Tag: illness

  • Pakistani-Canadian journalist Tarek Fatah passes away after prolonged illness

    Pakistani-Canadian journalist Tarek Fatah passes away after prolonged illness

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    Ottawa: Pakistani-Canadian columnist Tarek Fatah passed away on Monday after a prolonged battle with Cancer, his daughter Natasha Fatah, who herself is a journalist, shared the news.

    “Lion of Punjab. Son of Hindustan. Lover of Canada. Speaker of truth. Fighter for justice. Voice of the down-trodden, underdogs, and the oppressed. Tarek Fatah has passed the baton on… his revolution will continue with all who knew and loved him. Will you join us? 1949-2023,” Natasha tweeted.

    Born in Karachi, Pakistan before emigrating to Canada in 1987, Fatah was an award-winning reporter, columnist, and radio and television commentator, both in Canada and abroad, with a huge social media following, according to Toronto Sun.
    Fatah, who died at 73, was a political activist, a fierce defender of human rights and a staunch opponent of religious fanaticism in any form, nothing scared Tarek Fatah.

    MS Education Academy

    As a secular Muslim who authored books titled The Jew is Not My Enemy: Unveiling the Myths that Fuel Muslim Anti-Semitism and Chasing a Mirage: The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic State, Tarek was never deterred by controversy.

    On the contrary, he would dive right in.

    As one of many examples, he was a fierce critic of Pakistan and an advocate for the Baloch separatist movement, fighting for an independent Balochistan state.

    Expressing his condolences over the death of the columnist, “Kashmir Files” film director Vivek Agnihotri tweeted, “There was one and only @TarekFatah- daring, funny, knowledgable, sharp thinker, great orator and a fearless fighter. Tarek, my brother, it was a delight to have you as a close friend. Will you be able to rest in peace? Om Shanti.”

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    #PakistaniCanadian #journalist #Tarek #Fatah #passes #prolonged #illness

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Illness count from contaminated water in Hamirpur villages touches 535, Himachal CM seeks report

    Illness count from contaminated water in Hamirpur villages touches 535, Himachal CM seeks report

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    Hamirpur: The number of people taken ill after allegedly consuming contaminated water in a dozen villages of Nadaun sub-division in Himachal Pradesh’s Hamirpur district rose to 535 on Sunday.

    People from a dozen villages, including Banh, Jandgi Gujran, Jandali Rajputan, Panyala, Pathiyalu, Niyati, Rangas Chowki Haar, Thain and Sankar have been affected by the outbreak of water-borne diseases.

    Rajeev Kumar, the head of Rangas panchayat, had earlier in the day said the number of people taken ill crossed 300.

    Some patients have been referred to hospitals in Hamirpur.

    Two to three people in every household have taken ill after consuming contaminated water provided by the Jal Shakti department, he added.

    It is believed that the high amount of bacteria in the water is causing the illness, Kumar said. He attributed it to contamination of the pit from which the water is supplied.

    Villagers said the water was supplied without being filtered from an under-construction tank, causing the outbreak.

    Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu, who is also the MLA from Naudan, has directed the district administration and the Health department to take proper care of the patients and ensure no shortage of medicines and other items.

    He has also sought a complete report from state- and district-level agencies.

    Health department teams have reached the affected villages to provide treatment to the people under the direct supervision of Chief Medical Officer (Hamirpur) Dr RK Agnihotri.

    Officials from the Jal Shakti department have swung into action. It has stopped water supply to the affected villages and sent samples for testing.

    Bottled water is being distributed among the people after supply was stopped, said a junior engineer in the department.

    Deputy Commissioner Debasweta Banik said essential medicines, ORS packets, chlorine tablets and other materials were delivered to the villages through doctors, health and Asha workers.

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    #Illness #count #contaminated #water #Hamirpur #villages #touches #Himachal #seeks #report

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Groups sue to block Newsom’s CARE Courts program for severe mental illness

    Groups sue to block Newsom’s CARE Courts program for severe mental illness

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    Failure to participate in “any component” of the plan could result in additional hearings and court actions, including conservatorship.

    Newsom and other supporters of the concept have framed it as a humane effort to help vulnerable Californians who might otherwise languish on the streets or in jails. But civil rights groups have opposed the law since its inception, arguing it could strip people of their rights and worsen their mental health. New York City Mayor Eric Adams has faced similar challenges following his directive last year to compel psychiatric evaluations of some residents.

    The coalition of groups who filed the petition in California described the program as expanding “an already problematic system into a framework of coerced, court-ordered mental health treatment.”

    They say the program wrongfully subjects Californians to involuntary treatment and fails to get at the root of the problem, such as the lack of affordable housing.

    “The CARE Act unnecessarily involves our court systems to force medical care and social services on people. We are opposed to this new system of coercion,” said Helen Tran, a senior attorney at the Western Center on Law and Poverty. “The state’s resources should, instead, be directed at creating more affordable, permanent supportive housing and expanding our systems of care to allow everyone who needs help to quickly access them.”

    The petition also names Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly.

    Newsom’s office issued a pointed statement Thursday in response to the court filing.

    “There’s nothing compassionate about allowing individuals with severe, untreated mental health and substance use disorders to suffer in our alleyways, in our criminal justice system, or worse — face death,” said Daniel Lopez, the governor’s deputy communications director. “While some groups want to delay progress with arguments in favor of the failing status quo, the rest of us are dealing with the cold, hard reality that something must urgently be done to address this crisis.”

    Seven counties are slated to launch their programs by October: San Francisco, San Diego, Orange, Riverside, Stanislaus, Tuolumne and Glenn. The remaining 51 counties would start CARE Courts in 2024.

    The concept of compelled mental health treatment has taken hold elsewhere — including in New York City, where Adams last year issued a directive allowing seriously mentally ill New Yorkers to be transported to hospitals for psychiatric evaluations without their consent.

    That policy faces legal challenges of its own. In December a coalition of groups filed an emergency request for a federal judge to block the plan from going into effect.

    California’s program is, in part, a response to the state’s growing homelessness problem. Nearly a quarter of all unsheltered Americans live in California, where massive encampments have taken over sidewalks, underpasses and public parks in most major cities. Democratic mayors across the state have increasingly favored more punitive measures for homeless people as public frustration grows.

    Newsom has made homelessness a key focus, and under his leadership the state has allocated upwards of $15 billion for local governments to deploy shelters and services.

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    #Groups #sue #block #Newsoms #CARE #Courts #program #severe #mental #illness
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )