Tue, 21-Oct-2025

UK records another 40,004 new coronavirus cases

UK records another 40,004 new coronavirus cases

LONDON: Britain registered 40,004 new COVID-19 infections, bringing the total number of coronavirus cases in the country to 9,845,492, according to official figures released Sunday. The country also reported a further 61 coronavirus-related deaths. The total number of coronavirus-related deaths in Britain now stands at 143,927, with 8,079 COVID-19 patients still in hospital. The latest … Read more

UK urges China to provide ‘verifiable evidence’ about tennis star

UK urges China to provide 'verifiable evidence' about tennis star

LONDON: Britain on Saturday urged China to provide “verifiable evidence” about the “safety and whereabouts” of tennis star Peng Shuai, whose whereabouts are unclear after making sexual assault allegations against a top Communist Party official. “We are extremely concerned at the apparent disappearance of Peng Shuai, and are following the case closely,” the foreign office said in … Read more

US tells Taliban to ‘earn’ release of frozen funds

US tells Taliban to ‘earn’ release of frozen funds

WASHINGTON: The United States rebuffed an appeal by the Taliban to release Afghan assets frozen after their takeover, saying the new government in Kabul must ‘earn’ legitimacy first. Thomas West, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan, said in a tweeted statement that Washington had long made clear that if the Taliban claimed power by military force … Read more

US tariffs on Spanish olives violation of rules: WTO

US tariffs on Spanish olives violation of rules: WTO

GENEVA: A US decision to slap steep import duties on Spanish olives over claims they benefited from subsidies constituted a violation of international trade rules, the World Trade Organization ruled on Friday. Former US president Donald Trump’s administration slapped extra tariffs on Spain’s iconic agricultural export in 2018, considering their olives were subsidized and being … Read more

US ‘deeply concerned’ by missing Chinese tennis star

US 'deeply concerned' by missing Chinese tennis star

WASHINGTON: The United States is “deeply concerned” about Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai, who went missing after making sexual assault allegations against a top Communist Party official, the White House said Friday.

Press Secretary Jen Psaki said President Joe Biden’s administration wants China to “provide independent, verifiable proof” of her whereabouts.

The US call came as international concern mounts for the tennis star, missing since alleging earlier this month that she was sexually exploited by a former vice-premier of China.

The United Nations on Friday insisted on a fully transparent investigation into the claims made by Peng, formerly the world’s top-ranked doubles player, against Communist Party grandee Zhang Gaoli.

Tennis stars, sports bodies and governments and human rights defenders have also spoken up for Peng, 35, and demanded information.

The head of the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) said he was prepared to cut lucrative business ties with China if Peng remains unaccounted for and her sexual assault allegations are not probed.

Serena Williams, Novak Djokovic and Naomi Osaka have also voiced their concerns for one of China’s greatest ever players.

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UK drivers to face tough new laws over cellphone use in vehicles

UK drivers to face tough new laws over cellphone use in vehicles

LONDON: Drivers in Britain are to face fines and a risk to their driving licenses under stricter controls over the use of cellphones in their vehicles, the British Department for Transport (DfT) announced Friday.

While it is already illegal in Britain to text or make a phone call using a hand-held device while driving, the new laws, which will come into operation in 2022, will go further to ban drivers from using cellphones to take photos or videos, scroll through playlists or play games.

It will also outlaw the use of hand-held devices when vehicles are stopped at traffic lights or held up in a queue on a gridlocked motorway.

Offenders will face a 200-pound (269-U.S. dollar) fixed penalty notice and have 6 points on their driving license, risking a ban under a points totting-up system.

The tougher rules follow a public consultation that found 81 percent of respondents supported proposals to strengthen the law and make it easier for culprits to be prosecuted.

A study published Friday by the DfT revealed younger motorists are more likely to have used a handheld device while driving.

A poll conducted for the DfT by Ipsos MORI found around two thirds of 16-24 year olds used their cellphones in hand while stationary in traffic or at traffic lights, and about six in ten used their phones while moving in traffic.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said: “Too many deaths and injuries occur while mobile phones are being held. By making it easier to prosecute people illegally using their phone at the wheel, we are ensuring the law is brought into the 21st century.”

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US authorizes Covid boosters for all over 18s

US authorizes Covid boosters for all over 18s

WASHINGTON: The United States authorized the Pfizer and Moderna Covid vaccine boosters to all people aged 18 and older on Friday, as the world’s hardest-hit country enters a new winter wave of the pandemic.

Boosters were previously available to the immune compromised, over 65s, people at high risk of severe disease and people in high risk occupations.

The new decision “helps to provide continued protection against Covid-19, including the serious consequences that can occur, such as hospitalization and death,” said acting FDA commissioner Janet Woodcock in a statement.

“This emergency use authorization comes at a critical time as we enter the winter months and face increasing Covid-19 case counts and hospitalizations across the country,” added Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.

The FDA said it based its decision on strong immune response data from hundreds of people dosed with the two vaccines.

Pfizer also carried out a clinical trial involving 10,000 people aged over 16 which found that the booster showed an efficacy against symptomatic infection of more than 95 percent compared to those who did not receive a booster.

This study was not cited by the FDA in making its decision, but it could nevertheless indicate the Pfizer vaccine works best as a three-dose shot — or that the three-week time interval between first and second dose was never long enough to induce the best immune response.

Both vaccines are available to people six months after completing their primary series.

Pfizer’s vaccine is dosed at 30 micrograms, the same as the primary series, while Moderna’s is 50 micrograms, half the primary series.

People who received the Johnson & Johnson one dose vaccine were already eligible for a booster two months after their first shot.

The booster decision comes as cases are rapidly rising nationally, reaching 88,000 new infections per day on average as the country enters its fifth wave, according to the latest data.

– Misgivings –

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will hold a meeting later Friday to discuss clinical recommendations for who should now seek a vaccine.

The meeting should provide greater insight into the thinking of top federal advisors, some of whom have expressed misgivings about a “booster bonanza.”

The vast majority of those people becoming hospitalized or dying with Covid are unvaccinated, and thus the best way to control the winter wave would be to reach those people, rather than topping up the vaccinated, the critics say.

A potential downside, they argue, is that vaccine holdouts might conclude the shots are ineffective.

Another risk is a greater number of cases of vaccine-linked heart inflammation (myocarditis), especially among younger males.

Both companies are conducting post authorization studies to assess the risks of myocarditis.

Experts are in broad agreement that boosters alone can’t resolve the pandemic while the poorest countries, especially in Africa, remain stuck in the single digit percentages for people covered by their primary vaccination series.

Last week, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus decried the fact that rich countries are administering six times more vaccine doses everyday than low-income countries are delivering primary doses.

This increases the risk of new variants of concern emerging in those regions, which could eventually evade the protective action of current vaccines.

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US warns China on action against Philippines

US warns China on action against Philippines

ABUJA: The United States on Friday accused China of an escalation against the Philippines and warned that an armed attack would invite a US response after an incident in disputed waters.

“The United States stands with our ally, the Philippines, in the face of this escalation that directly threatens regional peace and stability,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said in Abuja, where Secretary of State Antony Blinken was travelling.

The action “escalates regional tensions, infringes upon freedom of navigation in the South China Sea as guaranteed under international law and undermines the rules-based international order.”

He warned that any “armed attack on Philippine public vessels” would invoke the 1951 US-Philippines treaty in which Washington is obliged to defend its ally.

The Philippines said the Chinese Coast Guard on Tuesday fired a water cannon against boats delivering supplies to Filipino marines, forcing them to halt their mission.

The incident came as the Filipinos were travelling to Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly Islands, one of a series of hotly contested areas in the South China sea.

The Philippines earlier voiced “outrage, condemnation and protest”.

China defended its actions, saying that it acted to “safeguard China’s sovereignty” as the Filipinos had not been in contact on their movements.

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US throws support behind treaty to curb plastic

US throws support behind treaty to curb plastic

NAIROBI: The United States on Thursday threw its support behind negotiations on a treaty to curb plastic pollution, ending a key holdup in international efforts to clean up the planet’s oceans and save marine life. On a visit to the United Nations Environment Programme in Nairobi, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States would … Read more

Six teens hurt in drive-by shooting near US school: police

Six teens hurt in drive-by shooting near US school: police

LOS ANGELES: An apparent drive-by shooting Monday near a Colorado high school left six teenagers in hospital, police said, as the spectre of gun violence raised its head again in the United States. Witnesses spoke of around 30 shots being fired, and police said they had recovered multiple rounds of different calibres at a park … Read more

World record: Bird flies nonstop for 8,000 miles to Australia

World record: Bird flies nonstop for 8,000 miles to Australia

A bird has flown nonstop covering 8,000 miles from Alaska to Australia, a bar-tailed godwit has set a new world record. The bar-tailed godwit’s aerodynamic form has been compared to that of a jet fighter, and the epic journey set a new world record. The male bird, which was carrying a small solar-powered satellite tracker, … Read more

China’s slowdown raises questions for global economy

economy

WASHINGTON: The Chinese economy, weighed down by electricity shortages and a vast real estate crisis, has lost its lustre recently, to the point where economists are starting to question its impact on the global growth it has helped drive for more than 20 years. The difficulties of the real estate sector in China triggered by … Read more

Aussies skirt vaccine rules with black market certificates

Vaccine

MELBOURNE: A ban on unvaccinated Australians entering bars and restaurants nudged thousands to get jabbed — but it has also seen the rise of a thriving black market in fake Covid-19 vaccine certificates online. Twenty-four-year-old Molly — who asked to conceal her real name — is hitting the town. When Melbourne last month clambered out … Read more

Stressed-out women are more likely to get heart disease

Stressed-out women are more likely to get heart disease

According to recent research, women with stressed-out lifestyles at home and at work are considerably more likely than males to get heart disease. Heart disease is more common among women who lead stressful lives Research of nearly 80,000 postmenopausal women done between 1991 and 2015 found that women with stressful lifestyles at home and at … Read more

