and the US military “to find us immediately more military medical personnel and get them here by next Sunday.” 

De Blasio credited federal officials with being “very responsive,” but added, “we’re talking about a sharp escalation ahead.”

New York governor Andrew Cuomo said the statewide death toll had risen to 965 from 728 a day earlier — its largest one-day jump yet — and he extended by two weeks an order for nonessential state employees to continue working from home. 

Early Saturday, Trump had floated the idea of a “quarantine” for New York and two neighboring states, but when state officials and health experts questioned the idea — which Cuomo derided as “preposterous” and “a declaration of war on the states” — the president dropped it. 

Instead, the federal Centers for Disease Control issued an advisory urging people in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to avoid non-essential domestic travel.

In Washington state, where the disease first struck with force, Governor Jay Inslee described “a desperate need for all kinds of equipment.” He said the nation needed to be put on an essentially wartime footing.

Inslee pushed back against the notion, advocated earlier by Trump, that the country could begin returning to work by Easter, which is April 12.

“There are some hard realities we have to understand,” he said on CNN. “Unless we continue a very vigorous social distancing program in my state, this will continue to spread like wildfire.”

Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan also described a deteriorating picture, especially in her state’s largest city, Detroit.

“We had a thousand new cases yesterday,” she said. “We know that number will be even higher today … The dire situation in Detroit is getting worse by the minute.”

Whitmer bemoaned a system that has states competing against one another for desperately needed supplies.

“We’re bidding against one another, and in some cases the federal government is taking priority,” she said.

“It’s really, I think, creating a lot more problems for all of us.”

Pelosi said earlier that Trump’s “continued delay in getting equipment to where it’s needed is deadly.” 

Dr. Birx, the task force coordinator, declined to say what her recommendation would be to the president in the next few days about an eventual easing of work and travel restrictions, but she offered this advice:

“Every metro area should assume that they could have an outbreak equivalent to New York, and do everything right now to prevent it.”



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#StayAtHomeChallenge: Heer’s self-isolation note

Children from across Pakistan have been sending us their notes, poems, art and photos as they pass the time in self-isolation. We have been publishing them here and on our Facebook @HealthSamaa page. This submission is by Heer Shahida:


My Self-Isolation

On a Sunday morning last year I saw that there were no newspapers on the table at home. I thought my father was reading newspapers in his bedroom. But he was not there. I found him sitting in our study room and watching news websites. It was unusual as I had been seeing my father reading newspapers every morning at dining room since my childhood. I do remember that my father had told me he would read newspapers ‘online’.

I did not take it so serious at that time and simply thought that my father had stopped buying newspapers to save his money. But now, in these days of Coronavirus, I am recalling it seriously. I do observe rapidly changing things.

Sudden closure of our school in February had worried me and my friends very much. The matter for more concern was that we were not meeting now. Our school is closed and we were unable to meet each other for a long time. But recently we did find a way to interact with each other. It became possible through internet. We four close friends did see and talk at the same time through a video call. It was a pleasant experience for us.

After few days I saw my father doing office work from home. I asked my father about it. He replied that due to current situation our office has allowed its workers to work from home. I will email my assignments to my office.  It was unusual and surprising for me.

Later on a day when I opened the door there was a man carrying a big box. He asked about my father. I did call my father who talked to the person for a while and received the box. When I opened the box I found some groceries in it. It was first time that an outsider had brought grocery at home. My father told me that it is time for online shopping due to Coronavirus threat.

And now when I asked about fate of my education my father told me that it will also be ‘online’ in case current wave of Coronavirus is continued for a long. I have heard and read so many times about ‘online’ things but now I am seeing it practically here. It seems that everything is going to be online in our country. The Coronavirus situation is changing our lifestyle.

Heer Shahida

8th grade

St.Paul’s English High School, Karachi



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Sindh to pay daily wage labourers through mobile wallet app

The Sindh government is going to be paying daily wage labourers who are out of work due to the coronavirus lockdown through a mobile wallet application.

The money will be given against their CNIC number and people will be able to get their money by showing their ID card and phone at mobile shops.

Requests for registration are being submitted and the government has asked NADRA, the FIA, FBR and State Bank for help verifying them.

People who have travelled abroad, except for Hajj or pilgrimages, will not be entitled to this money. Those with over Rs10,000 in their bank accounts won’t be eligible for this scheme either.

Ever since the lockdown began in Sindh, daily wage workers have been out of jobs. The government promised to provide them rations.

Sindh has reported 502 known cases of the coronavirus as of Sunday night, with three deaths.



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Message from president who led Ebola battle

Liberia's ex-President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf says the world must conquer fear to deal with coronavirus.

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Coronavirus: Mercedes F1 to make breathing aid

Thousands of the devices, which deliver oxygen to the lungs without needing a ventilator, could be made.

