Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Russia completely halts gas supplies to Europe via Nord Stream 1 citing maintenance works

New Delhi: Russia has completely halted gas supplies to Europe via Nord Stream 1 pipeline, citing maintenance on its only remaining compressor, said Gazprom, the Russian state-owned energy giant.

Gazprom added that the restrictions on the pipeline, which runs from Russia to Germany via the Baltic Sea, will be suspended from 31 August to 3 September.

European governments have accused Russia of using energy supplies as a weapon of war. However, Moscow denies doing this and has cited technical reasons for supply cuts.

Russia, which before the reductions started accounted for a bit more than a third of Germany’s gas supplies, has also reduced the flow of gas to other European countries which have sided with Ukraine. In recent weeks, Nord Stream 1 has been running at only 20 per cent of capacity, according to report in newsonair.gov.in.

The shutdown had been announced in advance, with Gazprom saying in mid-August that gas flows would be suspended for a three-day period for maintenance works.

According to CNBC report, Gazprom previously said that gas transmission would resume at a rate of 33 million cubic meters per day when the maintenance work is completed “provided that no malfunctions are identified.”

The president of the German network regulator said that Germany would be able to cope with the three-day outage as long as flows resumed on Saturday.

“I assume that we will be able to cope with it,” Reuters quoted Klaus Mueller as saying in an interview. “I trust that Russia will return to at least 20 per cent from Saturday, but no one can really say.”

Further restrictions to European gas supplies would deepen an energy crunch that has already triggered a 400 per cent surge in wholesale gas prices since last August, squeezing consumers and businesses and forcing governments to spend billions to ease the burden.

In Germany, inflation soared to its highest in almost 50 years in August and consumer sentiment soured as households brace for a spike in energy bills.

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WATCH: Attack on Taliban convoy in Kabul amid celebrations on anniversary of US troop exit

New Delhi: A Taliban convoy came under attack on Wednesday amid celebrations on the first anniversary of US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, journalist Bilal Sarwary said on Twitter.

He also shared a video purportedly showing the attack on the convoy in Kabul’s Khair Khana. Sarwary said that the convoy was returning from Bagram.

Bagram was the largest US military base in the country. It fell to the Taliban after the Afghan troops stationed at the base surrendered on 15 August 2021.

The Taliban held parades at the Bagram base to mark the anniversary of US troop withdrawal.

The plane carrying the last US troops took off from Kabul just a minute before midnight on August 31 last year.

That departure ended America’s longest war, which began in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States.

No group has taken responsibility for the attack so far but in the past, the Islamic State has targeted the Taliban.

With inputs from agencies

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Scientists predict melting of 'Zombie Ice' to raise global sea level by 10 inches

Scientists predict the melting of ‘Zombie Ice’ to raise global sea level by 10 inches

In Greenland’s earlier times, it seemed as though the ice would never end. But now, it will undoubtedly witness a very different future. Due to climate change,  the ‘doomed ice’ and ‘zombie ice’ portions of frozen ice sheets will begin to melt and raise the sea level by at least 10.6 inches, as per a study brought out in the Nature Climate Change journal. The vast majority of Greenland has been covered by an ice sheet for 18 million years, due to being largely located within the Arctic Circle. A layer of ice that is roughly 5,000 feet thick covers an area that is 1,380 miles by 680 miles. There is no longer enough snow falling to allow ‘parent glaciers’ to feed it and keep it frozen. This melting zombie ice is still affixed to thicker regions of the ice. In total, 120 trillion tons of ice are predicted to be affected, which means 3.3 percent of the entire Greenland ice sheet can be melted away into the ocean.

The amount of discharged water will be more than the previous projections for the rise in sea level. Following this scenario, the entire continental United States can theoretically be covered by 37 feet of water. While this isn’t actually the expected scenario, it’s still a depressing number.

The current situation is “more like one foot in the grave,” according to the study’s principal author, Jason Box, a glaciologist of the Greenland Survey. This is the first time a minimal ice loss and related sea level rise have been estimated for Greenland. Although the study gave no time frame for the sea level increase, the scientists stated that it might occur “within this century.”

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment from last year, sea levels would rise by two to five inches by 2100 as a result of the Greenland glacier melting. The new 10.6-inch calculation is a forecast based on the global average. It implies that regions farther from Greenland, like the U.S. East Coast, would see greater water inundation than regions closer to the zombie ice.

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Madonna is currently obsessed with sex, regrets marrying both times

New Delhi: Pop icon Madonna recently connected with fans while answering 50 questions about her four-decade career, guilty pleasure, regrets and upcoming album. In a video shared on her YouTube channel, the legendary singer had a fairly candid chat about her life, opening up on hitherto unknown facts or rumours.

Opening up on what decision she looks back and feels was not the best idea, she said, “Get married. Both times!’ For the unversed the singer was married to actor Sean Penn from 1985 to 1989 and Guy Ritchie from 200 to 2008.

During the interview the singer also revealed her current obsession is sex and that if she was not a musician she would have been a school teacher.

When asked what her “greatest guilty pleasure” is, the singer responded, “Sex.” She also gave the same response when quizzed about her “current favourite obsession.”

During the interaction, the 64-year-old singer also revealed her pet peeve is “lazy people”, that she’s “gagging to work with” Britney Spears again. Madonna and Spears released their hit track Me Against The Music almost 19 years ago.

The seven-time Grammy winner also revealed she would love to collaborate with Kendrick Lamar before admitting the hardest part of working on her upcoming biopic was cramming her entire life into a feature-length film.

Meanwhile, Madonna has hit a record-breaking milestone after scooping a top 10 album every decade since the release of her self-titled debut release in 1983. The 64-year-old has become the first female to land an album in the Billboard 200 top 10 every decade since the early 1980s, as per a report by mirror.co.uk.

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Taiwan passes China-centric defence budget, replaces howitzers with rockets

New Delhi: Taiwan has revamped its defence budget amid growing Chinese aggression.

In a proposal submitted to the Parliament for the 2023 annual budget, the Taiwanese Defence Ministry said that the military has decided not to purchase M109 self-propelled howitzer and replace it with 18 M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, journalist William Yang wrote on Twitter.

According to the new budget, Taiwan’s army will allocate more than 15.4 billion New Taiwan dollars for long-range precision fires, the journalist added.

The proposal also said that the US will supply 11 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) and 64 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) to Taiwan.

The defence proposal comes days after tensions escalated between Taiwan and China over US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan earlier this month.

Pelosi became the highest-ranking American official to visit the self-ruled island in 25 years. China which claimed sovereignty over Taiwan opposed the visit.

Following the visit, China conducted large-scale military drills near Taiwan.

With inputs from agencies

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19-year-old girl forced to execute her mother in revenge killing for father's murder

Tehran: A 19-year-old girl in Iran executed her own mother for killing her father.

The girl was asked by authorities to kick the chair away from under the feet of her mother leading to her hanging, in line with one of the Iranian regime’s most barbaric laws, Irish Mirror reported.

The woman has been identified as Maryam Karimi, who killed her husband after he subjected her to years of abuse and refused to grant her divorce.

As per the report, Karimi’s father and her only relative Ebrahim did his best to solve the issue peacefully but was unable to convince his “stubborn” son-in-law, so he aided his mistreated child in the killing.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2022

When policy wonks and lawmakers are at loggerheads, technology may come to our rescue. Here’s how

I’m not a techno-romantic person. But I believe that technology could solve our most complex problems though in the process sometimes it would raise legal, ethical, and social issues. Climate change, reproductive freedoms, school safety, random gun violence, and other conundrums cry for technologically innovative solutions. When policy wonks and lawmakers are at loggerheads, technology might come to our rescue.

Human beings won’t be replaced but their capabilities could be enhanced multi-fold by technologies with embedded intelligence systems. Just think how NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has given us a glimpse into the early universe with its sharp and deep infrared photos. We do not know what impact, if any, it would have on our daily lives but there’s no doubt that more than the political dramas being played out in the Capitol, our future is being determined by technologies including information communications technology (ICT), artificial intelligence (AI), nanotechnology, space technology, biotechnology, and quantum computing.

There’s no endgame in technology. The gunpowder, printing press, the steam engine, the telegraph, the Internet, the mobile phone, for example, have been determinants of history.

Technologies’ disruptive potential on societies should not be underestimated. In the early days of globalisation, for example, technology pushed jobs offshore to take advantage of cheap skilled labour. Capitalism loves cheap labour. But jobs in the future would be lost not to countries with cheap skilled labour, but to networked systems with man-machine embedded intelligence, which would require a new kind of skilled workforce, people who could work with semi-autonomous smart systems.

And no one is more eager to develop smart intelligent systems than the US military’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to upend the military’s first response capabilities and keep the nation out of danger as much as possible. They call it the Early Awareness System (EAS), which is different from the Early Warning System (EWS). In EAS, you imagine and calculate probabilities of developments that might happen, foresee events that might occur, and take appropriate proactive measures. In EWS, on the other hand, you deal with developments that have already taken place. The concept of first response capabilities based on embedded intelligence and early awareness system is finding applications in business, law enforcement, and anti-terrorism.

Technologies are seldom stand-alone in this age of digital networking. They have a recombinant potential and tend to converge with others to form newer technologies, which could be used in ways the original inventors never imagined. A new world of sensate surroundings in which nothing would remain incommunicado is arising. Based on the convergence of sensor and intelligent technologies, law enforcement and anti-terrorism experts have been dealing with terrorism, among other problems, in altogether different ways and perhaps more effectively.

The inside of the aeroplanes of the future would be embedded with sensors that record and transmit any unusual activity to a monitor-and-control centre for pre-emptive action. Scientists at QinetiQ, a commercial offshoot of the UK’s Ministry of Defence, have developed a working model of sensor-embedded airplane seat that’s capable of capturing signals of physiological changes in a passenger and transmitting the information to the cockpit monitor. The signals could enable the system to analyse whether the person is a terrorist or someone who is suffering from thrombosis of the deep vein, for example.

The smart seat would eventually be able to register signs of any emotional stress a passenger feels during the flight. Hidden seat sensors would provide unobtrusive in-flight surveillance and have the potential for actionable intelligence about the activities including the health status of in-flight passengers. More importantly, the information would enable plain-clothed air marshals to take preventive action in case there is a danger of terrorists contemplating blowing up or hijacking the plane. The cockpit would become an anti-terror cell.

We have become accustomed to various kinds of intrusive searches at airports, banks, and other places. We do not object to a data-collecting smart environment if the purpose is to enhance security. We know the security cameras are on us; but we do not feel self-conscious that we are being spied upon when we go to an ATM or a bank teller for a transaction. This is the price we pay for security and convenience and freedom. There can be no freedom without security. So perhaps we wouldn’t mind sitting in a sensor-embedded train or bus if that takes us safely to our destination where we can enjoy all the privacy we want.

Aah! But here’s the challenge. Could school buildings like airplanes be turned into early awareness smart systems with embedded intelligence? We have seen the horrific video of the Texas Uvalde school shooting where the 18-year-old gunman walked freely and shot 19 students and two teachers and wounded 17 other people. If Robb Elementary School were equipped with an embedded networked early awareness intelligence system, the gunman would have been apprehended long before he committed the carnage.

The Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, is sacred to most Americans but it should not become a black hole that sucks all our other cherished freedoms.

The author teaches in the graduate college at Norwich University. He is the author of several books including the most recent, ‘India In A New Key: Nehru To Modi’. Views expressed are personal.

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10-year-old saves mother who had seizure from drowning in swimming pool

In an incredibly brave incident, a 10-year-old saved the life of his mother, who suffered a seizure in a swimming pool. The young boy’s quick thinking and courageous act were caught on a surveillance camera. And the incident came to light after Lori Keeney, the mother who suffered the seizure, decided to tell the story about her son Gavin Keeney and shared the video of the incident on her Facebook account. The hair-raising incident took place at their residence in the United States’ Oklahoma. In the now-viral video, Lori can be seen struggling to breathe and staying afloat in the swimming pool, as Gavin rushed in an attempt to save her from drowning.

The video shows the 10-year-old pulling his mother towards the ladder on the edge. Their pet dog can also be seen trying to go inside the swimming pool. Gavin can be seen struggling in keeping her mother’s face above the surface, the young boy took the ladder’s support to position his mother in a way that she can continue breathing. However, after some seconds, a man can be seen coming in to help her.

While sharing the eye-opening video on Facebook, Lori penned down a lengthy caption to reveal “one of her worst nightmares.” Calling her son her “hero”, she said that she is very “hesitant” to bring this to light. She wrote in the caption, “One of my worst nightmares came to life this morning.”


She continued, “I’m very hesitant to share this video. As I’ve shared before, I don’t like for people to witness when I have a seizure so for all my friends and family here…know this was very, very hard for me to watch as I’ve never seen myself nor have I seen Gavin in action. I have security cameras up that captured this and I’m just sharing a brief part… it may be rough for some to see but y’all…look at my baby saved my life…literally saving my life.”