‘Cocaine hippos’ of Pablo Escobar recognizes as humans by a US court

'Cocaine hippos' of Pablo Escobar recognized as humans by a US court

A federal court in the United States has recognized hippos that belonged to Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar as a people. A judge in the United States has declared that Pablo Escobar’s ‘cocaine hippos’ can be recognized as humans. The creatures are offspring of the famed Colombian drug lord’s hippos, and they now have legal … Read more

Iran suspects Israel and US behind fuel cyber attack

Iran suspects Israel and US behind fuel cyber attack

TEHRAN: An Iranian general has said Israel and the United States were likely to have been behind a cyber attack that interrupted the distribution of fuel at service stations. Tuesday’s attack “technically” resembles two previous incidents whose perpetrators “were unquestionably our enemies, namely the United States and the Zionist regime”, the Revolutionary Guards’ Gholamreza Jalali … Read more

United States: Pablo Escobar’s hippos have been recognized as legal persons

United States: Pablo Escobar's hippos have been recognized as legal persons

In the United States, a group of roughly 100 hippos once owned by late drug lord Pablo Escobar, have been recognized as legal persons. This is the first time that animals have ever been officially classified as persons. The United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio has recognized the hippos as legal … Read more

Biden says US would defend Taiwan against China invasion

Biden

BALTIMORE: The United States will defend Taiwan if China attacks it, President Joe Biden said, prompting a warning from Beijing on Friday that its determination to take back the democratic island should not be underestimated. Authoritarian China regards self-ruled Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to one day seize the island, by force … Read more

India administers one billionth Covid jab

India

NEW DELHI: India administered its one billionth Covid-19 vaccine dose on Thursday as it fights its way back from a devastating surge in cases that brought the health system close to collapse. Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed the feat as a “triumph of Indian science”, but authorities remain on guard for a new pandemic wave. … Read more

Little crack disqualifies the Pumpkin that was supposed to be the largest in the United States

Little crack disqualifies the Pumpkin that was supposed to be the largest

This year, a Wisconsin farmer raised a 2,520-pound pumpkin that was thought to be the heaviest in the country, but it was excluded from competition owing to a crack. Mike Schmit of Markesan has been producing enormous pumpkins for years, but this was the first year one of his gourds weighed more than 2,500 pounds. … Read more

Israel, UAE ministers in US as Biden seeks to expand normalization

Israel, UAE ministers in US as Biden seeks to expand normalization

WASHINGTON: The top diplomats from Israel and the United Arab Emirates are set to hold three-way talks in Washington Wednesday as President Joe Biden’s administration embraces and looks to expand a normalization drive. Concerns about Iran — the spectre of which helped bring together Israel and Gulf states when they established relations last year as … Read more

North Korea’s Kim says US is ‘root cause’ of tensions

North Korea's Kim says US is 'root cause' of tensions

SEOUL: The leader of nuclear-armed North Korea, Kim Jong Un, has blamed the United States for tensions on the peninsula, state media reported Tuesday. The US is the “root cause” of instability, he said in an opening speech at a defence exhibition, according to the official Korean Central News Agency. Pyongyang is under multiple international … Read more

Watch: Police officer saves colleague from out-of-control car

Watch: Police officer saves colleague from out-of-control car

In the United States, a fellow cop was spared from a severe accident in the nick of time thanks to the quick action of a police officer. The jaw-dropping scene was captured on camera and has since gone viral. Two cops and a few people were seen standing beside a patrol car by the road … Read more

CIA steps up spying contest with China with new unit

CIA steps up spying contest with China with new unit

WASHINGTON: The US Central Intelligence Agency announced Thursday a new China-focused unit that underscored its view of Beijing as the country’s toughest long-term adversary. CIA Director William Burns said in a statement that the new China Mission Center will address the challenge China poses to all of the US spy agency’s mission areas. “CMC will … Read more

Squid Game: South Korea’s latest cultural phenomenon

Squid Game

A dystopian vision of a polarised society, Netflix smash hit “Squid Game” blends a tight plot, social allegory and uncompromising violence to create the latest South Korean cultural phenomenon to go global. It features South Korea’s most marginalised, including the deeply in debt, a migrant worker and a North Korean defector, competing in traditional children’s … Read more

Dogs can memorize the names of toys for months

Six border collies participated in a ‘Genius Dog Challenge,’ and it was discovered that the canine geniuses can recall the names of toys for two months. Over the course of a week, the dogs were shown unusually named toys, such as a rabbit named Thumper and a fish named Silver, and were taught their names. … Read more

Cases of stoned dogs growing in United States

Cases of stoned dogs are on the rise in United States

As cannabis regulations have been loosened in the great majority of states, the number of cases of stoned dogs is growing on daily basis in the United States. In the United States, the number of stoned dogs is on the rise. Now that cannabis is legal in all but four US states, the number of … Read more

First Indian-American woman crowned as Miss World of America

First Indian-American women crowned as a Miss World of America

Shree Saini, a heart health advocate, suffered a serious automobile accident that left her with burns all over her face. Shree Saini of Washington State, the first Indian-American to win Miss World America 2021, is one of the most unusual pageant winners ever. Saini has had a permanent pacemaker since she was 12 years old … Read more