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Close-up footage of Arkansas tornado

An active weather front brings a rapid developing and destructive tornado to Arkansas

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Pakistan must strengthen health infrastructure for future emergencies: Zafar Mirza

Pakistan must strengthen its health system to deal with future epidemics, said Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Zafar Mirza.

We are thankful to China for its assistance, even when it is going through a difficult situation itself, Dr Mirza said on Sunday during a briefing for Chinese doctors at the National Institute of Health in Islamabad.

He counted supplying diagnostic kits and personal protection equipment among the aid China had given Pakistan. It has also sent a team of doctors to help. So far, Pakistan has reported 1,516 cases and none of them are from China, said Dr Mirza, calling this remarkable.

This was only possible because of the coordination and cooperation between the governments of China and Pakistan, he said, explaining that the Chinese government decided not to allow Chinese citizens to travel to Pakistan unless they were quarantined for 14 days and then screened.

The Chinese Embassy in Pakistan then ensured that they quarantined themselves for another 14 days in Pakistan, he said, adding that this was the reason why Pakistan doesn’t have any cases from China.

Dr Mirza said by taking the right measures at the right time, even a country like China, with a population of over 1.4 billion, could make it possible that not a single case moved across the border. This will go down in history, he said.

He said Pakistan followed China’s policies and regulations. China was very nice as it allowed countries to evacuate their citizens against its recommendations, he said. But Pakistan left its students in China and they were well taken care of by the Chinese government.

Today the coronavirus is spreading in Pakistan and those same students are thanking the government of Pakistan for not evacuating them and asking us to take care of their families the same way the Chinese government took care of them. He said the president met students in Wuhan via Skype and they told him they were happy there, despite initially pressuring the government to let them come back to Pakistan.

Dr Mirza said he was glad to know that the team of Chinese doctors comprised medical professionals from different specialties. “We’re interested in all experts and expertise that you bring and we can tremendously benefit from your presence here, especially when we are also starting a major national programme to train health professionals in critical care.”

He said the critical care is an important part of handling an epidemic, where you need timely and expert management of patients who are critically ill. “It’s the difference between life and death.”

We have almost finalised our plan and I would like my team planning this two-day crash training to meet with your critical care experts and see if there is any input or advice they can give, he said.

The special assistant called this a global opportunity to make use of the political and financial attention being given to health. “This attention is unprecedented,” he said, adding that the health sector has never seen this kind of conern and support before.

“Our challenge as health professionals and lawmakers is how we use this attention and turn this into an opportunity to start thinking in the long term about building our health systems in such a way that we are strong enough, relatively strong enough, for when we have these kind of problems again,” he said.

Like other developing countries, Pakistan does not pay attention to building our capacity for health when there are no health emergencies, he said, calling it natural, as other health priorities take precedence.

This outbreak has shown us that we must build health security infrastructure in the country, he said. Dr Mirza counted times of peace (when there is no emergency) as the best time to invest in a country’s capacity and prepare it to respond effectively during a health emergency.

During an emergency you can do limited things and whatever measures you take are ad hoc, he said, adding that once the emergency is over, those efforts are over too. “If you have a good underlying system and you keep investing in it, that system becomes your guarantee for generating an effective response,” said Dr Mirza.

He said it was important for China and Pakistan to strengthen and deepen their cooperation in health so that Pakistan can learn from China. Infrastructure is very important, as are trade and economies, but all these are meaningless unless you don’t have a healthy population to benefit from them, he said.



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Squash legend Azam Khan passes away due to coronavirus

Legendary squad player Azam Khan, who won the British Open four times in a row from 1959-62, passed away due to the coronavirus in London.

The 95-year-old, whose brother Hashim Khan won the 1951 British Open, had moved to Britain during his playing days.

Azam had been moved to London’s Ealing Hospital after being tested positive for coronavirus but could not recover from the deadly virus that has gripped the world.



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Balochistan’s coronavirus cases increase to 138, 426 people quarantined

The number of coronavirus cases reported in Balochistan increased to 138 after five new cases were reported across the province on Saturday.

According to Balochistan Government Spokesperson Liaquat Shahwani, of these, seven cases were of local transmission while the remaining have travel histories.

One person died from the virus and two have been discharged so far. Reports of more than 276 people are pending, he said. A total of 426 people are being quarantined at the Taftan border and in Pishin.

To curb the spread of COVID-19, the government has closed down the Pak-Iran Taftan border and Chaman border shared with Afghanistan.

A lockdown has also been imposed and people have been advised to practice social distancing. On Saturday, the police arrested seven more people and sealed 13 shops for violating Section 144.



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Indian man flees home quarantine nude, bites elderly woman

A man under home quarantine in India’s Tamil Nadu ran out of his house nude and bit an 80-year-old woman on Friday.

The police said the young man was in self-isolation after returning to his village from Sri Lanka, according to a Deccan Herald report.

He fatally bit his elderly neighbour, who has hospitalised with neck injuries. She was hospitalised and died on Saturday.