Lori added that her son was on the porch after getting out of the pool, when he heard her. And without thinking twice, he jumped into the pool to save her life. After pulling her towards the ladder, Gavin called Lori’s father to help her. Lori concluded by saying that it breaks her heart to witness her 10-year-old son have to go through this.

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Explained: As floods wreak havoc in Pakistan, will India extend a helping hand?

After three years of a trade ban imposed by Pakistan following the abrogation of Article 370, the nation is likely to resume commercial relations with India amid one of its worst floods in recent history.

India is reportedly holding high-level talks mulling extending humanitarian assistance to Pakistan.

Let’s find out the developments surrounding the major move and why was the trade ban imposed:

India likely to assist Pakistan

As per Indian Express report, discussions are being held at the topmost level to extend aid to India’s neighbour. However, top officials are yet to decide.

If it comes to fruition, this will be the first time since the Narendra Modi-led NDA government assumed power in 2014 that India will extend aid to Pakistan in the wake of a natural disaster.

Pakistan has not approached India formally for help even though one of its ministers backed the idea of Islamabad importing food materials from New Delhi, as per NDTV.

PM Modi tweets on Pakistan floods

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday, in his first reaction to the floods in Pakistan, said he was “saddened” and “hoped for an early restoration of normalcy”.

“Saddened to see the devastation caused by the floods in Pakistan. We extend our heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims, the injured and all those affected by this natural calamity and hope for an early restoration of normalcy,” Modi said in his tweet.

Meanwhile, Pakistan finance minister Miftah Ismail reportedly told Islamabad media that the government could “consider importing vegetables and other edible items from India” as the flooding has damaged food supplies triggering price hikes.

“We will open duty-free import, make it easier and I also want to say that we will consider importing through the land border with India because these prices [of vegetables] are not sustainable,” Pakistan media quoted Ismail as saying, as per The Hindu.

Earlier, when the Congress-led UPA government was in power, India had extended aid to Pakistan during the 2010 floods, and after the earthquake in 2005.

India-Pakistan trade ban

On 19 August, 2019, Pakistan had called off trade ties with India under the leadership of then prime minister Imran Khan as a protest against the abrogation of Article 370, which provided special status to Jammu and Kashmir.

There were only a few exceptions to this trade ban; during the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, Pakistan allowed import of pharmaceutical products in May 2020.

Islamabad also opened its land route for India to ship 50,000 tonnes of wheat as humanitarian aid to Afghanistan in June.

After Shehbaz Sharif came to power in April, the Pakistan government appointed trade counsellor to its High Commission in Delhi, however, denied reports of any change in the trade policy, as per Dawn.

In spite of a trade ban, India’s exports to Pakistan had more than doubled to $142 million in the April-May period as compared to the previous year’s figure of $70 million, as per Business Standard report in July.

As per the report, Pakistan imported 282 products from India, including 67 pharmaceutical items during the first two months of the financial year 2023. The other items India exported comprise textiles, mineral fuels, organic chemicals, coffee, tea, spices, rubber, fruits and vegetables, iron and steel, among others.

Pakistan’s ‘monsoon on steroids’

The deluge in Pakistan has affected 110 of the 150 districts, hit 33 million people – one in seven Pakistanis– and destroyed livestock, homes and crops. Pakistan’s prime minister Shahbaz Sharif has declared an emergency and sought international aid to tackle the crisis.

The United Nations (UN) on Tuesday appealed for $160 million in emergency funding for Pakistan, BBC reported.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres has said that Pakistan is facing “a monsoon on steroids”.

“Let’s stop sleepwalking towards the destruction of our planet by climate change. Today, it’s Pakistan. Tomorrow, it could be your country,” Guterres said in a video message.

The UN chief said his appeal aims to provide 5.2 million people of the South Asian nation with food, water, sanitation, emergency education and health support.

Pakistan’s climate change minister Sherry Rehman termed the flooding as a “climate-induced humanitarian disaster of epic proportions”.

The country’s planning minister has said that as per estimates, the floods have caused damage of at least $10 billion.

With inputs from agencies

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Inspired by Sri Lanka? Muqtada al-Sadr’s followers cool off in pool after storming palace; watch here

New Delhi: Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, in a televised speech on Tuesday, called upon his supporters, hundreds of whom stormed the government palace and have been holding an ongoing sit-in outside the parliament building, to leave within an hour.

The development comes after chaos erupted in Iraq’s capital Baghdad soon after al-Sadr announced on Monday that he would quit politics. Thousands of his followers stormed Iraq’s presidential palace resulting in the death of two persons.

Later, pictures and videos emerged online of demonstrators, in a rerun of the recent protests in Sri Lanka, cooling off in the pool of the government palace.

Several people were injured during the clashes between al-Sadr supporters and security forces in Baghdad's Green Zone, and several of them were hit by tear gas and stun grenades as they storm the government palace in Baghdad, according to Russia Today.

An immediate curfew was put in place right after as Palace security was unable to control the mass of demonstrators.

As per Russia Today, Al-Sadr's announcement came in reaction to the retirement of Shia spiritual leader Ayatollah Kadhim al-Haeri, who counts many of al-Sadr's supporters as followers.

Al-Haeri announced he would be stepping down as a religious authority for health reasons and called on his followers to throw their allegiance behind Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, rather than the Shia spiritual center in Iraq's holy city of Najaf, media reported.

Earlier in July, numerous Iraqi demonstrators, mostly supporters of Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr stormed the heavily fortified parliament building in Baghdad to protest against the nomination for prime minister by rival Iran-backed parties. The protesters were opposing the candidacy of Mohammed Shia al-Sudani for the post of prime minister, as they believe him to be too close to Iran.

Notably, Al-Sadr's bloc won 73 seats in Iraq's October 2021 election, making it the largest faction in the 329-seat parliament but, ever since the vote, talks to form a new government have stalled, and Al-Sadr stepped down from the political process. A deadlock persists over the establishment of a new government.

In 2016 too Al-Sadr's supporters stormed the parliament in a similar fashion. They staged a sit-in and issued demands for political reform after then-Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi sought to replace party-affiliated ministers with technocrats in an anti-corruption drive.

Mass protests erupted in 2019 amid public anger over corruption and unemployment and this current protest poses a challenge for the oil-rich country.

With input from agencies

Also read:

Iraq: Powerful cleric Moqtada Sadr urges supporters to end protests as clashes claim 23 lives in Baghdad

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Video of rainbow-like cloud in China stuns internet

Despite great progress made by the global scientific fraternity, nature continues to surprise with its beauty and magnificence. Take for instance a rainbow cloud, which was recently spotted in China’s Haikou city on 21 August. A video of which was shared on the internet.

While sharing a small clip of the striking phenomenon, a Twitter user wrote in the caption, “Rainbow colored scarf clouds over Haikou city in China.” The sky shown in the video is surely a sight to behold.

What the residents of Haikou witnessed on 21 August is known as a pileus cloud. The pileus cloud is commonly known as a cap cloud and scarf cloud. As per The Weather Network, this type of cloud is formed when the updraft’s rapidly rising air in a towering cumulus cloud (also called a cumulonimbus) pushes against the cooler air present above it. This scenario results in the condensation of the moisture right along the top of the updraft, causing the formation of the pileus. Watch it here:


The diffraction of light takes place when the sunlight is at the right angle, giving the pileus its colours. It resembles a rainbow, as diffraction takes place between the droplets and ice crystals in the cloud. This type of cloud is usually short-lived.

Several social media users were quick to take to the comments section of the post. One user commented, “Damn China’s sky looks crazy.”


Another was enthralled by nature’s wonder, and wrote, “I wonder if the earth is special or if most planets offer as much of a magnificent view.”


Many sang praises about the beauty of nature.


So far, the video has been played more than 27 million times and has garnered over 16,000 likes.

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Monday, August 29, 2022

How scientists grew the world's first 'synthetic' embryo without eggs or sperm

The recipe to make a baby is simple: You need an egg, sperm, and a womb. But new research shows that neither of these is needed to procreate.

Using only a mixture of stem cells taken out from a mouse, scientists from the University of Cambridge were able to create the miracle of life – a synthetic embryo with a beating heart and even a brain.

Though the embryo lasted only for eight days, the research team claims that it could help doctors understand the earliest stages of organ development and what causes miscarriages.

Let’s take a closer look at how scientists made this possible.

How was the embryo made?

Researchers from the University of Cambridge began their experiment in a lab with three primary embryonic stem cells. They then grew them in favourable conditions so that the stem cells could develop.

Scientists were able to induce the stem cells to “talk” to each other by triggering the production of a certain type of gene.

Also Read: ‘Dil dhadakne do’: How scientists grew a piece of human heart in a laboratory

According to a report by New York Post, the three embryonic cells mimicked the natural process of life by developing a brain, a heart and a nutritional yolk sac.

Zernicka-Goetz, a professor in Mammalian Development and Stem Cell Biology in Cambridge’s Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, and her team created the artificial embryo with the help of a technique developed by Jacob Hanna, a stem-cell biologist at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. Hanna has been working on the research for years.

“Our mouse embryo model not only develops a brain but also a beating heart, all the components that go on to make up the body,” said Zernika-Goetz, who is also the lead author of the study.

The embryo, however, could not survive beyond eight days. If it would have lasted a little longer, it could have grown into a live mouse.

But why did scientists grow an embryo in the lab?

Scientists believe that through this experiment it would be easier for doctors to identify why some pregnancies fail at an earlier stage.

Since they grow outside the uterus, a synthetic embryo would help doctors to observe them better. They are also easier to manoeuvre through genome-editing tools, according to a report by Nature.

This could in turn help them to uncover the role of different genes in birth defects or developmental disorders.

“The stem cell embryo model is important because it gives us accessibility to the developing structure at a stage that is normally hidden from us due to the implantation of the tiny embryo into the mother’s womb,” Zernicka-Goetz said.

Can humans be created out of artificial embryos?

Researchers have tried to coax human stem cells to become blastocysts – a cluster of cells made by a fertilised egg. They have also tried to mimic the stage where an embryo organises into distinct layers composed of different cell types, called gastrulation.

However, some scientists believe that this is too far-fetched. According to a Nature report, organ formation using human cells poses a significant challenge.

Questions are also being raised on whether synthetic structures should be considered embryos at all. The International Society for Stem Cell Research has advised against culturing human embryos beyond the 14th day.

During the first fertilisation in humans, three types of stem cells develop – one that will eventually form the tissues of the body and the other two that support the embryo’s development. According to a report by India Today, for a human embryo to develop, there needs to be a “dialogue” between the tissues that will eventually become the embryo.

The University of Cambridge said in a statement, “One of these extraembryonic stem cell types will become the placenta, which connects the foetus to the mother and provides oxygen and nutrients; and the second is the yolk sac, where the embryo grows and where it gets its nutrients from in early development.”

Other body parts grown in labs

Last month, scientists and researchers from the University of Toronto and the University of Montreal in Canada grew a piece of heart under lab conditions. The scientists reverse-engineered a millimetre-long vessel that beat just like a real biological vessel.

According to a report by LiveScience, a team of Australian scientists grew a mini kidney using three distinct types of cells in 2020.

Last year, a brain which had structural and genetical similarities to a five-week-old foetus was grown by the Ohio State University. A “game changer”, the brain also carried functioning neurons.

With inputs from agencies

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Dogs do forget: What is dementia in canines and how's it diagnosed?

Dogs get dementia too. But it’s often difficult to spot. Research published today shows how common it is, especially in dogs over ten years old.

Here are some behavioural changes to watch out for in your senior dog and when to consult your veterinarian.

What is doggy dementia?

Doggy dementia, or canine cognitive dysfunction, is similar to Alzheimer’s disease in humans, a progressive brain disease that comes with behavioural, cognitive and other changes.

It is generally seen in dogs over eight years old, but can occur in ones as young as six.

Pet owners may dismiss many behaviour changes as just a normal part of ageing. So it’s likely there are more dogs with it than we realise.

Veterinarians can also find it difficult to diagnose. There is no accurate, non-invasive test for it. And, just like humans, senior dogs are likely to have a number of other health issues that can complicate diagnosis.

Does my dog have dementia?

Dogs with dementia can often get lost in their own backyard or home. They can get stuck behind furniture or in corners of the room, because they forget they have a reverse gear. Or they walk towards the hinge side of a door when trying to go through.

Dogs’ interactions with people and other pets can change. They may seek less or more affection from their owners than before, or start to get grumpy with the other dog in the home where once they were happy housemates. They may even forget faces they have known all their lives.

They also tend to sleep more during the day and be up more at night. They may pace, whine or bark, seemingly without purpose. Comfort does not often soothe them, and even if the behaviour is interrupted, it usually resumes quite quickly.

I think my dog has dementia, now what?

There are some medications that can help reduce signs of doggy dementia to improve quality of life and make caring for them a little easier. So, if you think your dog is affected, consult your veterinarian.

Our group is planning research into some non-drug treatments. This includes looking at whether exercise and training might help these dogs. But it’s early days yet.

Unfortunately there is no cure. Our best bet is to reduce the risk of getting the disease. This latest study suggests exercise might be key.

What did the latest study find?

US research published today gathered data from more than 15,000 dogs as part of the Dog Aging Project.

Researchers asked pet dog owners to complete two surveys. One asked about the dogs, their health status and physical activity. The second assessed the dogs’ cognitive function.

Some 1.4% of the dogs were thought to have canine cognitive dysfunction.

For dogs over ten years old, every extra year of life increased the risk of developing dementia by more than 50%. Less-active dogs were almost 6.5 times more likely to have dementia than dogs that were very active.

While this might suggest regular exercise could protect dogs against dementia, we can’t be sure from this type of study. Dogs with dementia, or with early signs of dementia, may be less likely to exercise.

However, we do know exercise can reduce the risk of dementia in people. So walking our dogs may help them and us reduce the risk of dementia.

‘I love my girl so much’

Caring for a dog that has dementia can be hard, but rewarding. In fact, our group is studying the impact on carers.

We believe the burden and stress can be similar to what’s been reported when people care for someone with Alzheimer’s.

We also know people love their old dogs. One research participant told us:

“I love my girl so much that I am willing to do anything for her. Nothing is too much trouble.”

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Moderna sues rival vaccine maker Pfizer: Will move affect availibility of COVID-19 vaccine?

Moderna has sued rival drugmaker Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech, alleging patent infringement related to the development of the first COVID-19 vaccines.

Moderna, a US-based biotech firm, has accused Pfizer and BioNTech of copying its mRNA technology, which it created years before the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Moderna believes that Pfizer and BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine Comirnaty infringes patents Moderna filed between 2010 and 2016 covering Moderna’s foundational mRNA technology,” the firm said.

“Pfizer and BioNTech copied this technology, without Moderna’s permission, to make Comirnaty,” Moderna further alleged.

What does this lawsuit mean? Will it impact the availability of the COVID-19 vaccines?

Let’s take a closer look:

What is the Moderna-Pfizer controversy?

Moderna has claimed in its statement that Pfizer-BioNTech copied two key features of its intellectual property.

One alleged infringement is of the mRNA structure that its scientists started working on in 2010 and were the first to demonstrate in human trials in 2015.

The second is the coding of a full-length spike protein that Moderna developed while manufacturing the shot for the coronavirus that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).

“Pfizer and BioNTech took four different vaccine candidates into clinical testing, which included options that would have steered clear of Moderna’s innovative path. Pfizer and BioNTech, however, ultimately decided to proceed with a vaccine that has the same exact mRNA chemical modification to its vaccine,” Reuters quoted Moderna as saying.

Moderna has filed a lawsuit in the United States and Germany seeking unstated financial damages.

What is mRNA technology?

Messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines aid the cells in making a protein or a piece of a protein that will trigger an immune response inside the body. This immune response, wherein antibodies are produced, protects the body and helps fight the virus in the future.

After vaccination, mRNA enters cells shortly and tells them to create a SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which then evokes an immune response, Dr Adam Taylor, a virologist and research fellow at Queensland’s Griffith University, told Reuters.

Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines use the mRNA technology, which the former introduced commercially for the first time in COVID-19 shots, BBC reported.

Meanwhile, other vaccines use the technique of injecting the weakened or dead forms of a virus which is recognised by the immune system to create antibodies.

ALSO READ: WHO approves France’s Valneva vaccine against COVID-19: Here’s everything you need to know about it

Pfizer ‘surprised’ by the lawsuit

Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer expressed surprise over the lawsuit and said it had not completely reviewed Moderna’s complaint.

“The Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine was based on BioNTech’s proprietary mRNA technology,” Pfizer said in a statement.

“We remain confident in our intellectual property supporting the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and will vigorously defend against the allegations of the lawsuit,” the company’s spokesperson said, as per BBC.

Moderna’s change in stance

Earlier in 2020, Moderna had said it would not effectuate its patent so that other drug manufacturers can invent their own vaccines, especially for low- and middle-income countries.

“Moderna refrained from asserting its patents earlier so as not to distract from efforts to bring the pandemic to an end as quickly as possible,” the company had said.

Will the lawsuit affect COVID-19 vaccine availability?

That’s unlikely.

Moderna has said it is not seeking to remove Pfizer- BioNTech vaccine, Comirnaty, from the market but for compensation.

As per The Verge, there should not be a major effect on the production of the COVID-19 vaccine by the partners after Moderna’s litigation.

“Moderna expects Pfizer and BioNTech to compensate Moderna for Comirnaty’s ongoing use of Moderna’s patented technologies,” The Verge cited Shannon Thyme Klinger, Moderna’s chief legal officer, as saying.

Similar lawsuits

A lawsuit was filed against BioNTech by German biotech company CureVac alleging patent infringement linked to the use of specific mRNA molecules. BioNTech denied the charges and said its work was original.

In March, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals filed lawsuits against Pfizer and Moderna for allegedly violating a patent that covers a “breakthrough class of cationic biodegradable lipids used to form lipid nanoparticles” for mRNA-based vaccines, reported Fierce Pharma.

Moderna has also been sued for patent infringement in the US and is currently involved in altercation with the U.S. National Institutes of Health over rights to mRNA technology.

With inputs from agencies

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Explained: The ‘monster monsoon’ ravaging Pakistan

Pakistan on Monday woke up to more worries as the flood fury continues. The death toll has reached 1,061 since June, according to figures released Monday by the country’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

The neighbouring nation is facing one of the worst floods in history, with 110 of the 150 districts affected. Sindh and Balochistan have been badly hit, leaving thousands homeless. The flooding, which has been caused because of unusually heavy monsoon, started in July and has worsened over the last couple of weeks.

Pakistan Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif has declared an emergency and asked for international help to respond to the disaster.

33 million affected; homes, roads destroyed

At least 28 people had died in the last 24 hours. Authorities are still trying to reach cut-off villages in the country’s mountainous north, reports the news agency AFP.

According to officials, this year’s monsoon flooding has affected more than 33 million people – one in seven Pakistanis – destroying or badly damaging close to million homes. Nearly 15 per cent of Pakistan’s population is homeless or living without adequate shelter.

The NDMA said more than two million acres of cultivated crops have been wiped out, 3,457 kilometres of roads destroyed, and 157 bridges washed away.

Millions of acres of rich farmland have been flooded by weeks of non-stop rain, but now the Indus is threatening to burst its banks as a result of torrents of water coursing downstream from tributaries in the north.

“Our crop spanned over 5,000 acres on which the best quality rice was sown and is eaten by you and us,” Khalil Ahmed, 70, told AFP. “All that is finished.”

‘Monster monsoon’

Pakistan’s Climate Change Minister Sherry Rehman called it “the monster monsoon of the decade”. This year’s floods are comparable to 2010 – the worst on record – when more than 2,000 people died and nearly a fifth of the country was under water.

“…it is already clear that the scale of this disaster is many times greater than that of the 2010 floods which, devastating as they were, were riverine floods. This time, the water is everywhere. And it is relentless,” Pakistani journalist Zarrar Khuhro writes in the newspaper Dawn.

“More than half of Pakistan” is inundated and half a million people have been evacuated and shifted to safer places, another Dawn report says.

Rescue operations

Pakistan Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said on Sunday that the armed forces were being deployed in the wake of the floods. He said the troops have been called in under Article 245 of the Constitution which empowers the government to summon the army in aid of the civilian administration to deal with an emergency.

Much of Sindh is now an endless landscape of water, hampering a massive military-led relief operation. “There are no landing strips or approaches available… our pilots find it difficult to land,” one senior officer told AFP.

The army’s helicopters were also struggling to pluck people to safety in the north, where steep hills and valleys make for treacherous flying conditions.

Many rivers in the area have burst their banks, demolishing scores of buildings including a 150-room hotel that crumbled into a raging torrent. The government has appealed for international help On Sunday, the first aid flights began arriving from Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

In the flood-affected regions of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a significant number of people were airlifted to safety on Sunday.

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced a grant of Rs 10 billion for Balochistan to cope with the destruction caused by floods. After a visit to the flood-hit areas of the Nasirabad division, the premier said that he had never witnessed such destruction in his life. “The devastation caused by floods and persistent rains is horrifying,” Sharif said.

The reasons for the floods

The annual monsoon is essential for irrigating crops and replenishing lakes and dams across the Indian subcontinent, but with each year comes a wave of destruction. Two months of unprecedented monsoon rains have triggered the devastating floods this time.

According to officials in Pakistan, human-caused climate change has brought stronger monsoons and more damage. Corruption, poor planning and the flouting of local regulations also mean that thousands of buildings have been erected in areas prone to seasonal flooding, reports Deutsche Welle.

Minister Sherry Rehman said last week that Pakistan was witnessing its eighth cycle of monsoon, whereas it normally witnesses three to four cycles of monsoon rains. Citing data, she warned of another cycle re-emerging in September.

The month of August has been exceptionally wet in Pakistan, which witnesses monsoons from July to September. The active rainfall is only for a month and a half.

According to Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) data shared by Rehman, August had produced two and a half times its normal rainfall — 176.8 mm against the expected 50.4 mm. In Sindh, it has rained almost eight times the normal amount during this period; Balochistan has received over five times more, reports The Indian Express.

“Pakistan has never seen an unbroken cycle of monsoon like this. Eight weeks of non-stop torrents have left huge swathes of the country under water. This is no normal season. This is a deluge from all sides, impacting 33 million plus people which is the size of a small country,” Rehman said on Twitter.

The PMD director general said that the flood situation in the country could have been even worse had it not been for the timely forecast. The predictions for very heavy rainfall were made in April and May, which gave government agencies time to prepare.

The fallout of the floods

Pakistan is among the top ten countries worst hit by climate change. Before the floods, it experienced an unprecedented heatwave that caused wildfires in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and an extremely dry spring season with 62 per cent less rainfall.

The large-scale devastation caused by the floods will lead to a huge loss to farmers, leading to a need to import more food in a country where 43 per cent of the population faces food insecurity.

In Sindh alone, almost all of the cotton and sugarcane crop has been destroyed, affecting not only farmers but also the textile industry. The loss in agriculture will hit the entire agribusiness chain, from middlemen to pesticide and fertiliser manufacturers, sales agents and other staff, reports Dawn. Hundreds of thousands of heads of livestock have also been lost in the floods.

“In economic terms, the cumulative losses mean a huge blow to Pakistan’s GDP and the very real possibility of massive food shortages,” the newspaper reports.

The repercussions of flash floods may include higher imports, compromise on exports and rising inflation, which will undermine efforts of the government to tackle the macro headwinds, The Express Tribune newspaper reported.

The unusual heavy monsoon rains and devastating flash floods have been estimated to cost cash-strapped Pakistan’s economy over USD 4 billion in the current fiscal, according to a research report.

“Based on our preliminary estimates, the current account deficit may increase by USD 4.4 billion (1 per cent of GDP) – assuming no counter-measures are taken, while around 30 per cent of the CPI (Consumer Price Index) basket is exposed to the threat of higher prices,” the daily reported, citing a report by JS Global Research.

With inputs from agencies

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Pakistan horror: 8-yr-old Hindu girl gang-raped, her eyes gouged out

Pakistan: In yet another incident of crime against minorities in Pakistan that have become endemic to the Islamic state, an eight-year-old Hindu girl was brutally gang-raped in Umarkot region of Sindh province, her eyes gouged out after that.

The minor was brutalised on Sunday. The suspects allegedly scratched her entire face.

The incident came into light after a Hindu rights activist in Pakistan tweeted a video clip in which the victim can be seen on a stretcher while her parents were taking her inside a hospital compound.

A woman accompanying the victim’s family to the hospital can also be seen in the video. The woman told news reporters that the girl’s condition is horrible because the bleeding has not stopped.

“She has been continuously bleeding from her genitals, the doctors in the local emergency hospital have referred her into BIDS hospital where a gynaecologist will examine her condition because she is continuously bleeding,” she said, adding that the girl is in desperate need of antibiotics.

“The rapists have literally scratched her entire face and have also gouged her eyes, just looking at her once is enough to give anybody chills down their spine,” she said while adding that the poor in Pakistan have no place. “Anybody can see the condition of this girl, this is not the only case, thousands of incidents like this happen every day but no action is taken whatsoever, where should these people go, government must answer,” she said.

In another video clip posted by the Hindu rights activist, victim’s mother told a news media that the victim had gone to a local shop, but did not return. In the video the woman can be seen talking in native language.

She was recovered by Umarkot police hours after her disappearance. The cops took her to civil hospital in the region and have lodged a probe in the matter. The accused are currently on the run, police making efforts to arrest them, said reports.

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Sunday, August 28, 2022

How dangerous is the situation at Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant?

Russian forces occupy Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in the Ukrainian city of Enerhodar. Russian and Ukrainian forces are fighting nearby, and shelling has damaged power and communication lines to the plant, prompting fears for the plant’s safety and evoking painful memories in a country still scarred by the world’s worst nuclear accident, at Chernobyl in 1986.

In addition, Russian authorities have developed plans to disconnect the plant from Ukraine’s power grid — in the event of damage to the plant, according to the Russians, as a prelude to switching the plant to the grid in Russian-occupied territory, according to the Ukrainians. Disconnecting the plant from the grid is a risky operation.

The Conversation asked Najmedin Meshkati, a professor and nuclear safety expert at the University of Southern California, to explain the risks of warfare taking place in and around nuclear power plants.

How safe was the Zaporizhzhia power plant before the Russian attack?

The facility at Zaporizhzhia is the largest nuclear plant in Europe and one of the largest in the world. It has six pressurised water reactors, which use water to both sustain the fission reaction and cool the reactor. These differ from the RBMK reactors at Chernobyl, which used graphite instead of water to sustain the fission reaction. RBMK reactors are not seen as very safe, and there are only eight remaining in use in the world, all in Russia.

The reactors at Zaporizhzhia are of moderately good design, and the plant has a decent safety record, with a good operating background.

Ukrainian authorities tried to keep the war away from the site by asking Russia to observe a 30-kilometer (nearly 19-mile) safety buffer. But Russian troops surrounded the facility and seized it in March.

What are the risks to a nuclear plant in a conflict zone?

Nuclear power plants are built for peacetime operations, not wars.

The worst thing that could happen is if a site is deliberately or accidentally shelled. If a shell hit the plant’s spent fuel pool — which contains the still-radioactive spent fuel — or if fire spread to the spent fuel pool, it could release radiation. This spent fuel pool isn’t in the containment building, and as such is more vulnerable.

Containment buildings, which house nuclear reactors, are also not protected against deliberate shelling. They are built to withstand a minor internal explosion of, say, a pressurised water pipe. But they are not designed to withstand a huge explosion.

As to the reactors in the containment building, it depends on the weapons being used. The worst-case scenario is that a bunker-buster missile breaches the containment dome – consisting of a thick shell of reinforced concrete on top of the reactor – and explodes. That would badly damage the nuclear reactor and release radiation into the atmosphere, which would make it difficult to send in first responders to contain any resulting fire. It could be another Chernobyl.

What are the concerns going forward?

The safety problems I see are twofold:

1) Human error

The workers at the facility are working under incredible stress, reportedly at gunpoint. Stress increases the chance of error and poor performance.

There is a human element in running a nuclear power plant — operators are the first and last layers of defence for the facility and the public. They are the first people to detect any anomaly and to stop any incident. Or if there’s an accident, they will be the first to heroically try to contain it.

2) Power failure

The second problem is that the nuclear plant needs constant electricity, and that is harder to maintain in wartime.

Even if you shut down the reactors, the plant will need off-site power to run the huge cooling system to remove the residual heat in the reactor and bring it to what is called a cold shutdown. Water circulation is always needed to make sure the spent fuel doesn’t overheat.

Spent fuel pools also need constant water circulation to keep them cool, and they need cooling for several years before they can be put in dry casks. One of the problems in the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan was the emergency generators intended to replace lost off-site power got inundated with water and failed. In situations like that, you get “station blackout” – and that is one of the worst things that could happen. It means no electricity to run the cooling system.

In that circumstance, the spent fuel overheats and its zirconium cladding can create hydrogen bubbles. If you can’t vent these bubbles, they will explode, spreading radiation.

If there is a loss of outside power, operators will have to rely on emergency generators. But emergency generators are huge machines — finicky, unreliable gas guzzlers. And you still need cooling waters for the generators themselves.

My biggest worry is that Ukraine suffers from a sustained power grid failure. The likelihood of this increases during a conflict because power line pylons may come down under shelling, or gas power plants might get damaged and cease to operate. And though Ukrainian intelligence services claim that the Russians intend to stockpile diesel fuel to keep these emergency generators going, it is unlikely that Russian troops will have excess fuel given their need to fuel their own vehicles.

How else does a war affect the safety of nuclear plants?

One of the overarching concerns about the effects of war on nuclear plants is that war degrades safety culture, which is crucial in running a plant. I believe that safety culture is analogous to the human body’s immune system, which protects against pathogens and diseases. Safety culture is pervasive and has a widespread impact. “It can affect all elements in a system for good or ill,” according to psychologist James Reason.

The tragic situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant violates every universally accepted tenet of healthy nuclear safety culture, especially the maintenance of an environment where personnel can raise safety concerns.

War adversely affects safety culture in a number of ways. Operators are stressed and fatigued and may be scared to death to speak out if something is going wrong. Then there is the maintenance of a plant, which may be compromised by lack of staff or unavailability of spare parts.

Governance, regulation and oversight — all crucial for the safe running of a nuclear industry — are also disrupted, as is local infrastructure, such as the capability of local firefighters. In war, everything is harder.

So, what can be done to better protect Ukraine’s nuclear power plants?

The only solution is declaring a demilitarised zone around nuclear plants. However, Russia has so far rejected United Nations Secretary General António Guterres’ plea for declaring a demilitarised zone around the plant.

I believe an optimal though not ideal solution is to bring the two operating reactors to a cold shutdown before any further loss of off-site power and risk of station blackout, store more fuel for emergency diesel generators at different locations at the plant site, and keep only a skeleton caretaker staff to look after the spent fuel pools.

Admittedly, this is only a stopgap measure. In parallel with the International Atomic Energy Agency’s effort under the leadership of its Director, General Rafael Mariano Grossi, I believe that the UN Security Council should immediately empower a special commission to mediate between the warring parties. It could be modelled after the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission in 2000, and appoint a prominent, senior international statesman as its head.

I believe the person should be of the calibre and in the mold of the legendary former director general of the IAEA, Hans Blix of Sweden. Blix led the agency at the time of the Chernobyl accident in 1986 and commands respect in today’s Russia and Ukraine.

War, in my opinion, is the worst enemy of nuclear safety. This is an unprecedented and volatile situation. Only through active, pragmatic engineering and nuclear diplomacy can an amenable and lasting solution to this vexing problem be found.

This is an updated version of an article originally published on March 4, 2022.The Conversation

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Libya: Over 30 killed and 150 wounded as miltias backing rival governments clash in Triopli

Cairo: Deadly clashes broke out Saturday in Libya’s capital between militias backed by its two rival administrations, portending a return to violence amid a long political stalemate.

At least 32 people were killed and 159 more wounded, the health ministry said. It added that 64 families were evacuated from areas around the fighting.

The escalation threatens to shatter the relative calm Libya has enjoyed for most of the past two years.

The oil-rich nation plunged into chaos following a NATO-backed uprising that toppled and killed longtime autocrat Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

Among the fatalities was Mustafa Baraka, a comedian known for his social media videos mocking militias and corruption. Baraka died after he was shot in his chest, said Malek Merset, an emergency services spokesman.

Merset said, “emergency services were still trying to evacuate wounded and civilians trapped in the fighting that erupted overnight and continued into Saturday evening.”

The health ministry said in a statement, “hospitals and medical centres in the capital were shelled, and ambulance teams were barred from evacuating civilians, in acts that amount to war crimes.”

The municipal council of Tripoli blamed the ruling political class for the deteriorating situation in the capital, and urged the international community to “protect civilians in Libya.”

The violence caused widespread panic among Tripoli residents. Footage circulated online showed houses, government facilities, and vehicles apparently damaged from the fighting. Other footage showed militia forces deploying and heavy fire being exchanged across the night sky.

The UN mission in Libya said the fighting involved “indiscriminate medium and heavy shelling in civilian-populated neighbourhoods” of Tripoli.

The mission called for an immediate cease-fire, and for all parties in Libya to “refrain from using any form of hate speech and incitement to violence.”

The clashes pitted the Tripoli Revolutionaries’ Brigade militia, led by Haitham Tajouri, against another militia allied with Abdel-Ghani al-Kikli, an infamous warlord known as “Gheniwa,” according to local media. Later on Saturday, more militias joined the fighting which spread to different areas in the capital.

Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah’s government, which is based in Tripoli, claimed the clashes broke out when one militia fired at another.

The fighting, however, is highly likely part of an ongoing power struggle between Dbeibah and his rival Prime Minister Fathy Bashagha who is operating from the coastal city of Sirte.

Both Dbeibah and Bashagha are backed by militias, and the latter was mobilizing in recent weeks to try to enter Tripoli to dislodge his rival.

An attempt in May by Bashagha to install his government in Tripoli triggered clashes that ended with his withdrawal from the capital.

US Ambassador to Libya Richard Norland urged for de-escalation “before things get worse” and for Libyan parties to agree on an early date for elections.

With input from agencies

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Pelosi’s Taiwan visit is a big opportunity for India: Here’s what a view from Taipei suggests

New Delhi: The US House of Representatives Speaker, Nancy Pelosi, visited Taiwan earlier this month. Expectedly, China responded aggressively to the visit. To justify its position, it stated that the United States and Taiwan are changing the status quo through regular political exchanges and that the United States is interfering in China’s internal matters. Therefore, as Pelosi was visiting Taiwan, China announced that it will conduct large-scale live-fire drills to blockade Taiwan.

Military activities by China and the possibility of an accident or a miscalculation have been alarming for the global community. In a meeting with United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan in Luxembourg in June, senior Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi reiterated that “the Taiwan issue concerns the political foundation of China-US relations which, unless handled properly, will have a subversive impact”. However, it is China that is not paying attention to Taiwanese people’s sensitivities and their will.

Pelosi’s visit was well received in Taiwan and has accrued benefits for the country amid China’s attempts to isolate Taiwan and the growing security threat.

It is important to note that Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan was also useful for both the United States and China: Pelosi’s Taiwan visit demonstrates the successful implementation of the Taiwan Travel Act, and Pelosi became the highest US official to visit Taiwan in decades. It will normalise Taiwan’s semi-political dialogue and interactions with the United States. It will further motivate the United States’ allies to send regular delegations to Taiwan. As far as China is concerned, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) used Pelosi’s visit to change the status quo and normalise its military actions in the Taiwan Strait.

Taiwan and India Facing Similar Threats

Since 2020, China has been using aggression to deal with Taiwan and India. The two countries are facing similar challenges in the Taiwan Strait and Line of Actual Control (LAC). Taiwan is a victim of China’s encroachment into Taiwan’s Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) and now, China is establishing a new normal by crossing into the median line. The intensity of military intimidation, economic coercion, and psychological warfare is only increasing.

In 2020, China initiated incursions at the Galwan Valley killing 20 Indian soldiers. It was around the same time when China began to increase its air encroachments into Taiwan’s (ADIZ). China is not just ratcheting up tensions at the LAC, India is concerned about China’s activities in its immediate neighbourhood. Two such examples are of Nepal and Sri Lanka. In order to give a boost to its much-controversial Belt and Road Initiative, China announced that it will launch a study for a cross-border railway with Nepal. More alarming for India was the docking of Yuan Wang-5, a Chinese spy ship, at the Hambantota Port that is leased to China for 99 years. China took advantage of Sri Lanka’s financial crisis to send monitoring ships to Hambantota Port so that Chinese warships can be stationed in the future- again a new normal in India’s neighbourhood. China has been increasing its footprint in India’s neighbourhood demonstrating China’s ambition to contain India in the region.

An Opportunity for India

India’s traditional view of Taiwan is through the geopolitical lens and considers it a sensitive issue. Over the decades, Taiwan’s stature has increased. Taiwan is at the forefront of the democratic chip supply chain resilience. India is looking to strengthen chip cooperation with Taiwan. It is India’s opportunity to court Taiwanese semiconductor companies and shift bases from China to India.

United States-Taiwan trade pact negotiations have already begun. Pelosi’s visit and now the trade pact demonstrates that the United States considers Taiwan an important part of its Indo-Pacific strategy. This is also an economic opportunity for India. Taiwanese companies are trying to shift bases from China, and India is a potential market for Taiwan. Given India-China dialogue is not moving in a positive direction, India should be more forthcoming toward Taiwan and find more avenues to engage Taiwan. One way could be to have more discussion within the Quad where all other three countries are concerned about the instability in the Taiwan Strait.

It is time for both India and Taiwan to scale up cooperation, and be more ambitious with their engagement. The situation in the Taiwan Strait cannot be allowed to be in China’s favour. Otherwise, the CCP will regard this situation as an achievement and a failure of Indo-Pacific countries. President Tsai Ing-wen stated, “Taiwan is willing and able to strengthen cooperation with democratic partners in building sustainable supply chains for democracy chips.”

It’s time for liberal democracies to step up cooperation for mutual benefit and address the China threat.

Dr Hsiao-Chen LIN is an assistant professor at National Defense University, Taiwan. She received her PhD degree from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Views expressed are personal.

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