Masarat Aalam denounces killing spree by Indian troops in IIOJK

Srinagar, January 14, 2022 (PPI-OT): In Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir, illegally detained All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) Chairman, Masarat Aalam Butt has denounced the unabated killing spree perpetrated by Indian troops in the territory.

Masarat Aalam Butt, in a message from New Delhi’s notorious Tihar jail, said the ruthless killing of innocent people, demanding their legitimate and inalienable right to self-determination, is a brazen violation of international laws, Human Rights Charter and commitments made by Indian leaders before the world community.

Lauding the valour and fortitude of the freedom-loving people of Kashmir, he reiterated his pledge to lead the ongoing resistance movement to its logical conclusion despite Indian measures of suppression and repression. Paying rich tributes to the martyrs of Kulgam and other parts of the territory, the APHC Chairman said, “We are indebted to the sacrifices rendered by our martyrs and we are committed to display our allegiance to the sacred cause of freedom from the Indian subjugation”.

Terming the internationally recognised Kashmir dispute as purely a political issue, he said it is very unfortunate that India does not respect human values, peaceful means of conflict resolutions and rule of law. He added that this stubborn approach by India has become a complicated stumbling block in the way of a peaceful political solution to the Kashmir dispute.

Masarat Aalam Butt expressed the hope that the United Nations Secretary General, António Guterres and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council would take serious note of the systematic genocide, large scale arbitrary arrests and unabated extrajudicial killings in IIOJK by Indian troops. He maintained that any forward move in this regard would keep the august World Body’s reputation intact among the Kashmiris.

Meanwhile, APHC leader, Farida Bahenji, in a statement issued in Srinagar said the ongoing siege and house searches by Indian forces to suppress the freedom movement have made the life of Kashmiris miserable. She said that India was using every cruel tactic to crush the Kashmir freedom movement but the Kashmiris are determined to continue their struggle till complete success.

Farida Bahenji urged the world powers to come forward and stop India from its state terrorism in IIOJK, otherwise, the region could be hit by a nuclear catastrophe that would affect the peace of the entire world.

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UN chief urged to ensure safety of Kashmiri political detainees

Islamabad, January 14, 2022 (PPI-OT): All Parties Hurriyat Conference Azad Jammu and Kashmir chapter leader, Mehmood Ahmed Saghar, has appealed to the United Nations Secretary General, António Guterres, to use his diplomatic clout upon India to ensure the safety of the Kashmiri political detainees languishing in different jails of Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir and India.

Mehmood Ahmed Saghar in a statement issued in Islamabad while citing the Modi regime’s authoritarian mindset to crush the Kashmiris’ legitimate struggle, said the detention of APHC Vice Chairman, Shabbir Ahmad Shah, and other leaders was part of India’s nefarious designs to render the ongoing freedom-movement leaderless.

Highlighting the plight of the Kashmiri prisoners, he said that it was high time that the UN muse take practical measures to ensure safety and early release of Shabbir Shah, who had been suffering from serious multiple ailments.

He urged the UN to take measures so that the Kashmir dispute could be resolved peacefully. He termed Kashmir conflict as one of the oldest unresolved disputes and said, Kashmir was born two years after formation of the UN.

The UN, he said, has the responsibility to use diplomatic and other peaceful means, in accordance with Chapters VI and VIII of its Charter, to help protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.

“The Kashmiri people have been facing the Indian tyranny for decades together. Hundreds of thousands of innocent Kashmiris have been killed since 1947 and Indian forces have subjected over ten thousand persons to custodial disappearance in the last three decades. Kashmiri people face all this only because they want implementation of the UN resolutions so that they can express their political will in a free and fair atmosphere”, he said. India had filled jails in and outside the territory with Kashmiri political prisoners, who were made to suffer because of their political beliefs, he added.

