India registers more than 60,000 new coronavirus cases

India registered more than 60,000 new coronavirus cases and 1,647 deaths on Saturday, according to the Health Ministry.

It said with 60,753 new infections, the total stands at 29.8 million, while the death toll is 385,137.

“India’s Active Caseload further declines to 760,019. Active Cases lowest after 74 days,” the ministry said in a statement and added that 97,743 patients also recovered in the past 24 hours.

After India saw an exponential increase in cases during the second wave last month, cases and deaths are now showing a decline in most parts of the country.

Legendary Indian sprinter Milkha Singh, also known as the “Flying Sikh,” died late Friday from complications of the virus, said officials.

Singh, 91, became the country’s first Commonwealth Games champion in 1958 and he also won four Asian Games gold medals.

“Due to post- Covid complications, he was shifted out of Covid Hospital to medical ICU. Milkha Singh ji could not be retrieved from his critical condition and after a brave fight, he left for his heavenly abode,” according to a statement by the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research in northern Chandigarh.

“We have lost a colossal sportsperson,” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote on Twitter. “His inspiring personality endeared himself to millions. Anguished by his passing away.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

Brazil hits 500,000 COVID-19 deaths amid nationwide protests

Brazil reached a grim milestone of half a million deaths from COVID-19 deaths on Saturday, the second-highest in the world after the US.

While the Senate is investigating the government’s management of the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of people are participating in mass demonstrations against right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, calling for him to be impeached, the acceleration of vaccination drive, and emergency economic aid.

They bring together left-wing political parties and social movements, raising criticism for putting the population at risk by enabling the increase in the spread of COVID-19.

The country of over 213 million people has administered at least 85.39 million vaccine doses, according to Our World in Data, a tracking website. The number of COVID-19 cases is nearly 18 million.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Pakistani premier greets Iran’s Raeisi over ‘landmark’ election win

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday congratulated Ebrahim Raeisi, Iran’s president-elect, over his “landmark” victory.

“Congratulations to Excellency brother Ibrahim Raisi @raisi_com on his landmark victory in the Islamic Republic of Iran’s 13th Presidential elections,” Khan tweeted. “Look forward to working with him for further strengthening of our fraternal ties and for regional peace, progress and prosperity.”

The ultra-conservative judiciary chief garnered 17.92 million votes in Friday’s election, defeating his three rivals in a landslide victory.

Voter turnout, according to the Interior Ministry, was 48.8%, the lowest in the country’s history.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Fitch affirms ratings of UK, Canada

Global rating agency Fitch Ratings has announced Friday it affirmed ratings of the UK and Canada.

The UK’s rating was confirmed at ‘AA-‘ and its outlook was revised to stable from negative.

“Recent macroeconomic, labor market and fiscal outturns since the start of 2021 have shown the UK economy and public finances to be more resilient to the impact of the pandemic shock than Fitch had expected,” it said in a statement.

“Better adaptation of businesses to working with the economic restrictions and greater resilience of private consumption and investment have resulted in an upward revision of our real GDP growth estimate,” it added.

Fitch now forecasts the UK economy to expand by 6.6% this year, up from its previous estimate of 5% made in January. It anticipates growth to come at 5% in 2022.

The agency also revised the Bank of England’s outlook to stable, from negative, and affirmed its rating at ‘AA-‘.

As for Canada, the North American country’s rating was confirmed at ‘AA+’ with a stable outlook, saying: “The high-income economy is advanced and well-diversified.”

“The ratings reflect Canada’s structural strengths, including strong governance, political stability, and macro policy framework, which have delivered steady growth and low inflation and a timely pandemic response,” it said in a separate statement.

Fitch forecasts Canada’s economy to grow by 6.6% in 2021 and 3.5% in 2022.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Why do young Afghan refugees in Pakistan lack education, skills?

Attired in a local traditional loose shirt and baggy trousers, around a dozen students are sitting on a gunny woven jute mat in a small room, solving past papers as part of their preparations for the forthcoming matriculation examinations.

The room is a portion of a school for Afghan refugee children in Sohrab Goth, a Pashtun-dominated locality in the eastern district of the country’s commercial capital of Karachi.

The school, housed in a four-story building inside a residential apartment and staffed by 12 people, is one of the five primary and secondary schools for the refugee children residing in a nearby camp.

Some 20 Islamic seminaries also operate in the sprawling camp – commonly known as Afghan Basti.

Nestled on the northern outskirts of Karachi, this run down locality with limited access to healthcare and basic sanitation, is home to nearly 250,000 Afghan refugees who were forced to flee their country due to a lingering conflict.

According to Syed Mustafa, who founded this school in 2005, around 60% of the children residing in the camp do not attend school. He migrated from the central Afghan province of Parwan following the US invasion in 2001.

“This is because of a lack of enough educational facilities, poverty, as well as indifference on the part of parents,” he told Anadolu Agency.

His school, which imparts education from Grade 1-12, charges a monthly fee ranging between 400 and 600 Pakistani rupees ($2.7-$4).

Over 350 students are enrolled in the school, 200 of being girls, mostly in junior classes. The girl students are studying free of charge, thanks to a couple of local NGOs and philanthropists.

– Easy victims

There are around 2.8 million documented and undocumented Afghan refugees in Pakistan, making it the world’s second-largest refugee population after Syrians in Turkey.

Only around half of the refugees are registered, with the rest living without documents, mostly in the northeastern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and southwestern Balochistan provinces, which border war-torn Afghanistan.

The southern Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital, also hosts 500,000 Afghan refugees.

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), more than 4.4 million refugees have been repatriated to Afghanistan since 2002, but many have returned to Pakistan due to ongoing violence, unemployment, and lack of education and medical facilities.

“Five schools for a population of over 250,000 are not even worth mentioning. These children are our future, but they are either forced to scavenge, work as child laborers, or just wander around to kill their time,” said Mustafa, warning that out-of-school children can be used for crime and militancy.

He was referring to intelligence reports, which suggest that many Afghan youths have joined local criminal groups, including drug peddlers. Many of them have reportedly joined the Afghan Taliban to fight against foreign troops and the Kabul government over the last decade.

“These uneducated and unguided children are like a ticking bomb. They can be troublesome for both Pakistan and Afghanistan if immediate steps are not taken to impart them education and other skills.”

– Government schools for refugee children

But Saleem Khan, the chief commissioner for Afghan refugees, said the refugee children already have access to government schools across Pakistan, in addition to many skill development and scholarship programs for the youth.

“We are identifying the areas of higher demand in Afghanistan in order to train the (Afghan) youth. It will not only benefit them here, but they can also play a role in the development of their own country,” Khan told Anadolu Agency.

He cited distance, poverty, and to a certain extent conservative beliefs about female education as key reasons for a large number of Afghan children not attending schools.

– Atmosphere not conducive to repatriation

According to the UNHCR, around 65% of the 1.4 million documented Afghan refugees in Pakistan are below the age of 25.

The UN agency, which is running several educational and skill development programs for refugee children and youth across Pakistan, believes that “they deserve to be educated and skilled for the future of Afghanistan.”

Besides its dedicated refugee programs, the UNHCR has been supporting the Refugee Affected and Hosting Areas (RAHA) initiative, which aims to mitigate the impact of the protracted refugee presence and promote social cohesion among Afghan refugees and their Pakistani host communities.

“Youngsters are the agents of change if an empowered and skilled young generation – both men and women – return to Afghanistan, they can better work for the restructuring of their country,” Qaisar Khan Afridi, a UNHCR spokesman, told Anadolu Agency.

He, however, acknowledged that the current security and political atmosphere in the war-torn country is not conducive to repatriation.

“The preferred solution to the refugee issue is voluntary repatriation. But since the ground realities do not support the goal of sustainable repatriation, chances are dim,” he said. “The return and reintegration need to be sustainable, otherwise refugees may either return or go to the western countries by using dangerous routes or indulge in negative activities.”

Afridi urged the international community to ensure security and development assistance, mainly in the areas of health, education, and employment to war-ravaged Afghanistan for the refugees’ sustainable repatriation.

Source: Anadolu Agency

EU, AstraZeneca disagree on court ruling regarding failed coronavirus vaccine deliveries

The European Commission and AstraZeneca claimed victory regarding a lawsuit on failed coronavirus vaccine deliveries after a Brussels court issued its ruling on Friday.

The Court of First Instance of Brussels delivered its first decision on the case that the European Commission filed against the British-Swedish pharmaceutical company for breaching an advanced purchase agreement that it signed with the bloc.

In a statement, the European Commission stressed that the decision confirmed their reason to start the legal procedure since the Court ordered interim measures for delivering urgently needed 50 million doses.

The company has to respect a binding schedule of deliveries, starting July 26 and deliver the last installment Sept. 27.

The EU executive body also appreciated the fact that the Court pointed out that AstraZeneca had committed a “serious breach” of its contracted obligations.

AstraZeneca also welcomed the ruling.

The company interpreted the decision as if they were obliged to deliver to the bloc 80.2 million doses, out of which they had already completed 70 million.

They also claimed that the Court dismissed all other demands of the European Commission, and “the Court found that the European Commission has no exclusivity or right of priority over all other contracting parties.”

The legal procedure will continue in September.

The bloc and the company have been in dispute about deliveries since January.

The company was heavily criticized by EU officials after it announced delays in shipments due to “reduced yields at a manufacturing site” while it continued to supply British health authorities that authorized the vaccine a month earlier than the EU.

AstraZeneca argued that it signed a contract with the UK earlier than the EU and it promised to deliver vaccines to the bloc with its “best reasonable efforts.”

The company originally signed up to deliver 300 million doses until July.

But it only shipped 30 million out of the contracted 120 million in the first quarter of 2021 and announced later it would deliver 70 million out of 180 million.

The EU, which has a population of 450 million, last year signed advanced purchase agreements with six vaccine producers — Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca, CureVac, Johnson&Johnson, and Sanofi/GlaxoSmithKline — to buy about 2.6 billion doses.

The bloc contributed financially to research to develop the jabs to receive first the treatments.

Following the spat in January, the EU also introduced an export control mechanism on vaccines produced in EU countries from February.

Source: Anadolu Agency

UPDATE – Judiciary chief Raeisi set to become Iran’s new president

Iran’s judiciary chief and the top conservative candidate, Ebrahim Raeisi, looks all but certain to romp home victorious in the country’s presidential election.

As per preliminary vote count of the 28.6 million votes cast, Raeisi was leading with 17.8 million, followed by Mohsen Rezaei with 3.3 million, Abdolnasser Hemmati with 2.4 million and Ghazizadeh Hashemi with one million votes, according to the Interior Ministry on Saturday.

Vote count was still underway with the final announcement still pending, but reports suggest Raeisi could be winning by a big margin.

All three rival candidates in the polls have issued separate statements congratulating Raeisi on his electoral victory, calling him “people’s choice” and the “president-elect”.

In a statement, his main reformist challenger and former top banker AbdolNaser Hemmati urged Raeisi to work for “hope, peace and welfare” of the people.

His two fellow conservatives, former IRGC chief Mohsen Rezaei and former deputy parliament speaker Ghazizadeh Hashemi, also congratulated him on being the “decisive choice” of the people.

Rezaei, in a statement, called for a “strong and popular government” that works to “solve problems of people”.

President Hassan Rouhani also congratulated Raeisi, without naming him, on winning the presidential election.

“Since it has not been officially announced yet, I will delay official congratulations,” Rouhani said during a government meeting. “But it’s clear who got enough votes and he will take over the presidency in 45 days”.

Parliament speaker Baqer Ghalibaf congratulated Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei over what he termed “high participation of people” in the Friday’s election.

There are still no official statistics on the voter turnout and the margin of victory for the winner. The Interior Ministry is likely to make the official announcement before Saturday afternoon.

Conservative estimates suggest Raeisi garnering above 50 percent votes, followed by Rezaei, Hemmati and Hashemi.

The vote is not likely to go to a second round, according to observers.

On Friday, following complaints of a delayed start at some polling stations, voting lines remained open till late at night.

While the result will be announced on Saturday, the incumbent government will continue in office until early August.:

Source: Anadolu Agency