Neighbours overpowered the man and handed him over to the police.



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China sends more supplies to aid Pakistan’s fight against coronavirus

Another plane full of relief supplies from China arrived in Islamabad Sunday morning.

The supplies are meant to help Pakistan fight the coronavirus. The NDMA spokesperson confirmed that the flight has arrived.

It contained around six tonnes of supplies, including 15 ventilators, masks, medical protective kits and other items.

The Chinese ambassador to Pakistan and NDMA Chairman were at the airport to receive the supplies.

Pakistan has reported 12 coronavirus deaths and 1,508 known cases as of Saturday. A lockdown has been imposed across the country to curb the spread of the virus.



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Balochistan to open container hospitals in remote areas

The Balochistan government has decided to open hospitals and relief and emergency centres in containers to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus in the province.

The decision was taken by Balochistan Chief Minister Jam Kamal Khan.

These container hospitals will be equipped with all medical facilities such operation theatres, isolation wards and even residences for doctors and paramedical staff.

They will also have a separate room for pre-burial procedures for deceased patients. These containers will be sent to remote areas of the province in the wake of the pandemic, authorities said.

According to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority, initially 1,500 container hospitals will be prepared. Paramedics and doctors will also be hired for them.



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Jhelum’s food markets remain open, defying Section 144

The fruit and vegetable markets of Jhelum remained open on Sunday despite strict lockdown orders from the government.

The markets remained open even after Section 144 was imposed in the city. Not more than four people are allowed to stand outside on the roads.

On the other hand, security measures against coronavirus were also not taken by the shopkeepers and buyers. Nobody was wearing masks or gloves.

A lockdown was imposed after the number of coronavirus cases across the country increased. Of these most of the case are from Punjab.



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Notification resuming international flights to Pakistan cancelled after provinces protest

A notification by the National Disaster Management Authority that said international flights would resume to Pakistan on April 5 was cancelled an hour after being issued due to opposition by the provinces.

The notification said that international flights would resume across the country on April 5. Pakistan had grounded all international flights till April 5 with the provision that the ban could be extended.

According to the provinces, it’s way too early to reopen airspace.

Sindh Information Minister Syed Nasir Hussain Shah said each province’s consent was needed before this decision was made.

In the NDMA’s notification, it said flights would resume and hotels near eight airports would be converted into quarantine centres.

The decision was made to allow Pakistanis stuck abroad to come back.

But the notification was cancelled and a memo was sent to all four provincial chief secretaries and the chief commissioner of Islamabad.

Pakistan has also stopped domestic flights in a move to curb the spread of the coronavirus. As of Saturday night, the tally of known cases had climbed to 1,495.



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US coronavirus deaths surge past 2,000: Johns Hopkins

Deaths from the new coronavirus in the United States surged past 2,000 on Saturday, doubling in just three days, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

The number of deaths late Saturday was 2,010, about a quarter of them in New York City, the country’s hardest-hit region, Johns Hopkins reported.

Confirmed cases in the United States topped 121,000, according to the tally.

The surge came as President Donald Trump said he was considering a quarantine on the greater New York area to slow the disease’s move from the US epicenter.

New York has reported more than 52,000 cases, and 517 of the US deaths were in New York City.

“There’s a possibility that sometime today we’ll do a quarantine — short-term, two weeks — on New York, probably New Jersey, certain parts of Connecticut,” Trump said, adding that it was important to protect Florida, a favorite winter destination for people in the northeast.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo objected to the idea, which he said Trump had not discussed with him.

“If you said we’re geographically confining people, that would be a lockdown. Then we would be Wuhan, China, and that wouldn’t make sense,” Cuomo told CNN, referring to the city in central China where the virus outbreak began, which was almost totally isolated by Beijing. 

Cuomo said he did not believe such an act would be legal, and added: “Why you would want to just create total pandemonium on top of a pandemic, I have no idea.”



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UK’s Birmingham airport turns temporary mortuary as coronavirus cases spike

A temporary morgue is being built at the airport in the UK’s Birmingham as the coronavirus spreads in the area.

The morgue has the capacity of holding up to 12,000 bodies, according to The Guardian.

The airport is located next to the National Exhibition Centre, which is going to be converted into a temporary field hospital.

The UK reported 115 new deaths across the country on Thursday and 40 of those were from the West Midlands (where Birmingham is located). By Friday, the NHS said one in five UK coronavirus deaths were in the Midlands.

According to the deputy director of public health England West Midlands, high levels of historical deprivation and smoking, combined with the region’s industrial past could be behind the higher than normal level of coronavirus deaths in the area.

As of Saturday, the UK has reported 1,019 coronavirus deaths and 17,089 confirmed cases.



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Former US President Bill Clinton admitted to hospital with fever

The 42nd president is at a Washington DC hospital, and is in "good spirits", according to a spokesman. from BBC News https://ift...