Referring to the illegally detained APHC Vice Chairman, Shabbir Ahmed Shah’s contribution towards the freedom struggle, he said that he had been languishing in Tihar jail, New Delhi, only because he had been championing the Kashmiris’ legitimate cause and seeking resolution of the lingering dispute through the implementation of the UN resolutions.

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Battle for UP: Another BJP MLA Mukesh Verma quits, joins Maurya

Lucknow, January 14, 2022 (PPI-OT): The series of resignations from the India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the state of Uttar Pradesh continued for a third day running after Mukesh Varma, the legislator from Shikohabad in Firozabad, also quit.

In his letter addressed to the state BJP president, Varma alleged that the Yogi Adityanath government, in the past five years, has failed to address the problems of weaker sections, youths, farmers, Dalits and other backward classes (OBCs).

“The BJP government in the past five years did not pay any attention to Dalits, backward castes and minorities and disrespected people’s representatives,” Varma wrote in the resignation letter. He said that small traders and businessmen had suffered in the regime. The legislator also stated that he would now work under the leadership of former Cabinet Minister, Swami Prasad Maurya.

“The state government has oppressed Dalits, backward castes, farmers, unemployed youth and small and medium industries. Because of these policies I am quitting the party. Swami Prasad Maurya is the voice of the oppressed and our leader. I am with him,” Indian media quoted him as saying.

Swami Prasad Maurya, Dara Singh Chauhan (both ministers) Roshan Lal Varma, Brijendra Prajapati, Bhagwati Sharan Sagar, Vinay Shakya and Avatar Singh Bhadana resigned in past two days. Barring Bhadana who has joined the RLD (Rashtriya Lok Dal), all the other legislators are likely to join the Samajwadi Party.

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Masks Rules Get Tighter in Europe in winter’s COVID-19 Wave

To mask or not to mask is a question Italy settled early in the COVID-19 outbreak with a vigorous “yes.” Now the onetime epicenter of the pandemic in Europe hopes even stricter mask rules will help it beat the latest infection surge.

Other countries are taking similar action as the more transmissible — yet, apparently, less virulent — omicron variant spreads through the continent.

With Italy’s hospital ICUs rapidly filling with mostly unvaccinated COVID-19 patients, the government announced on Christmas Eve that FFP2 masks — which offer users more protection than cloth or surgical masks — must be worn on public transport, including planes, trains, ferries and subways.

That’s even though all passengers in Italy, as of this week, must be vaccinated or recently recovered from COVID-19. FFP2s also must now be worn at theaters, cinemas and sports events, indoors or out, and can’t be removed even for their wearers to eat or drink.

Italy re-introduced an outdoor mask mandate. It had never lifted its indoor mandate — even when infections sharply dropped in the summer.

On a chilly morning in Rome this week, Lillo D’Amico, 84, sported a wool cap and white FFP2 as he bought a newspaper at his neighborhood newsstand.

“(Masks) cost little money, they cost you a small sacrifice,” he said. “When you do the math, it costs far less than hospitalization.”

When he sees someone from the unmasked minority walking by, he keeps a distance. “They see (masks) as an affront to their freedom,” D’Amico said, shrugging.

Spain reinstated its outdoor mask rule on Christmas Eve. After the 14-day contagion rate soared to 2,722 new infections per 100,000 people by the end of last week — from 40 per 100,000 in mid-October — Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez was asked whether the outdoor mask mandate was helping.

“Of course, it is. It’s not me saying it. It’s science itself saying it because (it’s) a virus that is contracted when one exhales,” Sanchez said.

Portugal brought masks back at the end of November, after having largely dropped the requirement when it hit its goal of vaccinating 86% of the population.

Greece has also restored its outdoor mask mandate, while requiring an FFP2 or double surgical mask on public transport and in indoor public spaces.

This week the Dutch government’s outbreak management team recommended a mask mandate for people over 13 in busy public indoor areas such as restaurants, museums and theaters, and for spectators at indoor sports events. Those places are currently closed under a lockdown until at least Friday.

In France, the outdoor mask mandate was partially re-instated in December in many cities, including Paris. The age for children to start wearing masks in public places was lowered to 6 from 11.

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer announced last week that people must wear FFP2 masks outdoors if they can’t keep at least 2 meters apart.

In Italy, with more than 2 million people currently positive for the virus in a nation of 60 million and workplace absences curtailing train and bus runs, the government also sees masks as a way to let society more fully function.

People with booster shots or recent second vaccine doses can now avoid quarantine after coming into contact with an infected person if they wear a FFP2 mask for 10 days.

The government has ordered shops to make FFP masks available for 85 U.S. cents. In the pandemic’s first year, FFP2s cost up to $11.50 — whenever they could be found.

Italians wear them in a palette of colors. The father of a baby baptized this week by Pope Francis in the Sistine Chapel wore one in burgundy, with matching tie and jacket pocket square. But the pontiff, who has practically shunned a mask in public, was maskless.

On Monday, Vatican City State mandated FFP2s in all indoor places. The tiny, walled independent state across the Tiber from the heart of Rome also stipulated that Vatican employees can go to work without quarantining after coming into contact with someone testing positive if, in addition to being fully vaccinated or having received a booster shot, they wear FFP2s.

Francis did appear to be wearing a FFP2 when, startling shoppers in Rome on Tuesday evening, he emerged from a music store near the Pantheon before being driven back to the Vatican.

In Britain, where Prime Minister Boris Johnson has focused on vaccination, masks have never been required outdoors.

This month, though, the government said secondary school students should wear face coverings in class. But Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi said that rule wouldn’t apply “for a day longer than necessary.”

When the British government lifted pandemic restrictions in July 2021, turning mask-wearing from a requirement to a suggestion, mask use fell markedly.

Nino Cartabellotta, president of the Bologna-based GIMBE foundation, which monitors health care in Italy, says Britain points to what can happen when measures like mask-wearing aren’t valued.

“The situation in the U.K, showed that use of vaccination alone wasn’t enough” to get ahead of the pandemic, even though Britain was one of the first countries to begin vaccination, he said in a video interview.

Source: Voice of America

WHO Approves Two New Drugs to Treat COVID-19

The World Health Organization is recommending two new drugs for the treatment of COVID-19, adding to a growing list of therapeutic remedies for the deadly disease.

Baricitinib is an oral medication recommended for patients with severe or critical COVID-19.It is part of a class of drugs that suppresses the overstimulation of the immune system and is used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.

WHO team lead for clinical care, Janet Diaz, says the drug should be given along with corticosteroids, a type of anti-inflammatory treatment. She notes three clinical trials of 2,600 people showed a drop in the mortality of patients with coronavirus infections once they received baricitinib.

She says WHO has also conditionally recommended the use of a monoclonal antibody drug called sotrovimab for treating patients with COVID-19 who have mild or moderate disease.

“Conditional for those patients that are of the highest risk for complications,” Diaz said. “This would include patients who are older age, unvaccinated or have underlying conditions. This recommendation is based upon one trial, a well-done trial with just over 1,000 patients. And this trial showed a reduction for the need for hospitalization.”

Studies are ongoing on the effectiveness of monoclonal antibodies against the omicron variant. While Diaz says early laboratory studies show that sotrovimab continues to be effective against the new coronavirus strain, she says she would not call the drug a game changer.

“I think we have multiple therapeutic options right now for COVID-19 and more are on the way,” she said. “Unfortunately, viruses are known to develop resistance to certain drugs. So, SARS COVID-2 is not different in that respect … and if something happens where the resistance does develop, we try to hopefully reduce the chances that happens.”

The WHO official says other therapeutics are in the pipeline.

She says WHO is committed to equitable and affordable access for all member-states to COVID-19 drugs, and the agency and partners are meeting with pharmaceutical companies to negotiate fair prices and access for low- and middle-income countries to life-saving treatments.

Source: Voice of America