At Least Three Dead, 15 Feared Trapped In Landslide In Northern India

NEW DELHI – At least three people were killed and over 15 others feared trapped inside a mine, after a landslide hit India’s northern state of Haryana yesterday.

 

The incident occurred near Haryana’s Tosham town.

 

A local police officer said that, at least three dead bodies had been recovered, and rescue work was going on, to extricate those trapped, adding that, locals said, over 15 people were trapped inside the mine.

 

Most of the victims were workers at the mine.

 

Haryana’s Agriculture Minister, J.P. Dalal, visited the site of the incident, and urged the district administration and police officials, to expedite the rescue and relief work.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Humanitarian Aid Distributed To Orphans In Afghanistan’s Takhar Province

TALUQAN, Afghanistan – Authorities in Afghanistan’s northern Takhar province, distributed humanitarian aid to 460 orphaned children yesterday, a provincial official said.

 

“After conducting survey, we have distributed humanitarian assistance to 460 orphans, and each one received a sack of flour, seven-kg cooking oil, a sack of rice and a few more kitchen items,” Qari Ansarullah Ansari, head of the province’s information and cultural department, said.

 

The authorities will continue to provide assistance to orphans and needy families across the province, the official added.

 

In another development yesterday, authorities in the northern Jawzjan province, distributed humanitarian aid to 100 needy families, in the provincial capital, Shiberghan.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Vietnam Reports 14,835 New COVID-19 Cases

HANOI– Vietnam reported 14,835 new COVID-19 cases yesterday, including 14,822 locally transmitted and 13 imported, according to its Ministry of Health.

 

The Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, remained the locality with the highest number of infections with 1,748 more cases, followed by southern Vinh Long province with 1,223 cases and southern Tay Ninh province with 947 cases.

 

The infections brought the country’s total tally of confirmed cases to 1,746,092, with 32,610 deaths, said the ministry. Nationwide, as many as 1,358,276 COVID-19 patients have so far recovered, up 2,990 from Friday.

 

Some 152.2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, including 68.8 million second shots and 5.7 million third shots, have been administered, according to the ministry.

 

Vietnam has gone through four COVID-19 waves of increasing scale, complication and infectivity. As of yesterday, the country registered over 1.7 million locally transmitted cases, since the start of the current wave in late Apr, the ministry said.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

China To Donate Two Million Doses Sinovac Vaccines To Botswana

GABORONE– Chinese Ambassador to Botswana, Wang Xuefeng, announced yesterday that, China will donate two million doses of Sinovac vaccine to Botswana in 2022.

 

“We hope that this new batch of donations will further help the Botswana government with its national vaccination deployment plan, including the booster dosing schedule,” Wang said, in a video message, posted on the Chinese Embassy’s Facebook page.

 

The donation is part of China’s commitment to provide an additional one billion doses of vaccines to Africa, according to Wang.

 

The announcement comes, as the southern African country moves into Phase Four of its national vaccine deployment plan, which will cover those aged 12 to 17, as well as, after the Botswana Medicines Regulatory Authority (BOMRA) approved the booster dose plan.

 

Botswana has so far recorded 219,509 confirmed COVID-19 cases, with 2,444 related deaths.

 

At least 1,167,105 of Botswana’s 1.6 million adults have received their first dose of the vaccine, with 1,032,584 fully vaccinated

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Nicaragua hands over Taiwanese Embassy to Chinese authorities

MANAGUA— Nicaragua’s Government has seized former Taiwan’s Embassy in Managua and handed it over to China, which maintains the Asian island is nothing but a rogue province.

 

The Nicaraguan government has seized the former embassy and diplomatic offices of Taiwan, saying they belong to China. Before being expelled from the country, departing Taiwanese diplomats had tried to donate the property to the Roman Catholic church.

 

But President Daniel Ortega’s government claimed any such donation would be invalid and that the building in an upscale Managua neighborhood belonged to China. The Ortega administration broke off diplomatic relations with Taiwan this month, saying it would recognize only the mainland government.

 

Taiwan’s Foreign Relations Ministry condemned the “gravely illegal actions of the Ortega regime,” saying the Nicaraguan government had violated standard procedures by giving Taiwanese diplomats just two weeks to leave the country. Taiwan “also condemns the arbitrary obstruction by the Nicaraguan government of the symbolic sale of its property to the Nicaraguan Catholic church.”

 

“There is only one China,” the Nicaraguan government had said in a statement announcing the change. “The People’s Republic of China is the only legitimate government that represents all China, and Taiwan is an inalienable part of the Chinese territory.”

 

The move increased Taiwan’s isolation despite new ties with Lithuania and Slovakia, which still do not formally recognize Taiwan as a country, which has only 14 foreign embassies left in Taipei.

 

China has been poaching Taiwan’s diplomatic allies over the past few years, reducing the number of countries that recognize the democratic island as a sovereign nation. China is against Taiwan representing itself in global forums or diplomacy. The Solomon Islands chose to recognize China in 2019, cutting diplomatic ties with Taiwan.

 

Taiwan depicts itself as a defender of democracy, while Ortega was reelected in November in what the White House called a “pantomime election.”

 

“The arbitrary imprisonment of nearly 40 opposition figures since May, including seven potential presidential candidates, and the blocking of political parties from participation rigged the outcome well before election day,” U.S. President Joseph Biden had said in a statement in November.

 

Nicaragua established diplomatic relations with Taiwan in the 1990s under then-President Violeta Chamorro, who had defeated Ortega at the polls. Ortega was elected back to power in 2007 and had maintained ties with Taipei until now.

 

In another controversial move, Ortega ignored the popular request for “Christmas without political prisoners” and chose to free over 1,000 common criminals, instead of any of the 171 incarcerated journalists and opposition leaders and militants, who were also denied family visits.

 

Since last November, opposition and human rights organizations had been campaigning for “Christmas without political prisoners” in Nicaragua, which had achieved significant national and international support.

 

Since 2016, the Ortega regime began a release program that has reached some 26,386 inmates come December, “received the generosity of the Nicaraguan people,” according to Vice President Rosario Murillo, Ortega’s wife.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Malaysia Reports 3,386 New COVID-19 Infections, 26 More Deaths

KUALA LUMPUR– Malaysia reported another 3,386 COVID-19 infections as of midnight, bringing the national total to 2,761,472, according to the health ministry.

 

Of the new cases, 346 are imported, with 3,040 being local transmissions, data released on the ministry’s website showed.

 

Another 26 deaths have been reported, bringing the death toll to 31,513.

 

Another 3,547 patients have been released after recovery, bringing the total number of cured and discharged to 2,688,925.

 

Among the 41,034 active cases, 273 are being held in intensive care and 159 of those are in need of assisted breathing.

 

The country reported 40,729 vaccine doses administered yesterday alone, and 79.6 percent of the population have received at least one dose. About 78.4 percent are fully vaccinated and 19.4 percent have received boosters.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK