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South Korea: Kim Jong Un did not have surgery amid lingering rumours

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un did not undergo surgery or any other medical procedure, a South Korean official said Sunday, amid speculation about his health that continues to linger even after he reappeared publicly in recent days.

North Korea had said Saturday that Kim attended the completion of a fertilizer factory near Pyongyang on Friday, in his first public appearance in about 20 days.

While Kim’s reemergence, captured on video footage released by North Korean state media, quelled intense rumours that he might be gravely ill or even have died, some media outlets and observers still raised questions about Kim’s health, citing moments when his walking looked a bit stiff at the factory.

A senior South Korean presidential official told reporters Sunday that the government has determined that Kim did not have surgery or any other procedure, according to the presidential Blue House.

South Korea has a spotty record in confirming developments in North Korea, one of the world’s most secretive countries. But when rumours about Kim’s health surfaced in recent weeks, the South Korean government steadfastly dismissed them as baseless and maintained there were no unusual activities in the North.

It wasn’t the first time Kim had disappeared from public view for an extended period. In 2014, when he reappeared after a six-week absence, he walked with a cane and used an electric cart. The North Korea-provided footage on Saturday showed Kim riding an electric cart similar to the one he used in 2014, when he was reported to have an ankle injury.

Kim, 36, is the third generation of his family to govern North Korea with an iron fist that tolerates no dissent. He hasn’t publicly anointed his successor, and rumours about his health triggered worries about the North’s political stability and its nuclear program.

In 2018, Kim entered talks with President Donald Trump on the fate of his nuclear arsenal, but their diplomacy has been deadlocked in recent months. Trump tweeted Saturday that “I, for one, am glad to see he is back, and well!”

North Korea hasn’t explained Kim’s absence, including why he missed the April 15 commemoration of the birthday anniversary of his late grandfather and North Korea’s founder, Kim Il Sung. It’s the North’s most important state anniversary, and Kim hadn’t skipped the event since taking power in late 2011 upon his father Kim Jong Il’s death.

READ | Lockdown: Assam allows reopening of liquor stores across state

READ | Delhi govt launches exercise to open liquor shops in non-containment zones

WATCH | State leaders on loss of liquor revenue

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Russia reports more than 10,000 new coronavirus cases

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Russia reported more than 10,000 new cases of coronavirus infections on Sunday, the first time the country’s daily tally reached five figures.

More than half of the 10,633 new cases reported were in Moscow, where concern is rising about whether the capital’s medical facilities will be overwhelmed.

Russia has recorded more than 134,000 coronavirus infections overall and 1,420 deaths.

READ | Lockdown: Assam allows reopening of liquor stores across state

READ | Delhi govt launches exercise to open liquor shops in non-containment zones

WATCH | State leaders on loss of liquor revenue

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This Thai company makes food packaging out of bamboo to cut down on trash

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This zero-waste packaging is made from bamboo

To tackle Thailand’s mounting trash problem, one company is turning to the country’s plant life.

Universal Biopack makes packaging that it sells to restaurants and manufacturers. But rather than plastic, it uses a mixture of bamboo and cassava, crops that are widely found across the country.

After growing rapidly in recent decades, Thailand has become one of Asia’s biggest economies. But like many other countries in the region, it’s been slow to try to combat the millions of tons of trash produced each year.

“Waste management is a big problem everywhere,” said Universal Biopack’s managing director, Vara-Anong Vichakyothin.

Related: The company turning 4 billion plastic bottles into clothes

The company is using a technology devised at a Bangkok university to make its zero-waste packaging. It hopes it will eventually replace many of the Styrofoam boxes and plastic bags that end up in huge garbage dumps across Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries.

Its eco-friendly formula took five years to develop and is so adaptable it could end up being used to package things like furniture and even phones. The bamboo it uses comes from leftover scraps from the chopstick manufacturing process.

UB Pack 3

In the cities of Bangkok and Chiang Mai, where takeout drink containers and noodle packets line the sidewalks, the company supplies restaurants, organic farmers and other businesses in the food and drink industry.

But finding new clients can be tricky.

Takeout food vendors in Thailand want to keep costs down in a competitive business with thin margins. Asking them to spend more on packaging for environmental reasons is a tough sell.

“The local economy still does not support [this technology]” said Universal Biopack’s founder, Suthep Vichakyothin.

UB Pack 2

But that hasn’t stopping other companies from entering the sustainable packaging market in Thailand. Like Universal Biopack, they’re betting on growing environmental awareness eventually leading to an increase in demand.

To become more competitive, Suthep’s company is investing. It’s aiming to ramp up production by building a partially automated assembly line at its factory near Bangkok and doubling its staffing from 50 people to 100.

The goal is to increase monthly capacity from 300,000 units to one million.

Related: A startup that makes pencils that grow into vegetables

A lot of the demand comes from overseas. One of its customers uses the natural packaging for coconut water it exports.

Universal Biopack says it’s also getting interest in its products from other countries, particularly in Scandinavia.

CNNMoney (Hong Kong) First published February 12, 2017: 9:08 PM ET

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New York Governor warns against blindly reopening states

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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Saturday pushed back against what he called premature demands that he reopen the state, saying he knew people were struggling without jobs but that more understanding of the new coronavirus was needed.

As governors in about half of the United States partially reopen their economies over this weekend, Cuomo said he needed much more information on what the pandemic was doing in his state, the hardest hit by the disease, before he loosens restrictions aimed at curbing its spread.

“Even when you are in uncharted waters, it doesn’t mean you proceed blindly,” he said. “Use information to determine action – not emotions, not politics, not what people think or feel, but what we know in terms of facts.”

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy echoed Cuomo’s slow-go restart approach, even as he reported “positive trends,” including a decline in the number of hospital patients with COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

While the number of deaths has trended lower in recent days, New Jersey’s toll, second only to New York’s, stood at 7,742, which Murphy cited as a key reason for maintaining his stay-at-home order.

“The family, friends and neighbors who we have lost are the reason why we cannot rush our restart,” he said at a news briefing. “We need to keep seeing these lines moving in these directions before we can put New Jersey on the road back, and before we’re able to responsibly restart our economy.”

An many U.S. eastern seaboard residents enjoyed a perfect spring day on Saturday, those in New Jersey had access to more outdoor space as Murphy allowed the state’s parks and golf courses to reopen for the first time in a month, warning they would be shut again if social distancing requirements were violated.

“Anecdotal and preliminary” reports suggest that the rules were being observed, he said.

Georgia and Texas are leading the way in the partial reopening of businesses that had been shuttered by the pandemic.

Leaders in those and several other states where the coronavirus has had less of an impact are under pressure to allow people to return to work, as government data released this week showed 30 million Americans have sought unemployment benefits since March 21.

Cuomo pointed to the roughly 900 new coronavirus cases that hospitals in New York are still reporting daily and the fact that officials do not know where those infections are coming from, as reason enough to continue keeping the Empire State shut down.

The governor also released the preliminary results of a statewide antibody survey of about 15,000 people showing that 12.3% had been previously infected with the virus.

It confirmed the results of another test with a smaller sample size released about 10 days ago showing that one in five New York City residents has had the virus, with the Bronx borough seeing the highest number positive for antibodies at 27.6%.

As of Saturday, the number of known infections nationwide had climbed to more than 1.1 million, including about 65,000 deaths, according to a Reuters tally.

As testing increases across the country, so does the number of cases. North Carolina on Saturday posted a record number of new cases with 551 infections, as did Puerto Rico, with 182. Iowa hit a record for the second straight day. Overall in the United States, there were 34,000 new cases on Friday, the highest daily total since April 24.

On the National Mall in Washington, thousands of people gathered to view a flyover by the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and Navy Blue Angels jets in honor of healthcare workers and others battling the pandemic, applauding after the aircraft soared over the Lincoln Memorial and past the White House.

Despite the size of the crowd, most maintained social distancing, with some wearing face masks and others not.

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Spain reports lowest daily coronavirus death toll in nearly 7 weeks

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Confirmed cases of the virus rose to 217,466, from 216,582 on Saturday, the ministry said.

A man rides on a bicycle next to the Can Pere Antoni beach in Palma de Mallorca during the hours in which individual exercise is allowed outdoors, for the first time since the lockdown was announced. (Photo: Reuters)

A man rides on a bicycle next to the Can Pere Antoni beach in Palma de Mallorca during the hours in which individual exercise is allowed outdoors, for the first time since the lockdown was announced. (Photo: Reuters)

Spain’s death toll from the new coronavirus rose by 164 to 25,264 on Sunday, health ministry data showed, marking the lowest one-day increase since March 18.

Confirmed cases of the virus rose to 217,466, from 216,582 on Saturday, the ministry said.

Madrid and Catalonia remain the two worst affected regions, with 8,332 and 5,185 fatalities respectively.

The declining death rate is an encouraging sign for Spain, which on Saturday took a large step towards unwinding its stiff lockdown by allowing adults to exercise outdoors for the first time in seven weeks.

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Verizon is bringing back unlimited data

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Inside Verizon's device testing lab

Verizon (VZ) is bringing back an unlimited data plan.

Starting Monday, Verizon customers can get unlimited data, talk and text for $80.

The company says the new introductory plan also includes up to 10 GB of mobile hotspot usage, as well as calling and texting to Mexico and Canada. It will also allow customers to stream unlimited HD video, thumbing its nose at T-Mobile’s controversial practice of lowering video quality for some of its unlimited data customers.

Although the new Verizon plan promises “fast LTE speeds,” those using a lot of data may suffer. The company said that after a customer uses 22 gb of data on a line during any billing cycle, it “may prioritize usage behind other customers in the event of network congestion.” That has become standard practice on all networks that offer unlimited data plans.

Related: T-Mobile and Sprint offer new ‘unlimited’ data plans — sort of

Verizon first eliminated its version of an unlimited usage plan in 2011, following similar decisions by other major wireless carriers.

