Tag: emergency

  • USCATALOG World New Launch Crime Patrol Police Emergency Squad (Big Size) Toy

    USCATALOG World New Launch Crime Patrol Police Emergency Squad (Big Size) Toy

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    Viaan World Present New Launch Friction Powered Crime Patrol Emergency Squad Big Size Car Toy For Kids. Its Realistic Car Graphics Design Fast Moving Frictions Wheels Superb Built Quality Big Size. In The Box Sales Package 1Pcgeneral Type Tanks Trucks Big Vehicles Push Pull Along Toysgeneral Minimum Age 3 Yearsgeneral Assembly Required Nogeneral Number Of Contents 1Body Features Material Plasticpower Features Battery Type 0 No Batteries Batterypower Features Battery Operated Noproduct Dimensions Product Width 10 Cmproduct Dimensions Product Height 10 Cmproduct Dimensions Product Weight 310 G Material Plasticnonbattery Operatedage 3 Years
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  • Air India New York-Delhi flight diverted to London due to medical emergency

    Air India New York-Delhi flight diverted to London due to medical emergency

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    New Delhi: An Air India flight from New York to Delhi was diverted to London on Monday due to a medical emergency, according to an official.

    According to data available on the flight tracking website Flightradar24, the flight is being operated with a Boeing 777-337 (ER) aircraft.

    The official said the flight was diverted to London due to a medical emergency onboard. After deplaning the passenger concerned, the flight will take off from London for Delhi, the official added.

    Details about the medical emergency could not be immediately ascertained.

    The flight is likely to be delayed by at least 6-7 hours before it lands in Delhi, according to a wide-body aircraft pilot.

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    #Air #India #YorkDelhi #flight #diverted #London #due #medical #emergency

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • AI Express flight from Dubai makes emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram airport

    AI Express flight from Dubai makes emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram airport

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    Thiruvananthapuram: An Air India Express flight from Dubai to Thiruvananthapuram (Flt no IX540) made an emergency landing at the airport here on Sunday morning after the flight developed a technical snag in the nose wheel of the aircraft.

    All 156 passengers on board the flight are safe.

    The Air India Aircraft made an emergency landing at 5.40 a.m. after the pilot contacted the air traffic control requesting for an emergency landing. The airport immediately declared an ’emergency’ at the airport and made all the arrangements at the airport.

    The runway was cleared for emergency landing and the flight smoothly landed at the airport, sources in the airport told IANS.

    The aircraft was later towed away after all the 156 passengers embarked from it.

    The airport sources told IANS that no flights were diverted due to this incident. The Director General of Civil Aviation will conduct an investigation into the incident.

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    #Express #flight #Dubai #emergency #landing #Thiruvananthapuram #airport

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • White House mulls post-Covid emergency backstop for uninsured

    White House mulls post-Covid emergency backstop for uninsured

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    virus outbreak biden explainer 19719

    “We know that the end of the [Covid public health emergency] is not the end of our work on Covid,” said one senior administration official, who was granted anonymity to discuss the ongoing deliberations. “It remains a public health priority, and a lot of people will still need these treatments.”

    Biden health officials are preparing to unravel a sprawling set of pandemic policies over the next several months, as the administration ends the public health emergency on May 11 and moves toward managing the virus as a long-term disease.

    For a White House that has made vaccines and treatments the centerpiece of its pandemic response, preserving widespread access to those tools will rank among the most pressing political and policy challenges.

    The administration doesn’t plan to shift responsibility for vaccines and treatments to the private market until late summer at the earliest, giving it time beyond the May expiration of the public health emergency to navigate the handover. Even then, most people would still be able to get shots and treatments through private health insurers or federal programs like Medicare and Medicaid that would be newly responsible for negotiating their own supply deals with Covid drugmakers. A separate pre-existing federal program would continue providing free vaccinations for uninsured children.

    But for the roughly 30 million adults without coverage, the changeover means they could be forced to pay out of pocket for drugs that can cost hundreds of dollars per dose — raising concerns among health experts that those most in need of pandemic care will soon be least able to afford it.

    “Figuring out a way to ensure that cost is not the barrier for people to access vaccines, tests and treatments is essential,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Brown University. “We have seen throughout this pandemic that income is one of the most important determinants of who has been able to protect themselves and who hasn’t.”

    Joe Biden championed the rollout of hundreds of millions of free Covid shots as a hallmark accomplishment of his presidency that allowed people to resume their everyday lives. The availability of treatments, he has said, marked another major step in his administration’s efforts to minimize the public health threat.

    “We have broken Covid’s grip on us,” Biden said during his State of the Union address last week. “We’ve saved millions of lives and opened our country back up.”

    Wary of allowing the virus to flare up again, the Biden administration has lobbied Congress to create a “Vaccines for Adults” program that would permanently keep Covid shots free for everyone. But there’s little expectation the idea will gain traction with Republicans in control of the House, prompting concerns among public health officials and consumer advocates over how the administration plans to fill the gap.

    “They definitely understand that we’re going back to our longstanding so-called medical care system that leaves a lot of people in the lurch,” said Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer for the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. “But nobody’s heard a definitive plan.”

    The Department of Health and Human Services has pledged to take care of the uninsured, though it’s so far offered few specifics. The department has instead focused first on preparing the health industry and consumer groups for the official end of the health emergency, health officials said, with plans to roll out more details on commercialization as that process is finalized in the coming months.

    But behind the scenes, health officials have accelerated work on a plan to redirect leftover funds and supplies into a temporary program focused solely on getting vaccines, tests and treatments to the uninsured.

    The plan is in its early stages, and the people with knowledge of the matter cautioned that several elements could still change. But under the emerging post-commercialization blueprint, the administration would seek to keep Covid care free for uninsured adults through the end of the year and potentially into the summer of 2024.

    Health officials have explored extending a partnership with pharmacies to provide no-cost Covid testing into 2024, as well distributing tests from its own federal stockpile to places like homeless shelters, food banks and community centers most likely to work with the uninsured.

    Officials also estimate that they can keep enough of the government’s existing supply of the antiviral Paxlovid on hand to cover the uninsured population for months after coverage shifts to the private market for others.

    As for vaccines, the administration has discussed setting aside enough money to purchase a small number of doses in the fall, when drugmakers are expected to update their vaccines and the government anticipates handing off distribution responsibilities to the private sector.

    That new stockpile could be fewer than 10 million doses, the people with knowledge of the matter said, based on the expectation that demand for Covid boosters will remain low. Fewer than 20 percent of American adults have received the latest booster, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a figure that officials estimate is even lower among an uninsured population that skews younger.

    The administration is still sorting out several logistical questions, including how much of its network of pharmacies, health centers, local health departments and other community sites it can use to continue distributing vaccines and treatments after commercialization.

    Overall, the program will also be sharply limited by Congress’ yearlong refusal to fund the Covid response. The administration has less than $1 billion left over to put toward its uninsured plan, meaning costs could ultimately determine how long the federal aid can last.

    But the hope is that the plan would provide a temporary bridge, giving the administration more time to make the case for additional funding — and in the process, fending off concerns that a White House that pledged to prioritize equity in its pandemic might end up leaving the most vulnerable behind.

    “There can be no surprises here,” the senior administration official said, acknowledging the stakes for the millions of uninsured and Biden’s own Covid legacy. “And we are working to have no surprises.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Monkeypox still international public health emergency: WHO

    Monkeypox still international public health emergency: WHO

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    Geneva: The World Health Organization (WHO) said that a widespread outbreak of the mpox (monkeypox) remained a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC).

    The WHO officially declared in July 2022 that the mpox outbreak outside of the traditional endemic areas in Africa had already turned into a PHEIC, the highest level of alert that the global health authority could issue, Xinhua news agency reported.

    In a statement on Wednesday, the WHO said its experts acknowledged the progress in the global response to the mpox outbreak and a further decline in the number of reported cases during the last few months.

    However, a few countries continued to see a sustained incidence of cases, while other regions were likely to have under-reporting of confirmed cases. The WHO committee of experts and WHO Secretary-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus have therefore both maintained that mpox remains an international public health emergency.

    The latest statistics from the WHO have shown that the current global risk of the mpox outbreak is assessed as moderate, while being reduced from moderate to low in the Region of South-East Asia. It also remains low in the Western Pacific Region.

    Meanwhile, the WHO said its preparedness and response plan against the mpox outbreak, which was launched in July 2022 to help guide coordinated public health action, would come to an end in June 2023.

    Two WHO regions, Europe and the Americas, which reported 95 percent of diagnosed cases, have maintained stable in case numbers during recent weeks.

    As of February 3, 43 countries and territories had not detected any new cases in the past three months, the WHO European Region reported. The Region of the Americas has also reported a stable number of cases in the last six weeks, with 200 to 250 cases per week.

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    #Monkeypox #international #public #health #emergency

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pakistan govt calls emergency session of parliament; introduces bill to raise Rs 170 billion taxes

    Pakistan govt calls emergency session of parliament; introduces bill to raise Rs 170 billion taxes

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    Islamabad: The cash-strapped Pakistan government on Wednesday introduced a money bill in parliament to raise Rs 170 billion in taxes by June this year as part of conditions by the IMF to get the next tranche of an already agreed loan.

    Finance Minister Ishaq Dar presented the Finance (Supplementary) Bill, 2023, in the National Assembly — the lower house — empowered to legislate on money matters.

    Pakistan and IMF officials held 10 days of marathon talks in Islamabad, from January 31 to February 9, but could not reach a deal as the fund demanded prior actions before signing any agreement to release USD 1.1 billion out of the USD 7 billion deal agreed in 2019.

    Speaking in the house after introducing the bill, Dar said the government was aware of the hardships of common people and tried its best to not further burden them through new taxes.

    He also accused the previous government of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) led by Imran Khan of damaging the national economy. “When we were in the government, Pakistan’s economy was 24th largest in the world, but now it has dropped to 47th position,” he said.

    Dar also said that the devastating floods of the last year also played havoc with the economy, creating huge problems for the government.

    The government was forced to bring legislation through the parliament after President Arif Alvi on Tuesday refused to promulgate an ordinance to raise the new taxes and “advised” the finance minister to take parliament into confidence over the Rs 170 billion taxes.

    The Cabinet met after the president’s “refusal” and approved the bill later in the evening after a debate. It also summoned the parliament to meet in an emergency session and pass the new bill.

    The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) issued an order after the cabinet meeting to enhance a federal excise duty on locally manufactured cigarettes, which would generate up to Rs 60 billion in taxes on tobacco products, while the Finance Division issued a notification increasing the general sales tax by one per cent to 18 per cent to raise another Rs 55 billion.

    The remaining amount of Rs 55 billion to fulfil Rs 170 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) demand was being collected through an increase in excise duty on airline tickets, and sugary drinks as well as an increase in withholding tax rates through the Finance (Supplementary) Bill 2023.

    Pakistani and IMF officials are now holding talks in virtual settings to finalise a deal to provide the much-needed funds to shore up the foreign exchange that dropped to below USD 3 billion this month.

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    #Pakistan #govt #calls #emergency #session #parliament #introduces #bill #raise #billion #taxes

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cyclone Gabrielle: New Zealand declares emergency

    Cyclone Gabrielle: New Zealand declares emergency

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    Wellington: New Zealand declared a state of emergency on Monday as Cyclone Gabrielle started to lash the North Island.

    People in several regions such as Northland and Auckland, the country’s largest city, have been warned of high risk of tidal flooding by the civil defense department. Thousands of people are cut off power in the North Island, Xinhua reported.

    According to forecast, 400 millimeters of rain and wind gusts of 130 km/hour are expected over the next 20 hours.

    The national carrier Air NZ cancelled all domestic flights in and out of Auckland on Sunday, and many international flights are also cancelled.

    Most schools and childcare centres in the region have closed, and 26 emergency shelters and civil defense centers have been set up across Auckland, according to the civil defense department.

    Auckland and many other places in the region were upgraded to red alert on Sunday as MetService, the national meteorological service of the country, warned that the worst weather is yet to come.

    The government asked residents to prepare sandbags to buffer their homes, store food and water, and be ready for necessary evacuations in the coming days. Many sandbag stations are set up across Auckland overnight, and locals are encouraged to prepare their own sandbags for extreme situations.

    New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins urged people to “take the severe weather warning seriously” and “stay at home, cancel all unnecessary travels.”

    This is only two weeks after Auckland and the adjacent region Waikato were inundated by record downpours and floods.

    Red Warnings are only issued for the most significant weather events, and this is the second time in the year 2023.

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    #Cyclone #Gabrielle #Zealand #declares #emergency

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Germany to issue emergency visas to Turkey, Syria earthquake victims

    Germany to issue emergency visas to Turkey, Syria earthquake victims

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    Berlin: Germany will grant three-month visas to Turkish and Syrian earthquake victims with family in the country, the interior minister said on Saturday.

    “This is emergency aid,” German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser told the daily newspaper Bild.

    “We want to allow Turkish or Syrian families in Germany to bring their close relatives from the disaster area to their homes without bureaucracy,” added Faeser.

    More than 28,000 people were killed in the devastating earthquake that rocked Turkey and Syria on Monday.

    It reached 28,192 on Saturday (local time), with Turkey’s death toll climbing to 24,617, Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay said in a news conference.

    In Syria, the total number of confirmed deaths stands at 3,575, including 2,167 in rebel-held areas in the northwest, according to the White Helmets civil defense group.

    An additional 1,408 deaths have been recorded in government-controlled territories, according to Syrian state media, which cited the country’s health ministry.

    Faeser said that those eligible can have “regular visas, issued quickly and valid for three months”.

    She added that the joint initiative with the foreign ministry would allow victims to “find shelter and receive medical treatment” in Germany.

    Around 2.9 million people of Turkish origin live in Germany, with more than half holding Turkish nationality.

    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday announced a three-month state of emergency in the 10 provinces in southeastern Turkey impacted by the tremor.

    Earlier, Germany has also suspended rescue and relief work at the site of a deadly earthquake in Turkey due to security concerns, following a similar move by Austria earlier Saturday, reported CNN.

    The German Federal Agency for Technical Relief (THW) stopped its rescue operations due to a change in the security situation in the Hatay region, the organization said in a statement Saturday.

    It had been operating with International Search and Rescue (ISAR) Germany, in coordination with Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management Agency (AFAD).

    “In the last few hours, the security situation in the Hatay region has apparently changed. There are increasing reports of clashes between different groups. The search and rescue teams of ISAR Germany and THW will therefore remain in the joint base camp for the time being. ISAR and THW will resume their work as soon as AFAD deems the situation to be safe,” read the statement.

    The Austrian Army also cited security risks in suspending its operations, reported CNN.

    The Austrian Army has suspended rescue operations in Turkey due to an “increasingly difficult security situation,” according to the Austrian Forces Disaster Relief Unit (AFDRU).

    “The expected success of saving a life bears no reasonable relation to the security risk. There is increasing aggression between groups in Turkey,” Lieutenant Colonel Pierre Kugelweis of the AFDRU said in a statement Saturday.

    “There was no attack on us Austrians. We’re all fine … The mood among the helpers is good, given the circumstances … We would like to help, but the circumstances are what they are,” Kugelweis continued.

    “We keep our rescue and recovery forces ready. We are ready for further operations,” Kugelweis added, stating that a scheduled return to Austria for Thursday remains in place.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Germany #issue #emergency #visas #Turkey #Syria #earthquake #victims

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Emirates to send emergency aid to victims of Turkey-Syria earthquake

    Emirates to send emergency aid to victims of Turkey-Syria earthquake

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    Abu Dhabi: In the wake of the catastrophic earthquakes in Turkey and Syria that hit the countries on Monday, Dubai-based Emirates Airlines is setting up an airbridge withthe Dubai International Humanitarian City (IHC),to transport as much as 100 tonnes of crucial aid to survivors.

    An air bridge is being established to transport urgent relief supplies, medical materials and equipment over the next two weeks to support the assistance efforts on the ground and search and rescue activities in both countries, Emirates said.

    The first shipments are due to go out on Friday, consisting of high thermal blankets and family tents, medical kits and shelter items.

    In the coming days, more consignments of blankets, tents, shelter kits, flash lights, water distribution ramps and trauma and emergency health kits will be transported on Emirates.

    Emirates SkyCargo plans to dedicate cargo space for around 100 tonnes of humanitarian relief goods over the course of the next two weeks across its daily flight operations to Istanbul.

    The critical emergency supplies carried on Emirates will then be delivered by local organizations to affected areas in southern Turkey and northern Syria, supporting on-ground responders and providing much needed aid to the hundreds of thousands of people impacted by the earthquakes.

    The new aid mission is the latest step in the UAE’s efforts to support the affected countries.

    Earlier on February 7, UAE pledged $100 million to Syria and Turkey. following a massive earthquake that killed more than 23,000 people across both countries.

    The 50-bed UAE hospital, which is equipped with a CAT scanner and an X-ray machine, arrived at Gaziantep Airport on Wednesday.

    Turkey’s ambassador to the UAE said on Wednesday that the field hospital will be set up in Hatay province.

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    #Emirates #send #emergency #aid #victims #TurkeySyria #earthquake

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UN launches emergency responses following earthquakes in Turkey, Syria

    UN launches emergency responses following earthquakes in Turkey, Syria

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    United Nations: In the wake of devastating earthquakes that struck southern Turkey and northern Syria early on Monday, UN aid agencies have scrambled to help many thousands of reported victims, including those still believed to be buried under the rubble.

    “My heart goes out to the people of Turkiye and Syria in this hour of tragedy,” said the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in a statement. “The United Nations is fully committed to supporting the response. Our teams are on the ground assessing the needs and providing assistance.”

    The initial 7.8 magnitude quake struck close to Gaziantep, a major city and capital of the Gaziantep Province, in the westernmost part of Turkey’s Southeastern Anatolia Region, followed by another 7.5 magnitude tremor several hours later, Xinhua news agency reported.

    After the second earthquake, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) released a situation overview saying that “close to 2,000 deaths have been reported” in the two countries impacted, with at least 78 aftershocks.

    A Level 4 alarm has been issued by the Turkish government, requesting international assistance.

    In northwest Syria, 4.1 million people rely on humanitarian assistance, mostly women and children.

    A cholera outbreak is ongoing in Syrian communities, coupled with harsh winter weather. In the last quarter of 2022, there is a funding gap of 48 per cent, with $371 million pledged out of a required total of just over 800 million.

    “As part of the United Nations family, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) stands ready to support affected people in the coming days, weeks and months as they recover from this tragedy,” UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner said in a statement.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has authorized emergency medical teams to provide care to the injured and most vulnerable populations, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a tweet.

    The OCHA noted that the epicenter of the initial 7.8 magnitude earthquake is close to Gaziantep in southern Trkiye, an important UN aid hub for northern Syria. Many cities in the region were affected.

    “This is one of the largest earthquakes in recent times. Turkey and Syria need all the help they can get. The current search and rescue efforts will last a few days but soon the main priority will be medical assistance for the injured, the restoration of water, power and other services, and shelter for those who have lost their homes,” said former UN relief chief Mark Lowcock in a live commentary obtained by Xinhua through email.

    Lowcock is a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington, DC, and London, which focuses on international development.

    “Deeply saddened by the loss of life caused by this morning’s #earthquake,” the UN refugee agency in Syria tweeted, adding that it was “actively coordinating a response with #UN Agencies and other humanitarian actors to deliver assistance and support to those in need in Syria.”

    “As part of the United Nations family, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) stands ready to support affected people in the coming days, weeks and months as they recover from this tragedy,” UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner said in a statement.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has authorized emergency medical teams to provide care to the injured and most vulnerable populations, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a tweet.

    The OCHA noted that the epicenter of the initial 7.8 magnitude earthquake is close to Gaziantep in southern Turkiye, an important UN aid hub for northern Syria. Many cities in the region were affected.

    “This is one of the largest earthquakes in recent times. Turkey and Syria need all the help they can get. The current search and rescue efforts will last a few days but soon the main priority will be medical assistance for the injured, the restoration of water, power and other services, and shelter for those who have lost their homes,” said former UN relief chief Mark Lowcock in a live commentary obtained by Xinhua through email.

    Lowcock is a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington, D.C., and London, which focuses on international development.

    “Deeply saddened by the loss of life caused by this morning’s #earthquake,” the UN refugee agency in Syria tweeted, adding that it was “actively coordinating a response with #UN Agencies and other humanitarian actors to deliver assistance and support to those in need in Syria”.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )