Indian doctors go on hunger strike, demand justice in rape-murder of Kolkata medic

Special Indian doctors go on hunger strike, demand justice in rape-murder of Kolkata medic
Doctors and hospital staff in Kolkata march in solidarity with colleagues on hunger strike, Oct. 8, 2024. (West Bengal Junior Doctors’ Front)
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Updated 09 October 2024
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Indian doctors go on hunger strike, demand justice in rape-murder of Kolkata medic

Indian doctors go on hunger strike, demand justice in rape-murder of Kolkata medic
  • Junior doctors in West Bengal resumed months-long protest on Monday
  • Senior doctors at hospital where murder took place resign in solidarity

NEW DELHI: Doctors across India went on hunger strike on Wednesday in solidarity with their colleagues in West Bengal who have been demanding justice and safer working conditions after the gruesome murder of a female medic in Kolkata.

Thousands of young medics have been taking to the streets after a 31-year-old trainee doctor was raped and murdered on Aug. 9 at the state-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in West Bengal’s capital, where she worked.

While the protests were concentrated in Kolkata, where junior doctors have been on strike demanding justice for the victim and better safety measures in hospitals, other medics across India have been regularly holding solidarity demonstrations with them.

In late September, doctors agreed to return to work to help with emergency services amid floods, and after the West Bengal government agreed to some of their demands, including sacking the Kolkata police chief and two top Health Ministry officials.

But the demands for accountability for the murder, removal of the state’s health secretary, and increased police protection in hospitals have not been addressed, and the junior doctors resumed their protest on Monday. As seven of the protesters have been on indefinite hunger strike, the Federation of All India Medical Association symbolically joined them.

“The hunger strike is in solidarity and support of the junior doctors of West Bengal and their demands,” said Dr. Rohan Krishnan, chairman of the organization that represents over 100,000 resident doctors across the country.

“This hunger strike is for a day. At least one representative from each resident doctors’ association is on strike across India. I feel at the minimum it would be 1,000 doctors on strike.”

Krishnan told Arab News that the incidence of violence against doctors has been increasing in India and “what has happened in Bengal requires immediate measures and actions,” which until now have not been undertaken.

The federation sent a 10-member delegation to Kolkata to join the protesting junior doctors.

“We are here for the symbolic protest with the junior doctors, and we are having multiple meetings,” Dr. Suvrankar Datta, FAIMA president who is leading the delegation, told Arab News.

“The state government is ignoring the rational and genuine demands of the doctors who are on indefinite hunger strike. We have to ensure that the state government shows some kind of intent to come to the table at least. What the doctors are demanding can be done in a single day. The demands are all very just and very genuine.”

The probe into the murder has been moved from Kolkata Police to India’s federal Central Bureau of Investigation, which announced on Monday it had charged with rape and murder a suspect who was arrested soon after the incident.

The CBI charges came on the basis of interviews, CCTV footage, and autopsy, which revealed the doctor had 25 internal and external injuries as a result of the attack and had died by strangulation.

The brutality of the rape and murder sent shockwaves across India, which were further compounded by reports that senior hospital staff and local police had tried to cover up the incident.

“Our demand has been, first, justice to the victim and, second, to ensure that such an incident does not take place (again),” said Dr. Aqeeb Ashraf, member of the West Bengal Junior Doctors Front.

“Our movement is basically based on these two demands. We have met the chief minister many times and still no solution is coming out … Many people are joining our movement. Doctors are putting their lives at stake to save the medical system in Bengal.”

On Tuesday, 50 senior doctors from RG Kar Medical College and Hospital, where the murder took place, resigned in support of their striking colleagues.

“Our seniors are giving mass resignations to stand by us to address the government, so that they come and listen to us,” Dr. Paramita Thander, junior doctor at the RG Kar Medical College, told Arab News.

“If they don’t listen and (if) anything happens to the people on hunger strike, then we will go for escalation.”


Russian strike kills six in south Ukraine: authorities

Russian strike kills six in south Ukraine: authorities
Updated 9 sec ago
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Russian strike kills six in south Ukraine: authorities

Russian strike kills six in south Ukraine: authorities

KYIV: A Russian ballistic missile strike killed six people and wounded eight others in Ukraine’s southern coastal region of Odesa on Wednesday, authorities said.
“As a result of the enemy attack, unfortunately, six people were killed and eight were wounded, four of them in serious condition. All the victims are citizens of Ukraine,” Odesa regional governor Oleg Kiper said on Telegram.


Time running out in Florida to flee Hurricane Milton

Time running out in Florida to flee Hurricane Milton
Updated 3 min 54 sec ago
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Time running out in Florida to flee Hurricane Milton

Time running out in Florida to flee Hurricane Milton

SARASOTA: Many Florida residents have fled, but some battened down the hatches, in the final hours Wednesday before Hurricane Milton pummels the state, as government relief efforts were dragged into the thick of the White House race.

Ferocious winds and tidal surges are expected to inundate Florida’s heavily populated and low-lying Gulf Coast, with the cities of Tampa and Sarasota in the storm’s path, amid rising fears of widespread chaos and multiple fatalities.

Milton is then expected to barrel across the state as a hurricane, ripping a path over to the Atlantic Ocean, with tourist hub Orlando — home to Walt Disney World — in its sights.

In Sarasota, as the rain intensified, streets were increasingly deserted, with most businesses shuttered and sandbagged for protection. Residents sought refuge at evacuation centers.

“I am nervous. This is something we just went through with the other storm — ground saturated, still recovering from that,” Randy Prior, who owns a pool business, told AFP.

Prior, 36, says he plans to ride out the storm at home, after recently toughing out Helene, which flooded the same western parts of Florida before wreaking havoc across remote areas of North Carolina and further inland.

“I own a business, so once the storm stops, I’ve got to be here, help clean up, get everything back to normal. But this one’s a big one for sure.”

Tampa resident Luis Santiago meanwhile said he would “close up everything” and leave.

With the storm coming immediately after lethal Hurricane Helene hit the US southeast, Donald Trump has sought political advantage by falsely saying aid is channeled away from supporters of his Republican Party toward migrants.

At the White House on Wednesday, President Joe Biden slammed the Republican former president and current candidate’s “onslaught of lies.”

“There’s been a reckless, irresponsible and relentless promotion of disinformation and outright lies,” Biden said in angry remarks.

Vice President Kamala Harris, who is taking on Trump at the polls, echoed Biden’s criticisms in a separate telephone interview with CNN.

“It is dangerous, it is unconscionable, frankly, that anyone who’d consider themselves a leader would mislead desperate people to the point that those desperate people would not receive the aid to which they are entitled,” she said.

In Florida, officials again warned those in danger zones to seek safe shelter.

“You still have time to evacuate if you are in an evacuation zone,” Governor Ron DeSantis told a press briefing. “This hurricane is going to pack a major, major punch and do an awful lot of damage.”

But time was running out.

By Wednesday afternoon, Milton was located 120 miles (195 kilometers) southwest of Tampa, generating maximum sustained winds of 130 mph (215 kph), according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

Multiple tornado warnings were in effect across Florida.

“Milton is expected to remain an extremely dangerous major hurricane when it reaches the west-central coast of Florida tonight, and remain at hurricane strength while it moves across the Florida peninsula through Thursday,” the NHC said.

“Preparations to protect life and property, including being ready for long-duration power outages, should be rushed to completion.”

Airlines added flights out of Tampa, Orlando, Fort Myers and Sarasota, as highways clogged up with escaping traffic and gas station pumps ran dry.

Not all Floridians and tourists were hurrying to leave.

John Gomez, 75, traveled all the way from Chicago to try to save his Florida home.

“I think it’s better to be here in case something happens,” Gomez said.

At Walt Disney World in Orlando, which was expected to receive a big hit once Milton crosses the peninsula, visitors were getting a few rides in before the theme parks close shortly after midday.

“It’s safe and we’re here, so might as well,” said Lindsay Moore, 42, who flew in from Hawaii over the weekend.

“We thought about canceling but airlines wouldn’t let us.”

Trump has repeatedly fueled conspiracy theories and disinformation about supposed failure by Biden and Harris.

“Western North Carolina, and the whole state, for that matter, has been totally and incompetently mismanaged by Harris/Biden,” Trump said Wednesday on his Truth Social network.

“Hold on, and vote these horrible ‘public servants’ out of office.”

Scientists say global warming has a role in intense storms as warmer ocean surfaces release more water vapor, providing additional energy for storms, which exacerbates their winds.

Across the southeastern United States, emergency workers are still struggling to provide relief after Helene, which killed at least 235 people.


Two right-wing former ministers left in race to be UK Conservative leader

Two right-wing former ministers left in race to be UK Conservative leader
Updated 31 min 48 sec ago
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Two right-wing former ministers left in race to be UK Conservative leader

Two right-wing former ministers left in race to be UK Conservative leader
  • Party members will choose between former business and trade minister Kemi Badenoch and former immigration minister Robert Jenrick
  • James Cleverly, who won the third round of voting, was eliminated from the race with 37 votes

LONDON: Two right-wing former ministers will go head-to-head to win votes from members of the Conservative Party and become its next leader after making it through to the final round of a contest set to shape the future of Britain’s once dominant party.
Wednesday’s vote by Conservative lawmakers was the penultimate step in a race that has been marked by the kind of in-fighting that some Conservatives blame for their party’s defeat in July’s national election.
Party members nationwide will now choose between former business and trade minister Kemi Badenoch and former immigration minister Robert Jenrick. The victor will be announced on Nov. 2.
Badenoch came first in the race among Conservative lawmakers with 42 out of 120 votes, with Jenrick coming a close second on 41 votes. In a surprise twist, Cleverly, who won the third round of voting, was eliminated from the race with 37 votes.
Whoever becomes leader will be charged with turning around the fortunes of a party that had governed Britain, alone or in coalition, since 2010 but which suffered its worst defeat in the July election, when Labour won a landslide victory.
But the Conservatives are more hopeful of returning to power in five years’ time rather than the once expected 10 after Prime Minister Keir Starmer suffered a bumpy start in government, coming under fire over welfare cuts and donations for clothes.
According to the Conservative Home website, Badenoch is the most popular contender among the party’s membership, although former foreign minister Cleverly was boosted after the annual conference, when he made a well-received speech.
“I’m grateful for the support I’ve received on this campaign,” Cleverly said. “Sadly it wasn’t to be.”
One Conservative lawmaker said Cleverly’s unexpected exit was evidence of “dark arts,” suggesting one of the candidates must have asked supporters to back Cleverly in Tuesday’s round of voting to make him appear temporarily stronger.
The final two candidates both say they will reunite a party that became mired in chaos, scandal and deep divisions over Brexit during its last eight years in government, and they pledge to return to its conservative roots to offer an alternative to Labour at the next national election, which must take place by mid-2029.
But they differ over tackling immigration, with Jenrick wanting to leave the European Convention of Human Rights, a treaty agreed by almost every European nation, while Badenoch says immigration can be tackled without doing so.


Saudi to participate in Bio Japan

Saudi to participate in Bio Japan
Updated 09 October 2024
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Saudi to participate in Bio Japan

Saudi to participate in Bio Japan
  • Leading biotech companies, universities and almost every major global pharmaceutical company takes part in Bio Japan
  • Saudi Arabia has launched a comprehensive National Biotechnology Strategy and is investing in biotechnology as a part of Saudi Vision 2030

YOKOHAMA: Saudi Arabia is participating in Bio Japan – the world’s oldest biotechnology exhibition and business event – for the first time and presented a seminar on Wednesday in conjunction with the Japan Cooperation Center for the Middle East.
Leading biotech companies, universities and almost every major global pharmaceutical company takes part in Bio Japan, which focuses on biotechnology, regenerative medicine, and the health care industry in general.
Saudi Arabia has launched a comprehensive National Biotechnology Strategy and is investing in biotechnology as a part of Saudi Vision 2030, recognizing its great potential to drive economic diversification and innovation.
The plan is to foster collaboration between government agencies and private enterprises and unlock the full potential of biotechnology research, development, manufacturing, and commercialization. By unifying efforts and establishing a clear road map, Saudi Arabia seeks to position itself as a global leader in biotechnology and capitalize on the sector’s vast benefits for both domestic and international markets.
Representing Saudi Arabia at the event were Bandar bin Abdulmohsen Al-Knawi, Executive Director General for Health Affairs at the Ministry of National Guard; Ammar Al-Taf, the Assistant Deputy of the Ministry of Investment; and Majed Al-Saadi, the General Manager of Investor Outreach in the Ministry of Investments. Saudi Ambassador to Japan, Dr. Ghazi Binzagr also attended the workshop and the meetings.
Mohammed Al-Dahlawi, director Japan Office Ministry of Investment Saudi Arabia is also participating along with Mohammed Alfehaid, Director, Industrial Biotech, Ministry of Investment Saudi Arabia.
Bio Japan 2024, held in Yokohama and running from October 9th to 11th, brings together key players in the industry, experts, and innovators from around the world to showcase pioneering advancements in biotech, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, and health care technology.
According to the organizers, the conference brings together over 20,000 attendees from 35 countries, including leading biotech companies, research institutions, and government representatives.
Key topics of discussion will include innovations in biopharmaceuticals, advancements in stem cell research and gene therapies, sustainability in biotech, and how AI is revolutionizing drug discovery processes.


UK’s Tom Fletcher named head of UN humanitarian agency

UK’s Tom Fletcher named head of UN humanitarian agency
Updated 09 October 2024
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UK’s Tom Fletcher named head of UN humanitarian agency

UK’s Tom Fletcher named head of UN humanitarian agency
  • The organization grapples with unprecedented crises and budget pressures

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations named British diplomat and academic Tom Fletcher as head of its humanitarian agency on Wednesday, as the organization grapples with unprecedented crises and budget pressures.


“United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres today announced the appointment of Tom Fletcher of the United Kingdom as Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA),” the UN said in a statement.