But companies have been steadily reviving such plans.

Verizon first overhauled its data-usage plans last summer when it introduced a new “Safety Mode” plan. That technically gave customers access to unlimited data, but they were subjected to slow-as-molasses speeds after they went over their allotted data.

AT&T similarly eliminated overage fees for customers in September. Like Verizon, AT&T throttles customers speeds once they reach the data limit on their plans. The company brought back unlimited plans earlier last year, but it is only available for homes with both AT&T’s wireless phone service and either DirecTV or U-Verse TV.

Meanwhile, competitors T-Mobile (TMUS) and Sprint (S) made their own bids to attract customers looking for “unlimited data” plans.

Nearly all NYC subways get cell service

Last August, Sprint began offering a plan to give customers unlimited talk, text and high-speed data for $60 for the first line, $40 for the next, and $30 for each additional up to 10.

The T-Mobile plan, announced the same day as Sprint’s, charged $70 a month for the first line, the second at $50 and additional lines are only $20, up to eight lines.

CNNMoney (New York) First published February 12, 2017: 7:03 PM ET

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Saudi Arabia to take strict, painful measures to deal with coronavirus impact: Report

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A man, wearing a surgical mask as a precautionary measure against the novel coronavirus, walks near a hospital in Khobar city in Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Reuters)

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Early high school start times adversely affect attendance: Study

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Early high school start times adversely affect attendance: Study
Image Source : PIXABAY

Early high school start times adversely affect attendance: Study

Earlier high school start times can have significant adverse consequences for students, including increased rates of tardiness and absenteeism, according to a study.

“The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that high schools begin class after 8:30 a.m., but we know that most schools start much earlier,” said study researcher Melinda Morrill, Associate Professor at North Carolina State University in the US.

For the findings, published in the journal Economics of Education Review, the researchers looked at data on seven cohorts of students, with graduation years ranging from 2013 to 2019.

Specifically, researchers looked at data from the freshman, sophomore and junior years of each cohort. The change in start times was implemented in the 2012-13 school year.

As an additional control group, the researchers also looked at data from 14 other high schools in the same school district that had already adopted a 7:25 a.m. start time.

“There’s a growing body of research that suggests earlier start times can hurt test scores. We looked at that, but the numbers weren’t statistically significant one way or the other,” Morrill said.

The researchers also wanted to look beyond testing to see if there were effects on other measures of academic engagement.

“And we found a significant increase in both absences and tardiness,” Morrill said.

The findings showed that the changes to an earlier start time led to an increase of about one additional absence per year. There were definitely missing more school.

“Looking at all 19 of the schools, we found that historically, the five schools that started at 8:05 had significantly lower rates of absenteeism and tardiness than the 14 schools that started at 7:25,” Morrill said.

“But once those five schools moved their start time to 7:25, those advantages disappeared,” Morrill added.

Fight against Coronavirus: Full coverage



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Italy’s incredible ‘floating ship’ bridge reaches for the sky

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(CNN) — High above the Polcevera valley, the final section of a majestic new bridge was hoisted into place this week, signaling the imminent completion of a remarkable engineering project against seemingly impossible odds.

The bridge is a critical traffic artery for northern Italy. It connects two sides of the city of Genoa and serves its busy mercantile port, while being part of the E80 European highway that links Italy to France. It’s also on a main route used by holidaymakers heading to the Ligurian Riviera from cities like Turin and Milan.

More importantly, it was built on the scene of tragedy, replacing an earlier structure, the Morandi bridge, which collapsed on August 14, 2018, killing 43 people.

That the replacement has arrived less than two years after the disaster is something of an achievement.

It was constructed rapidly, in a country rarely considered an exemplar of efficiency. Some of the most challenging work was carried out amid Europe’s worst coronavirus outbreak.

And yet, there it is. Over a kilometer long and standing 45 meters above the valley. Seen from below, it’s designed to look like a ship floating in the sky.

“Genoa is a shipmaking city, so it’s not bizarre to make the bottom of the bridge look like a ship’s hull,” Renzo Piano, who designed the new bridge, tells CNN Travel. It adds to a portfolio that includes the Shard in London, the Whitney Museum in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris. A Genoa native, Piano also worked on a bold redesign of the city’s waterfront in the 1990s.

“I wanted this bridge to tell a story about Genoa,” says Piano. “A famous Genoese poet, Giorgio Caproni, wrote beautifully that Genoa is made of steel and breeze. This bridge will be a portrait of the city. It’s made of steel, but it’s also flirting with the breeze. It will be flying over the valley. It will be strong and powerful, but simple, like a beautiful song.”

Closing a wound

bridge pink sky-1

The new bridge is designed to look like a floating ship from below.

Courtesy RPBW Architects

In a ceremony limited in scope by the lockdown still enforced across the country, Italian premier Giuseppe Conte said that a wound was being closed, although one that can never fully heal. He added that Genoa was “shining a new light over Italy.”

From his home in Paris, Renzo Piano watched with “a mix of pride, affection, sadness and a bit of melancholy, because the big adventure part of the project is done, the part when you take pieces of steel that weigh 2,000 tons and make them fly from the ground to a height.”

The collapsed Morandi bridge, named after the engineer who designed it, Riccardo Morandi, was completed in 1967.

It had the same structure as the Brooklyn Bridge, which it vaguely resembled, but it was made mostly of concrete rather than steel, because Italy didn’t have the required supply of the metal at the time.

The steel stays, or cables, that supported the deck were also covered in concrete, and the structure of the bridge was lacking any redundancies that could have prevented a collapse in case of failure.

When one of the main pylons fell during mid-morning traffic, it brought with it a section of road spanning 600 feet that crashed down on the railway and buildings below, leading to the evacuation of hundreds.

The exact cause of the collapse is still under investigation, but corrosion, construction defects, improper maintenance and a design that was beyond its load limits have all been identified as contributing factors.

Piano’s new design does away with cables entirely. It’s a streamlined steel beam supported by 18 reinforced concrete piers, spaced 160 feet apart except for the three central ones, where the gap widens to 320 feet because of the river and railway. The design is meant to reflect the character of the city itself.

“Genoa is a city of silence in some way, and this is what the bridge does: It goes through the valley in silence, putting its feet where it can, almost asking for permission. Maybe that’s part of the inspiration, because when you have a tragedy, the first reaction must be silence.”

Non-stop work

working at night-1

Work on the bridge has been going on 24/7 to complete the project in a year.

Courtesy RPBW Architects

The new bridge was built by Salini Impregilo, an Italian construction company, and Fincantieri, a state-owned shipbuilder. The project cost 200 million euros, about $220 million, not considering the cost of demolition of the Morandi bridge, which cost another 90 million euros, or about $98 million.

“Normally it would take three to three and a half years to design and build a bridge of this size. This one took a little over a year,” says construction manager Stefano Mosconi, who added that up to 1,000 people were working on the project at the same time.

To speed things up, construction took place less than 20 meters south of the fallen bridge, so that it could start while the cleanup work was still in progress.

“This bridge is not just a stretch of highway. It also links two parts of the city of Genoa, so it was very important to have it working as soon as possible,” Mosconi adds. “We also wanted to respond to a very negative event, a huge tragedy, with a positive force, by building a safer bridge faster than ever before.”

Piano says that the project attracted a high level of expertise, which makes it less surprising that it could be achieved in such a short time.

“It’s not a miracle. It’s just what happens when competence wins over incompetence. Italy is a special country, with capacity to do things — unfortunately that capacity only comes out when there’s a tragedy. I hope this bridge will teach something to people.”

Work on the site never stopped, continuing at night with tasks deemed compatible with noise regulations.

When Italy went into lockdown in early March, strict safety measures were enforced and the project was allowed to continue due to its national and strategic importance.

Only one worker tested positive on the site, in late March, and he has since returned to work along with colleagues who had been in contact with him and had been quarantined.

Opening in July

The last section was lifted into place at the end of April.

The last section was lifted into place at the end of April.

MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty Images

To ensure the tragedy never repeats, the bridge is equipped with its own monitoring system, as well as a fleet of robots that run along the hull to spot any sign of trouble.

It is designed to last at least 100 years.

Despite the inauguration, however, it isn’t finished. While the structure is complete, the asphalt road is still to be laid down and won’t open to traffic until July at the earliest.

For that reason, the bridge doesn’t yet have a name, which will be decided later (Piano suggested calling it simply “Genova.”)

Even so, 620 days after the tragedy, the new bridge already represents a beacon of hope and pride for Italy, as the country prepares to ease lockdown measures after coronavirus claimed close to 30,000 lives.

“The story of this bridge shows that the competence is there, the technology is there, even the passion is there,” Piano says. A new building project “is a gesture of optimism. I’m not surprised that somebody takes it as a sign of hope.”

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South Korea Blue House’s assessment is Kim Jong Un did not have surgery: Yonhap

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un did not have surgery, local news outlet Yonhap said.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attends the completion of a fertiliser plant, in a region north of the capital, Pyongyang, in this image released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on May 2, 2020.

South Korea’s assessment is that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un did not have a surgery, local news outlet Yonhap said, citing an unidentified senior official at presidential Blue House.

“There were speculative reports that Chairman Kim underwent a surgery citing some difference to his walk,” the official was cited as saying.

“We have reasons to believe that there was no surgery, but cannot disclose such details.”

Also read: Trump says glad to see North Korea’s Kim Jong-un is back and well

ALSO WATCH| Global race on to bring out coronavirus vaccine

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Countries emerge from coronavirus lockdown: ’46 days in the house was enough’

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From the United States to Europe and Asia, people in many parts of the world are emerging from their homes as virus-related restrictions begin to ease and springtime temperatures climb. Chinese were flocking to tourist spots, many newly reopened, after a relaxation of domestic travel restrictions ahead of a five-day holiday that runs through Tuesday.

Nearly 1.7 million people visited Beijing parks on the first two days of the holiday, and Shanghai’s main tourist spots welcomed more than a million visitors, according to Chinese media reports. Many spots limited the number of daily visitors to 30 per cent of capacity or less, keeping crowds below average.

Masks were worn widely, from runners in Spain to beach-goers in the southern United States.

In New York City’s Central Park, joggers moved past each other without a glance on Saturday, and a steady stream of folks left tips for a trio working their way through a set of jazz standards alfresco.

“It’s great to have an audience after all these weeks,” saxophonist Julia Banholzer, a native of Germany, said. “All my dates have been canceled through September, and I don’t know if any will come back this year. New York is a tough place, but this is just another tough period we need to get through.”

Neighbouring New Jersey reopened state parks, though several had to turn people away after reaching a 50 per cent limit in their parking lots. Margie Roebuck and her husband were among the first on the sand at Island Beach State Park. “Forty-six days in the house was enough,” she said.

US Navy and Air Force fighter jets drew people outside as they flew over Atlanta, Baltimore and Washington, DC, in honor of health care workers.

In Spain, many ventured out Saturday for the first time since a lockdown began on March 14. “I feel good, but tired. You sure notice that it has been a month and I am not in shape,” Cristina Palomeque said in Barcelona. “Some people think it may be too early, as I do, but it is also important to do exercise for health reasons.”

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez asked citizens to remain vigilant. Covid-19 has caused more than 25,100 deaths in Spain. “Until we have a vaccine, we are going to see more outbreaks,” Sánchez said. “What we need to guarantee is that these outbreaks do not put our national health system in danger.”

The divide in the United States between those who want lockdowns to end and those who want to move cautiously extended to Congress. The Republican-majority Senate will reopen Monday, while the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives stays shuttered.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s decision to convene 100 senators gives President Donald Trump, a Republican, the imagery he wants of America getting back to work, despite health worries and a lack of testing.

Elsewhere, the pandemic’s danger remained evident. Pakistan followed Russia in reporting its biggest one-day spike in new infections. Pakistan announced nearly 1,300 new cases Saturday, raising the total in the country of 220 million people to about 18,000.

The government has said it might ease controls, but doctors have pleaded for stricter lockdowns, warning an explosion of infections would overwhelm hospitals.

Moscow is considering establishing temporary hospitals at sports complexes and shopping malls to deal with the influx of patients. Russia has reported around 125,000 cases and more than 1,200 deaths, but the actual numbers are believed to be much higher because not everyone is tested.

The virus has killed more than 240,000 people worldwide, including more than 66,000 in the United States and more than 24,000 each in Italy, Britain, France and Spain, according to a count kept by Johns Hopkins University.

Health experts warn a second wave of infections could hit unless testing is expanded dramatically.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms. For some, especially older adults and those with health problems, it can cause severe illness such as pneumonia, or death.

There are economic factors to consider as well. The shutdown of businesses has plunged the global economy into its deepest slump since the 1930s and wiped out millions of jobs.

Singapore announced Saturday it will let selected businesses reopen from May 12 in a cautious rollback of a two-month partial lockdown, and Sri Lanka said the government and private sector should resume work from May 11 “to ensure a return to normalcy in civilian life and to revive the economy.”

Bangladesh, which opened thousands of garment factories last month, confirmed 552 new cases on Saturday.
The South Asian country’s health care system is fragile, and authorities say they would not be able to provide ventilation and intensive care support for more than 500 people at one time.

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Indian rival slams Uber’s business model

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Ola puts Uber in the shade

Uber’s top rival in India has some unsolicited advice for the U.S. startup: Go local.

“They have a very cookie-cutter approach in terms of what the model is and how [to] force feed it into any geography,” Pranay Jivrajka, a top executive at Ola Cabs, said on the sidelines of CNN’s Asia Business Forum in Bangalore.

Jivrajka, who until recently served as Ola’s COO, said that Uber should ditch its one-size-fits-all approach and instead try to understand “local nuances” that would help it to identify services that “users and drivers actually want.”

Uber declined to comment on Jivrajka’s remarks.

Uber and Ola have for years waged a bitter battle for supremacy in India, a market with 1.3 billion potential customers. The country has taken on increased significance for Uber after a series of recent setbacks elsewhere in Asia.

The San Francisco-based company suspended its operations in Taiwan last week, six months after it sold its operations in China to local rival Didi Chuxing. Didi, which is taking the fight to Uber in key foreign markets, is one of Ola’s investors.

In India, Uber has often found itself playing catch-up with its Bangalore-based rival. Its most recent local product offering — allowing Indian users to book a car for an entire day — is already offered by Ola in 85 cities.

Ola also lets users book one of India’s ubiquitous three-wheeled auto rickshaws, a service Uber started but then discontinued in 2015.

“What has helped us is having an ear to the ground in terms of understanding what the users want,” said Jivrajka.

Related: Uber’s rivals are teaming up in Asia

Uber CEO Travis Kalanick insists that his company is not prepared to leave India.

“We are losing, but we see a path towards profitability,” Kalanick said during a December visit to Delhi. “We see ourselves being here in the long run.”

Related: Uber suspends its service in Taiwan as fines mount

India isn’t always a straightforward market for either company — tens of thousands of drivers representing both Uber and Ola went on strike in Delhi this week, demanding better pay and benefits. The Delhi government has offered to mediate the dispute.

Jivrajka did not comment on the protests, but said that Ola’s main focus remains bringing more drivers onto its platform.

“We need more drivers because the pace at which demand is increasing is way higher than the way supply is getting aggregated,” he said.

Related: Uber CEO drops out of Trump’s business advisory council

Jivrajka also had some advice for another Silicon Valley giant hoping to enter India: electric automaker Tesla.

“There are no rules on the Indian roads,” Jivrajka said. “One thing a lot of people say is that if you can drive in India, you can drive anywhere.”

— Manveena Suri contributed reporting

CNNMoney (Bangalore, India) First published February 13, 2017: 8:48 AM ET

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People should unite to give coordinated response to coronavirus: Dalai Lama

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As the world grapples with coronavirus, the Dalai Lama on Sunday said people should come together to give a “coordinated, global response” to challenges posed by the crisis.

The 14th Dalai Lama said people must focus on what unites them as members of one human family and reach out to each other with compassion.

As the world grapples with coronavirus, the Dalai Lama on Sunday said people should come together to give a “coordinated, global response” to challenges posed by the crisis.

The Tibetan spiritual leader also noted that the economic disruption caused by the spread of the virus is posing a major challenge to governments and is undermining the ability of people to make a living.

“This crisis and its consequences serve as a warning that only by coming together in a coordinated, global response, will we meet the unprecedented magnitude of the challenges we face. I pray we all heed ‘The Call to Unite’, he said in a statement released by his office here.

The Tibetan government-in-exile is based in Himachal’s Dharamshala.

In this time of crisis, we face threats to our health and sadness for the family and friends we have lost. Economic disruption is posing a major challenge to governments and undermining the ability of so many people to make a living,” he said.

The 14th Dalai Lama said people must focus on what unites them as members of one human family and reach out to each other with compassion.

“As human beings, we are all the same. We experience the same fears, the same hopes, the same uncertainties, yet we are also united by a desire for happiness. Our human capacity to reason and to see things realistically and clearly give us the ability to transform hardship into opportunity,” he said.

Coronavirus has so far killed over 2,35,000 people globally

IndiaToday.in has plenty of useful resources that can help you better understand the coronavirus pandemic and protect yourself. Read our comprehensive guide (with information on how the virus spreads, precautions and symptoms), watch an expert debunk myths, check out our data analysis of cases in India, and access our dedicated coronavirus page. Get the latest updates on our live blog.

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Coronavirus: UK shadows Italy as worst hit in Europe with death toll surging past 28,000

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The United Kingdom’s death toll from Covid-19 rose 621 to 28,131 as of May 1, just short of Italy which has so far had the world’s second most deadly outbreak of the disease after the United States.

As Britain shadows Italy for the grim status of being the worst-hit country in Europe, Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing criticism from opposition parties who say his government stumbled in the early stages of the outbreak.

Housing minister Robert Jenrick gave the latest UK figures at a Downing Street briefing on Saturday.

The United States has had 64,740 deaths, followed by Italy with 28,710 and the United Kingdom on 28,131 and then Spain on 25,100, according to a Reuters tally.

Italy, which has a population of 60 million, said its death toll rose 474 as of Saturday. The United Kingdom has a population of about 67 million.

Johnson, 55, initially resisted introducing a lockdown to restrict economic and public activity, but changed course when projections showed a quarter of a million people could die.

Johnson himself battled Covid-19 last month, spending three days in intensive care. He returned to work on Monday, telling the nation that people around the world were looking at the United Kingdom’s “apparent success”.

TESTS FOR EASING LOCKDOWN

He has said the country is over the peak but that it is still too early to relax the lockdown he imposed on March 23 because there could be a second peak that he fears might overwhelm hospitals.

The $3.0 trillion British economy, the world’s fifth-largest, is stalling and Johnson is due next week to present a possible way to get the country back to work without triggering a second spike in cases.

He has set five tests that must be met before he can lift the lockdown – with a reduction in the daily death toll and prevention of a second deadly peak among the key ones.

Government scientists said that while the daily death tolls show a downward trend they expect them to plateau for a while.

IndiaToday.in has plenty of useful resources that can help you better understand the coronavirus pandemic and protect yourself. Read our comprehensive guide (with information on how the virus spreads, precautions and symptoms), watch an expert debunk myths, check out our data analysis of cases in India, and access our dedicated coronavirus page. Get the latest updates on our live blog.

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BGG to double capacity at astaxanthin farm in southwestern China

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AHS operates a glass tube facility in Yunnan Province in southwestern China in which it cultivates Haematococcus pluvialis​, the algae species that is the main natural commercial source of the ingredient (astaxanthin can also be produced by chemical synthesis and can be extracted from Phaffia​ yeast). The new expansion is slated take place in two phases.  The first phase, set to take place in the third quarter of 2020, will boost capacity by 25%.  After the second phase is complete the farm will have more than doubled in size, according to the company.

“With this new round of investment in our farm, we will secure enough production capacity to support our growth for the next few years and to position BGG as the leading producer worldwide,”​ said Chunhua Li, chairman and founder of BGG.

Dr Oz boom has endured

Interest in astaxanthin spiked in the US after a segment of the Dr Oz Show in early 2011 when guest Dr Joseph Mercola touted the ingredient’s health benefits.  But unlike some other ingredients that were hyped on the show, the astaxanthin boom proved to have legs.  

Google searches using the term ‘astaxanthin’ spiked after the show.  Taking that level of interest as 100, searches have declined into the 20 to 36 range in the years since.  But that is still as much as triple what the number of searchers was in 2010. 

The global market for astaxanthin was pegged at about $100 million in 2018​ and was projected to grow at low double digit rates into the 2020s. That growth projection was made before the coronavirus crisis, of course.

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COVID-19 clinical trials, Gencor’s fenugreek findings and more

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COVID-19 natural product trial: New curcumin, artemisinin supplement to be tested on patients

A curcumin and artemisinin-based oral spray has been proposed as a treatment for COVID-19 patients and a clinical trial will be conducted, ASX-listed phytocannabinoid firm MGC Pharmaceuticals has revealed.

Known as ArtemiC, the new product is jointly developed by MGC and Switzerland firm Micelle Technology based on a product originally developed by the latter. New adaptations have been made to the product in response to COVID-19. 

The supplement, which also contains vitamin C and Boswellia serrata, will be tested on COVID-19 patients in Israel’s Nazareth Hospital EMMS.

Fytexia’s sinetrol significantly reduces body weight, body fat mass, and BMI – South Korea RCT

A trial featuring French bioscience firm Fytexia’s patented ingredient – Sinetrol – has displayed anti-obesity effects​ in obese Koreans.

Sinetrol is mainly made up of orange and grapefruit extract. It has been approved by the South Korean food authorities​ in making the health claim of “help reduce body fat” ​among the overweight population. 

The trial, funded by Fytexia’s exclusive South Korean business partner, pharmaceutical company RP Bio, was independently conducted by researchers from Gachon University and Sungkyunkwan University.

Exercise boost: Gencor’s fenugreek extract found to aid strength and body composition – RCT

Gencor’s fenugreek extract Testofen has been found to increase strength, aerobic endurance and lean body mass in healthy, exercising men, according to new findings published in the journal Transitional Sports Medicine.

The randomised, placebo controlled, double-blind study trial, which was funded by Gencor, was undertaken by researchers from the universities of Sydney and Queensland,

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Oil prices have doubled in a year. Here’s why

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Trump signs oil pipeline executive actions

It’s a good day for OPEC.

Data published Monday by the oil cartel show its members have largely complied with an agreement to slash production.

The confirmation caps a remarkable year for OPEC, which was forced to devise a plan to boost prices after they fell to $26 per barrel in February 2016.

The price collapse — to levels not seen since 2003 — was caused by months of growing oversupply, slowing demand from China and a decision by Western powers to lift Iran’s nuclear sanctions.

Since then, the market has mounted a stunning turnaround, with crude prices doubling to trade at $53.50 per barrel.

Here’s how major oil producers worked together to push prices higher:

OPEC deal

OPEC agreed major production cuts in November, hoping to tame the global oil oversupply and support prices.

The news of the deal immediately boosted prices by 9%.

Investors cheered even more after several non-OPEC producers, including Russia, Mexico and Kazakhstan, joined the effort to restrain supply.

Crucially, the deal has stuck. The OPEC report published Monday showed that its members have — for the most part — fulfilled their pledges to slash production. The International Energy Agency agrees: It estimated OPEC compliance for January at 90%.

UAE energy minister Suhail Al Mazrouei told CNNMoney on Monday that the results were even better than he had expected.

The production cuts total 1.8 million barrels per day and are scheduled to run for six months.

Related: OPEC has pulled off one of its ‘deepest’ production cuts

election2016 markets oil up

Investors upbeat

The OPEC deal took months to negotiate, and investors really, really like it. The number of hedge funds and other institutional investors that are betting on higher prices hit a record in January, according to OPEC.

The widespread optimism is helping to fuel price increases.

Higher demand

The latest data from OPEC and the IEA show that global demand for oil was higher than expected in 2016, thanks to stronger economic growth, higher vehicle sales and colder than expected weather in the final quarter of the year.

Demand is set to grow further in 2017 to an average of 95.8 million barrels a day, compared 94.6 million barrels per day in 2016.

The IEA said that if OPEC sticks to its agreement, the global oil glut that has plagued markets for three years will finally disappear in 2017.

Saudi oil minister: I don’t lose sleep over shale

What’s next?

Despite the stunning growth, analysts caution that prices may not go much higher.

That’s because higher oil prices are likely to lure American shale producers back into the market. The total number of active oil rigs in the U.S. stood at 591 last week, according to data from Baker Hughes. That’s 152 more than a year ago.

U.S. crude stockpiles swelled in January to nearly 200 million barrels above their five-year average, according to the OPEC report.

“This vast increase in inventories is a result of a strong supply response from the U.S. shale producers, who were not involved in the OPEC agreement and who have instead been using the resultant price rally to increase output,” said Fiona Cincotta, an analyst at City Index.

More supply could once again put OPEC under pressure.

CNNMoney (London) First published February 13, 2017: 9:13 AM ET

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Supplements and skin care products to play ‘key role’ in Australian growth strategy

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The firm partnered with cannabis specialist Bod Australia in launching nine new hemp seed products late last month. Available in about 2,000 stores, including Chemist Warehouse, Coles, and Priceline Pharmacy, the offerings ranged from soft gel capsule supplements to skincare applications. 

Specifically, the dietary supplement capsules are all hemp seed oil combined with either green tea, turmeric, MCT, or purely the hemp seed oil alone.

This is also the first time that the firm has launched hemp-based products.

Asked the initial sales response of its hemp-based products, Swisse MD Nick Mann, told us that retailer interest has been “extremely positive” ​and has allowed them to rapidly develop a sizeable footprint in both grocery and pharmacy channels. 

“The potential is there, and while it’s still early in the launch phase, the initial sales are accelerating weekly. 

“We believe this range will play an important role in the delivery of incremental growth for Swisse ANZ in 2020,”​ Mann said.

The target audience is the “progressive contemporary community”, ​referring to consumers who want to benefit their health and are environmentally-conscious at the same time.

The next level

Beyond hemp, Swisse has identified CBD as a key area for future R&D projects.

“CBD has the potential to revolutionise stress and mild anxiety management globally. This is our framework for development and innovation, and we have an unbelievably talented partner in Bod Australia,”​ Mann said.   

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Man arrested trying to quarantine on private Disney island

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The 42-year-old said he didn’t hear numerous deputies searching the private island for him on foot, by boat and by air because he was asleep in a building.

Photo: AP

Florida deputies arrested a man who had been living out his quarantine on a shuttered Disney World island, telling authorities it felt like a “tropical paradise.”

Orange County Sheriff’s deputies found Richard McGuire on Disney’s Discovery Island on Thursday. He said he’d been there since Monday or Tuesday and had planned to camp there for a week, according to an arrest report.

The 42-year-old said he didn’t hear numerous deputies searching the private island for him on foot, by boat and by air because he was asleep in a building. He told the deputy he didn’t know it was a restricted area, despite there being numerous “no trespassing” signs.

“Richard stated that he was unaware of that and that it looked like a tropical paradise,” according to the arrest report.

Orange County Marine deputies on Bay Lake used a public address system to tell McGuire he was not allowed to be on the property, but he remained on the island, anyway, according to the arrest report.

A security representative for Disney said she saw McGuire using a company boat Thursday, noting that the area had several “no trespassing” signs and two closed gates. She asked the agency to press charges.

McGuire was arrested on a trespassing charge and taken to jail without incident. It was not immediately clear whether he had an attorney who could comment.

Previously called Treasure Island, Discovery Island had been the site of a zoological park before the island was closed to the public in 1999.

Also read: Army Colonel, Major among 5 killed in encounter in J&K’s Handwara; 2 terrorists gunned down

ALSO WATCH| We are operating under great uncertainties on health and economic side: Ex-CEA Arvind Subramanian | EXCLUSIVE

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Whey protein, MUFA and vitamin formula lowers fasting blood glucose – Nestle-funded study

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However, before adopting the nutrition therapy, patients who are taking insulin secretagogues such as sulphonylureas will need to make adjustments to the medications taken.

The study, funded by Nestle Health Science, was published in Nutrients.

During Ramadan, meals are taken before dawn and after sunset, and the daytime fasting can vary between 11 and 22 hours each day depending on the region.

In diabetics, their problem of insulin resistance or deficiency during fasting can lead to gluconeogenesis, where glucose is generated from non-carbohydrates. 

This increases the risk of developing low or high blood glucose, a dangerous build-up of ketones, and dehydration.

In this trial, researchers study how the incorporation of a nutrition therapy, specifically Nestle’s diabetes  formula ‘Nutren Diabetes’, can reduce the risks of developing complications during fasting.

The formula, consisting of 30 vitamins, minerals, whey protein and MUFA, was consumed as part of the pre-dawn meal or as a pre-bed snack.

Lasting for eight weeks, the trial recruited 64 patients who were asked to choose their preferred grouping – either receiving the nutrition therapy or following standard care.

More than half (38) of them chose to receive the nutrition therapy and they were required to take the therapy two weeks before Ramadan, during the four-week long Ramadan, and two weeks after Ramadan.

Results

One of the most significant results is the lowering of the fasting blood glucose level in the group that took the nutrition therapy.

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