Wednesday, 28 November 2018

Antidepressant use rose after Brexit vote, data shows

Antidepressant use in England rose significantly compared to other prescription drugs in the wake of Britain´s decision in 2016 to exit the European Union, according to new research released on Wednesday.

Debate over the merits of Brexit has dominated Britain´s political discourse for more than two years, split families and communities and prompted panicked contingency plans from businesses in the event of a "no deal" with Brussels.

But relatively little attention has been paid to the impact Brexit — and the long-running uncertainty that´s dogged the process — has had on the population´s mental health.

Researchers at King´s College London looked at official monthly prescribing data for antidepressants for all 326 voting districts in England, comparing it with other classes of drugs in the run up to the June 23, 2016 referendum and the weeks that followed.

Given that the Brexit result came as a surprise that ushered in "considerable uncertainty" over its effect on Britain´s economy and society, the study authors wanted to see if that translated to greater antidepressant use.

After calculating a "defined daily dose" to ensure they could compare different types of drugs fairly, they found that after the vote the volume of antidepressants prescribed increased 13.4 percent relative to the other medicines studied.

"This shows that relative antidepressant prescribing increased in England after the Brexit referendum, compared with other drug classes that were used as a control group," Sotiris Vandoros, senior lecturer in health economics at King´s College London and adjunct professor at Harvard University, told AFP.

Although it was difficult to definitively tie the vote result to the rise in antidepressant use, Vandoros said the fact that the increase was relative to other forms of prescription drug was significant.

"A growing body of literature suggests that economic uncertainty can have negative effects on mental health," he said.

"Job insecurity and worries about one´s future finances are associated with poorer health outcomes. Any event that triggers uncertainty and worries can have a negative effect."

Antidepressants up generally 

Given that antidepressants aren´t prescribed to everyone, the study´s authors said the results couldn´t be taken to mean that the national mood as a whole worsened after the Brexit vote.

Indeed, ardent supporters of Britain´s voluntary rupture with its single largest trading partner may have noticed their mood improve in the wake of the referendum.

But Vandoros said that, all else being equal, the shock vote result and the tumult that followed was the "likely explanation" behind the relative rise in antidepressant use.

The paper, which was published in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, argued that governments should do more to offer mental health advice and support during periods of political and economic uncertainty.

Allan Young, professor at King´s Institute of Psychiatry Psychology & Neuroscience, who wasn´t involved in the study, said its findings should be treated with "great caution".

"Antidepressant prescriptions have risen in England consistently over recent years and these data may simply reflect that rather than one single event," he said. "Nevertheless, the call to support mental health issues should be heeded."

With Prime Minister Theresa May facing a number of hurdles to get her final Brexit deal over the line by the time Britain leaves the bloc in March, Britons´ may at least soon get some clarity over the future of their country — for better or worse.

"When the UK leaves the EU, we will start to see reality unfolding with regards to the anticipated events," said Vandoros. "So uncertainty will be replaced with certain outcomes, whether positive or negative."

E. coli lettuce outbreak traced to California

An outbreak of E. coli linked to romaine lettuce appears to have been traced to crops in California, the US food authority said Monday.


American consumers were warned against eating the leafy salad by health officials last week.

The outbreak has caused 43 people to become sick in the US and another 22 in Canada, according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

"Our investigation at this point suggests that romaine lettuce associated with the outbreak comes from areas of California that grow romaine lettuce over the summer months," the FDA said in a statement.

"The outbreak appears to be related to ´end of season´ romaine lettuce harvested from these areas," it said.

The harvest has now shifted to other areas and it was "critically important to have a ´clean break´ in the romaine supply available to consumers in the US in order to purge the market of potentially contaminated romaine lettuce," the FDA said.

It added that the break in supply appears to have been accomplished after officials requested on November 20 that the produce be withdrawn from the market and destroyed.

On the same day — two days before the Thanksgiving holiday when Americans gather and feast together — the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advised consumers not to eat any romaine lettuce and to throw away any they might have in their homes.

Asian markets see modest gains as US takes a break

HONG KONG: Asian equities chalked up modest gains Thursday in light trading ahead of the US Thanksgiving holiday, following a rebound in energy and tech stocks on Wall Street.


But analysts cautioned the tepid uplift in New York Wednesday should not be interpreted as a sign of the start of a recovery from the recent carnage on global stock markets.

Investor sentiment remains fragile following the volatility that has swept markets since October, while the OECD has warned that the world economy has peaked and faces a slowdown as it confronts the Trump administration´s trade war and tighter monetary conditions.

The dollar slipped against the euro, the pound and the yen amid reports the Federal Reserve may pause future interest-rate hikes.

Crude prices resumed their downward trajectory Thursday, after a brief recovery on Wednesday.

The commodity has fallen by almost 30 per cent from four-year highs touched at the start of October. Oil analysts attribute the pullback to high supply as well as a weakening global growth outlook.

"This half-hearted recovery effort should not be confused with anything other than pre-holiday scramble doing little more than what amounted to chasing oil prices," said Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trade at OANDA.

"Markets have been remarkably muted, even by holiday standards."

He added the post-Thanksgiving Black Friday shopping spree would be "the ultimate litmus test of US consumer confidence heading into the holiday season".

Ahead of a Friday holiday in Japan, the Nikkei rose 0.65 per cent as investors took heart from the weakening yen.

However, fresh data suggested the world´s third-largest economy is continuing to struggle in its years-long battle with deflation.

Bitter row

Inflation in Japan stood at one per cent in October, unchanged from the previous month, according to government data.

Japan has battled deflation for many years and the central bank´s ultra-loose monetary policy appears to have had limited impact.

Late last month, the Bank of Japan again revised down inflation forecasts, in the latest sign it had failed to make headway towards its two-per cent target despite years of massive monetary easing.

Shares in Nissan rose 0.77 per cent ahead of its board meeting that will propose the sacking of disgraced chairman Carlos Ghosn, after his spectacular arrest for financial misconduct sent shockwaves through the car industry and the business world.

The scandal has sparked questions over whether the alliance of Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi Motors can survive without Ghosn, seen as the glue holding together his fractious creation, which globally employs around 450,000 people.

Elsewhere, Hong Kong ended the day with modest gains and Shanghai closed slightly down, while Sydney was the standout regional performer, gaining 0.9 per cent. Shares in Singapore were up even as the trade-reliant city-state braces for slower economic growth next year as demand in key markets in Asia weakens.

In early trade in Europe Thursday, London dropped 0.2 per cent while both Paris and Frankfurt slid 0.3 per cent. Bourses had staged a sharp recovery Wednesday even as the EU, as expected, officially rejected Italy´s big-spending budget, clearing the path for unprecedented sanctions and deepening a bitter row with Rome´s populist government.

However, reports said Italy´s government may be open to budget revisions as the European Union took a first step toward imposing fines on the country.

Oil plunges nearly eight per cent despite talk of output cut

BOSTON: Oil prices slumped up to nearly 8 per cent to the lowest in more than a year on Friday, posting the seventh consecutive weekly loss, amid intensifying fears of a supply glut even as major producers consider cutting output.


Oil supply, led by US producers, is growing faster than demand and to prevent a build-up of unused fuel such as the one that emerged in 2015, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is expected to start trimming output after a meeting on December 6.

But this has done little so far to prop up prices, which have dropped more than 20 per cent so far in November, in a seven-week streak of losses. Prices were on course for their biggest one-month decline since late 2014.

A trade war between the world’s two biggest economies and oil consumers, the United States and China, has weighed upon the market.

“The market is pricing in an economic slowdown - they are anticipating that the Chinese trade talks are not going to go well,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago, referring to expected talks next week between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires.

“The market doesn’t believe that OPEC is going to be able to act swiftly enough to offset the coming slowdown in demand,” Flynn said.

Brent crude futures settled down $3.80 a barrel, or 6.1 per cent at $58.80. During the session, the benchmark dropped to $58.41, the lowest since October 2017.

US West Texas Intermediate crude lost $4.21, or 7.7 per cent, to trade at $50.42, also the weakest since October 2017. In post-settlement trade, the contract continued to fall.

For the week, Brent fell 11.3 per cent and WTI posted a 10.8 per cent decline, the largest one-week drop since January 2016.

Market fears over weak demand intensified after China reported its lowest gasoline exports in more than a year amid a glut of the fuel in Asia and globally.

Stockpiles of gasoline have surged across Asia, with inventories in Singapore, the regional refining hub, rising to a three-month high while Japanese stockpiles also climbed last week. Inventories in the United States are about seven per cent higher than a year ago.

Crude production has soared as well this year. The International Energy Agency expects non-OPEC output alone to rise by 2.3 million barrels per day (bpd) this year while demand next year was expected to grow 1.3 million bpd.

Adjusting to lower demand, top crude exporter Saudi Arabia said on Thursday that it may reduce supply as it pushes OPEC to agree to a joint output cut of 1.4 million bpd.

However, Trump has made it clear that he does not want oil prices to rise and many analysts think Saudi Arabia is coming under US pressure to resist calls from other OPEC members for lower crude output.

If OPEC decides to cut production at its meeting next month, oil prices could recover, analysts say.

“We expect that OPEC will manage the market in 2019 and assess the probability of an agreement to reduce production at around 2-in-3. In that scenario, Brent prices likely recover back into the $70s,” Morgan Stanley commodities strategists Martijn Rats and Amy Sergeant wrote in a note to clients.

If OPEC does not trim production, prices could head much lower, potentially depreciating toward $50 a barrel, argues Lukman Otunuga, Research Analyst at FXTM.

Volatility spikes to two-year high 
By the middle of November, commodity trading advisory funds tracked by Credit Suisse prime services had dropped 1.5 per cent on the month, owing to the losses in energy futures and the increased volatility.

Mark Connors, global head of portfolio and risk advisory at Credit Suisse, told Reuters this week that the action among macro and CTA funds reflects a risk-aversion trade, as net long positions have dropped from near five-year highs to roughly even exposure between longs and shorts.

Hedge funds and other money managers cut their net long positions in Brent by 32,263 contracts to 182,569 in the week ended November 20, according to data provided by the Intercontinental Exchange on Friday. That’s the lowest net long position since December 2015.

Volatility, a measure of investor demand for options, has spiked to its highest since late 2016, above 60 per cent, as investors have rushed to buy protection against further steep price declines.

The decline in oil prices pulled US energy shares lower. Oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp fell more than three per cent and were the leading decliners on the Dow Jones Industrial Average Oilfield service providers Schlumberger NV and Halliburton Co also fell nearly three per cent.

Sophie Turner and Joe Jonas reach India for Nick, Priyanka's wedding

Bollywood actor Priyanka Chopra and American singer Nick Jonas’ wedding is only days away and family and guests have started to arrive in India.


Nick reached New Delhi on Thursday where Priyanka Chopra was shooting for The Sky is Pink, after which the couple left for Mumbai where the wedding celebrations are under way.

Now, Nick’s brother Joe Jonas and his fiancee, Game of Thrones star Sophie Turner, have reached Mumbai.

I may not have a very high IQ but my EQ is quite decent . But when I saw a VFX made visual of a dragon dying and then turning evil my heart melt. I was heartbroken at the same time it would be evil to say that I celebrated the death of a person. What??? Yes we are talking about the death of #sansastark rude and obnoxious husband #ramsaybolton of #gameofhrones . I was so thrilled to see my favourite Sansa #sophieturner at the airport after I landed from Delhi. Accompanying her is #joejonas bro of #nickjonas . They are here for the big wedding in Jodhpur.. Let the #priyankakishaadi begin ️️️ @viralbhayani

Nick and Priyanka’s wedding celebrations begin on November 29 in Jodhpur.

Priyanka is expected to keep the wedding a private affair. According to a report in Bombay Times, Priyanka will be boarding a chopper from Udaipur to reach Umaid Bhawan Palace in Jodhpur on November 29 in order to avoid the media.

The couple is expected to host two lavish wedding receptions, one in Delhi and another in Mumbai.

Reports claim that the Hindu wedding ceremony is to be held at the Umaid Bhawan Palace in Jodhpur on December 2 and will also be followed by a Christian wedding. 

Nawaz demands NAB probe into Dubai property owned by Aleema Khan

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif Wednesday raised questions over a Dubai property owned by Prime Minister Imran Khan's sister, Aleema Khan, and demanded the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) to probe into her sources for purchasing the property.


In his informal conversation with journalists during his appearance before an accountability court, the former premier said the NAB does hold investigations against members of his party, adding that the anti-corruption watchdog should also find out how the prime minister's sister purchased the property.

This month, Aleema Khan deposited half the total cost of her previously undeclared Dubai property with tax authorities as penalty.

Aleema paid 25 per cent of the total estimated amount of her luxurious flat, "The Lofts East-1406", in taxes and 25 per cent fine charges, officials had said. The prime minister's sister was slapped with a double penalty (taxes and fine) because she did not disclose the said property worth around Rs74 million.

The said luxurious flat was located in the heart of Dubai, adjacent to Burj Khalifa, the most expensive area in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), added the officials.

"Wherefrom did Aleema Khan get property worth billions in Dubai," Nawaz questioned, adding that Aleema Khan does not even have any sources of income.


He said the prime minister's sister paid fine for hiding property, questioning, "Isn't it an NRO (National Reconciliation Ordinance)?"

Noting that Aleema is also a board member of Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital (SKMCH), the former premier asked what is the money trail of her property.

He said the nation wants to know who is behind Aleema Khan's property.

Nawaz said they saved Rs160 billion in power projects, behind which was tireless efforts of the then Punjab chief minister Shehbaz Sharif.

"But Shehbaz Sharif was thrown in jail instead of commending him," he lamented.

The former premier further said the Lahore-Multan Motorway project has been completed, but it is not being operationalised.

"Name the project PTI Motorway, but at least open it," he urged, saying the government is not ready to operationalise projects initiated by them.

Nawaz further regretted his incarceration despite having done much for the country.

"We made JF-17 fighter jet in collaboration with China. Is it reward for that we are made to face prisons?" he asked.

"Thinking about this hurts. Then you say I do not speak up," the former premier told reporters.

He said people accuse him of making a 'compromise' if he does not speak up, questioning, "Can an individual, returning from London after being sentenced, go for an NRO?

"You can neither write nor publish whatever I would say," Nawaz told the newsmen.

Ronaldo hits 100 Champions League wins as Juventus soar into last 16

TURIN: Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri hailed the impact Cristiano Ronaldo was having on the Italian champions as the Portuguese star became the first player to achieve 100 Champions League wins in Tuesday´s 1-0 success over Valencia that clinched their passage to the knockout rounds.


"Ronaldo gives us a sense of security and confidence," said Allegri of the beaten finalists in two of the last four editions of the elite European competition.

"The team is essentially the same as last season. We´ve grown, become faster in playing the ball, but then of course, there is Cristiano Ronaldo.

"This team is constantly improving - they´re passing and putting play together more quickly."

Ronaldo -- who joined Juventus last summer from Real Madrid -- is targeting a sixth Champions League title to add to his four with the Spanish team and one with Manchester United.

The Italian team are looking for their third European title and first since 1995.

Last season they exited in the quarter-finals to Ronaldo´s Real Madrid.

The 33-year-old played a key role against Valencia providing the assist on 59 minutes which Croatian Mario Mandzukic tapped in for his third goal in as many matches.

Juventus had needed just a point to ensure qualification.

Their win combined with Manchester United´s late 1-0 win over Young Boys at Old Trafford means Valencia crash out of the competition.

Allegri´s side will now have to wait to see whether they top Group H when they play their final group game mid-December in Bern against Young Boys.

´Great spirit´
Ronaldo came out firing on all cylinders after his controversial red card during his first Champions League game for Juventus in Valencia back in September, which Allegri´s side still won 2-0.

The five-time Ballon d´Or winner had two chances within the first three minutes to add to his record tally of 121 Champions League goals.

Valencia had their best chance before the break when Mouctar Diakhaby´s header off a corner was punched out with one hand by Juventus goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.

Just before the hour mark, Ronaldo broke free of Valencia defender Gabriel and with some fancy footwork fired low across the face of the goal leaving Mandzukic to finish off.

Valencia thought they had scored the equaliser two minutes later but Diakhaby´s header was ruled to have come off his hand.

Valenica goalkeeper Neto kept out a late goal-bound header from Ronaldo, who rose to meet Paulo Dybala´s out-swinging corner.

"You can see how united we are including the forwards," said Juventus captain Giorgio Chiellini.

"All three of them - Ronaldo, Mandzukic and Dybala, really put themselves about today. If we scrap like that, with the skill we have in the side, it makes everything much easier.

"We have to turn the page now - we´ll start thinking about the Champions League again in February. We must focus on Serie A because we have a tough month ahead," added the defender as the league leaders target an eighth consecutive domestic title.

"The match was decided by great play by Cristiano," said Valencia coach Marcelino Garcia, "but out team gave everything, showing great spirit against one of the best teams in Europe."

Eddings tapped to lead Australian cricket

Australian cricket´s embattled governing body named Earl Eddings to lead the organisation out of crisis Wednesday, opting for a safe pair of hands already serving on the board.


Cricket Australia said in a statement that it had bumped Eddings -- a director of a risk-management company -- from deputy and interim chairman to have the role full time.

"I am honoured to serve in this position and am committed to making cricket stronger and a game that we can all be proud of," Eddings said.

Cricket Australia has been buffeted by a series of bad performances by the men´s test side, after a ball tampering scandal saw the captain and vice captain stood down for cheating.

Amid the fallout from the fiasco, former chairman David Peever also quit under intense pressure.

The sport´s top body had been under some pressure to appoint a former Australian player.

But likely replacement ex-captain Mark Taylor recently quit the board, while CA director and ex-fast bowler Michael Kasprowicz was overlooked.

The board instead opted for "a well-regarded member of the team with a solid understanding of our history," said director Jacquie Hey.

"Earl´s involvement over the past decade provides continuity in a time of change," she added.

In March, top players were caught using sandpaper to alter the ball at a Test match in Cape Town.

Then-captain Steve Smith and his deputy David Warner were banned for 12 months, and batsman Cameron Bancroft for nine months over their roles in the incident.

Coach Darren Lehmann quit soon after and then-chief executive James Sutherland stepped down last month.

A Cricket Australia commissioned report, found an "arrogant" and "controlling" culture within the organisation contributed to players cheating in the pursuit of victory. 

Hockey World Cup kicks off in India today

BHUBANESWAR: The 14th edition of the Hockey World Cup gets under way in Bhubaneswar, India from today.


This year’s mega-event will feature hosts India, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Canada, England, Germany, Ireland, Malaysia, Netherlands, Spain, New Zealand and Pakistan and will continue till December 16.

Group A consists of Argentina, France, Spain and New Zealand whereas Australia, England, Ireland and China are placed in Pool B. Hosts India, Belgium, Canada and South Africa make up Group C. Group D comprises Pakistan, Germany, Netherlands and Malaysia.


The tournament will officially get underway with India playing South Africa and Canada taking on Belgium on the opening day.

Four-time champions Pakistan will begin their World Cup campaign on December 1st against Germany. They have lifted the trophy in 1971, 1978, 1982 and 1994.


The opening ceremony in Bhubaneswar on November 27 saw Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan recreate his Chak De India moment with his 'sattar minute' speech. He was joined by Madhuri Dixit.

Further, Salman Khan has confirmed he will be participating in the second inaugural ceremony in Cuttack today.

A R Rahman, who has composed the theme song of the World Cup, will perform in today's ceremony in Cuttack after mesmerising the crowd on Tuesday.

Race, Trump factors in final US Senate race of 2018, in Mississippi

Voters in Mississippi on Tuesday will decide a US Senate special election runoff marked by racial controversy and capped by a last-minute visit by President Donald Trump to shore up the beleaguered Republican incumbent.



Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith, a white former state lawmaker who was appointed to the seat in April, is still favored over black Democrat Mike Espy in the reliably Republican state, which has not sent a Democrat to the US Senate since 1982.

But she has been engulfed in a political storm since a video surfaced showing her praising a supporter at a Nov. 2 public event by saying: “If he invited me to a public hanging, I’d be on the front row.”

The comment caused an uproar in Mississippi, a deep South state with a history of racism and violence against blacks, including lynchings. Several businesses, including giant retailer Walmart, demanded that she return their donations.

Hyde-Smith was also shown on another video joking about suppressing liberal student votes, and photographs have surfaced of her posing with Confederate artifacts in 2014.

Espy, a former congressman and US agriculture secretary, gained new momentum from the furor in a state where 38 percent of residents are African-American.

“She is still the front-runner, but she is a wounded front-runner. She’s not the sure thing she was a few weeks ago,” said Nathan Shrader, a political science professor at Millsaps College in Jackson, the state’s biggest city.

Hyde-Smith, who initially refused to apologize for the hanging remark, said last week she was sorry “for anyone that was offended” and accused Espy of twisting her words for political gain.

Espy denied the charge and said “we all know what came out of your mouth.” He has said the comment perpetuated negative stereotypes about Mississippi and hurt investment.

Hyde-Smith, 59, has touted her support for Trump and her endorsement by the president, who won Mississippi by 18 percentage points in 2016. Trump held two get-out-the-vote rallies in the state on the eve of the election.

“Got to get out and vote, don’t take any chances,” he told supporters in Tupelo. “Your vote on Tuesday will decide whether we build on our extraordinary achievements or whether we empower the radical Democrats to obstruct our progress.”

The runoff to serve the last two years of former Republican Senator Thad Cochran’s term was necessary because neither Espy nor Hyde-Smith gained more than 50 percent of the vote in a Nov. 6 special election with four candidates. Cochran, 80, resigned earlier this year, citing health concerns.

The last contest of the midterm election cycle, Tuesday’s election will not affect the balance of power in the new Congress that sits in January. Republicans will still hold a Senate majority even if Hyde-Smith loses, while Democrats will take control of the House of Representatives.

A lack of public polling has contributed to uncertainty about the race.

Mississippi Democrats hope to recreate the coalition that propelled Democrat Doug Jones to a Senate victory in neighboring Alabama last year by energizing black voters, particularly women, and winning support from white swing voters.

Espy, 64, has campaigned as a moderate who would work with Trump and Republicans to benefit the state. Shrader said Espy had done a good job of walking the fine line of appealing to Republicans while still generating enthusiasm among Democrats.

“Hyde-Smith is relying on her Republican affiliation and her loyalty to Trump - and that might be enough,” he said.

Sri Lanka's top military official detained over mass murder cover-up

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka´s military chief was remanded by court Wednesday after weeks evading arrest over the alleged cover-up of the abduction and murder of 11 young men during the island´s civil war.


Admiral Ravindra Wijegunaratne is the highest-ranking military officer ever held by a court over alleged crimes from Sri Lanka´s wartime past, when the armed forces were accused of grave abuses against civilians.

The powerful Chief of the Defence Staff was detained after revelations he attempted to abduct a key witness over the weekend and have a police detective removed from the case.

"I am denying bail because in your position you are able to influence witnesses and disrupt the investigations," Magistrate Ranga Dassanayake told a packed courthouse in Colombo.

Wijegunaratne, who arrived at court flanked by military personnel, has denied protecting the chief suspect in the high-profile murders — a navy intelligence officer — or attempting to cover-up the crimes.

Wijegunaratne, who was chosen by the president, appeared in full military regalia, earning a rebuke from Magistrate Dassanayake who suggested he was trying to intimidate the court.

Earlier, his entourage attacked journalists trying to photograph Wijegunaratne as he arrived at court. A navy officer was later arrested by police for assault.

Three arrest warrants were issued for Wijegunaratne this month but the top military appointee refused to surrender, even travelling to Mexico as an envoy for the president.

Senior military figures have been accused of serious crimes and civilian abuses during Sri Lanka´s decades-long war, but have broadly enjoyed impunity from prosecution.

Grave abuses

Investigators told the court that Wijegunaratne helped the chief accused in the murders — Chandana Prasad Hettiarachchi, a naval intelligence officer.

He was accused of abducting and killing the wealthy men in their late teens and early 20s for ransom in the final days of the war that ended in 2009. Their bodies were never found.

Wijegunaratne, who is not directly tied to the murders, allegedly helped Hettiarachchi travel to Malaysia to evade arrest. The naval officer returned and was detained in August.

Military officials were accused of kidnapping and holding civilians for cash ransom during the war, among other major abuses documented by rights groups.

Several intelligence officers are facing prosecution over the murder of journalists critical of Mahinda Rajapakse, the former president whose tenure was marred by allegations of war crimes and grave rights abuses.

His recent controversial appointment as prime minister by Sri Lanka´s president has plunged the country into crisis, with parliament twice voting against the war-era strongman ruler taking over government.

Rajapakse, who has refused to step aside as Sri Lanka drifts in a power vacuum, and several members of his family, are being investigated for fraud and murder during his 10-year presidency.

But those inquiries were thrown into doubt after his surprise return to the helm of government in an alliance with President Maithripala Sirisena.

Rajapakse led Sri Lanka as government troops crushed the Tamil insurgency in May 2009, ending 37 years of bitter and brutal fighting.

The final days of the offensive were marked by major abuses, according to rights groups. A UN panel has said 40,000 civilians may have been killed in the final stages of the war.

European politicians call for new sanctions on Russia over Ukraine

MOSCOW/KERCH: Several senior European politicians on Tuesday raised the possibility of new sanctions against Russia to punish it for capturing three Ukrainian vessels at sea, an incident the West fears could ignite a wider conflict.


A Russian minister said further sanctions would solve nothing and that the incident should not be used to derail the Minsk accord, which aims to end fighting in eastern Ukraine between Kiev’s forces and pro-Russian separatist rebels.

Russian assets have come under pressure on financial markets amid concerns that possible new sanctions could hurt the economy, though the rouble on Tuesday clawed back some earlier losses as investors bet any sanctions would not be swift.

Russia opened fire on the Ukrainian boats and then seized them and their crews on Sunday near Crimea - which Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014. Moscow and Kiev have tried to pin the blame on each other for the incident.

President Vladimir Putin told German Chancellor Angela Merkel by phone on Monday that Moscow was ready to provide more details to bolster its version of events. Moscow says Kiev deliberately provoked it in order to trigger a crisis.

Merkel, who also spoke on Monday with Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko, called for de-escalation and dialogue.

The United States urged European nations on Tuesday to do more to assist Ukraine in its standoff with Russia.

US President Donald Trump told the Washington Post in an interview that he might cancel his scheduled meeting with Putin at the G20 summit in Argentina this week over the maritime clash, adding, “I don’t like that aggression.”

Ukraine has introduced martial law for 30 days in parts of the country it deems most vulnerable to an attack from Russia. It has said its ships did nothing wrong and that it wants the West to impose new sanctions on Moscow.

Some of the 24 Ukrainian sailors held by Russia for straying into Russian waters appeared on Russian state TV on Tuesday admitting to being part of a pre-planned provocation. Kiev denounced what it described as forced confessions.

Indonesia's Lion Air must improve safety culture: crash report

Lion Air must improve its safety culture and better document repair work on its planes, Indonesian authorities said Wednesday, in preliminary findings into last month´s crash that killed all 189 people on board.


The Boeing 737 MAX vanished from radar about 13 minutes after taking off from Jakarta on October 29, slamming into the Java Sea moments after it had asked to return to the capital.

The transport safety agency did not pinpoint a definitive cause of the accident, with a final crash report not likely to be filed until next year.

But its investigators said that Lion Air kept putting the plane back into service despite repeatedly failing to fix a problem with the airspeed indicator in the days leading up to the fatal flight.

The report also suggested the pilots struggled with the plane´s anti-stall system as they radioed in a request to return to Jakarta´s main airport.

The findings will heighten concerns there were problems with key systems in one of the world´s newest and most advanced commercial passenger planes.

Investigators have previously said the doomed aircraft had problems with its airspeed indicator and angle of attack (AOA) sensors, prompting Boeing to issue a special bulletin telling operators what to do when they face the same situation.

An AOA sensor provides data about the angle at which air is passing over the wings and tells pilots how much lift a plane is getting. The information can be critical in preventing an aircraft from stalling.

Dubious record 
The Indonesian National Transportation Safety Committee has retrieved one of the plane´s black boxes — the flight data recorder — but is yet to locate the cockpit voice recorder.

Black box data showed the plane had an airspeed indicator issue on multiple earlier flights, investigators said.

Lion must take steps "to improve the safety culture and to enable the pilot to make (a) proper decision to continue the flight," the safety agency said, adding that the carrier must ensure "all the operation documents are properly filled and documented".

Despite a dubious safety record and an avalanche of complaints over shoddy service, the budget carrier´s parent Lion Air Group, which also operates Batik Air and Wings Air, has captured half the domestic market in less than 20 years of operation to become Southeast Asia´s biggest airline.

Indonesia´s aviation safety record has improved since its airlines, including national carrier Garuda, were subject to years-long bans from US and European airspace for safety violations, although the country has still recorded 40 fatal accidents over the past 15 years.

But Boeing has also come under fire for possible glitches on the 737 MAX -- which entered service just last year.

The APA, a US airline pilots union, said that carriers and pilots had not been informed by Boeing of certain changes in the aircraft control system installed on the new MAX variants of the 737.

"I am really surprised if Boeing has not shared all the flight performance parameters with pilots, unions, and training organisations," University of Leeds aviation expert Stephen Wright told AFP before the report was released.

"I cannot forsee why a manufacturer would not incorporate potential known problems into their mandatory training programs," he said, adding that "a deliberate omission would have serious legal ramifications"

Several relatives of the crash victims have already filed lawsuits against Boeing, including the family of a young doctor who was to have married his high school sweetheart this month.

Lion Air Flight JT610 plunged into the sea less than half an hour after taking off on a routine flight to Pangkal Pinang city.

Authorities have called off the grim task of identifying victims of the crash, with 125 passengers officially recognised after testing on human remains that filled some 200 body bags.

Huge explosion rocks Kabul, casualties feared: officials

KABUL: A massive explosion rocked Kabul late Wednesday amid fears a British security company had been targeted, officials said, with casualties expected in the latest violence to beset the Afghan capital.



The interior ministry and police both said the blast had been a car bomb targeting a compound which houses G4S, a British security company, in east Kabul. There was no immediate confirmation from the company or the British embassy in Kabul, however.

Interior Ministry deputy spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said casualties were "not known".

Kabul police spokesman Basir Mujahid said at least six wounded people had been evacuated from the site, but could not confirm their nationality.

Earlier, sources had said the blast was followed by gunfire. "There was some gunfire at the beginning, but it has stopped," Mujahid said.

There was no immediate claim for the attack. Both the Taliban and the Islamic State group have stepped up their attacks on Kabul, which is one of the deadliest places in the country for civilians.

According to its website, G4S provides security for the UK Foreign Office in Kabul.

The attack came just hours after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani announced a 12-person team for prospective peace talks with the Taliban, as the UN renewed calls for direct negotiations between Kabul and the militants.

The Afghan government, Western diplomats and United Nations officials have in recent weeks raised hopes of finally reaching a deal to end the Taliban´s 17-year insurgency.

At an international conference on Afghanistan in Geneva, Ghani said his government had "formed a 12-person negotiating team, comprised of both women and men, and led by presidential chief of staff (Abdul Salam) Rahimi".

Rahimi, a former humanitarian worker and ex-deputy Afghan finance minister, is considered one of Ghani´s closest aides.

However Wednesday´s assault also follows a wave of bloody violence across the war-torn country in recent weeks that has killed hundreds of people as militants step up their attacks.

On November 20 at least 55 people were killed when a bomber blew himself up in the middle of a banquet hall in one of the deadliest attacks in Afghanistan this year.

The violence comes as the Taliban intensifies pressure on Afghan security forces, even as the international community ramps up efforts towards talks.

US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad has expressed hopes that a peace deal to end the war could be struck before the Afghan presidential election, scheduled for April.

His comments underscore an apparent increasing sense of urgency in the White House and among American diplomats for a peace deal to be done quickly.

Bangladesh attorney general says jailed leader Khaleda cannot contest election

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s jailed opposition leader Khaleda Zia cannot run for office in next month’s election, the country’s top law officer said on Wednesday, increasing the uncertainty over the party’s prime ministerial candidate.


Khaleda, who has twice been the country’s prime minister and shares a long-standing rivalry with the current leader Sheikh Hasina, was jailed in February after being convicted for misappropriation of funds for an orphanage.

She denies the allegations and says it is aimed at keeping her away from politics.

Her ability to contest the polls has been in doubt since her incarceration but colleagues in her Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) have said they were hoping she would be released ahead of the elections.

With weeks to go for the Dec. 30 polls though, Attorney General Mahbubey Alam said on Wednesday that, according to the law, even if Khaleda was released from jail, she would not be allowed to contest the polls.

His comments came a day after the Bangladesh high court ruled against petitions filed by five BNP members convicted of corruption who sought a stay on their sentences to stand in the election, Alam said.

One of the petitioners appealed that ruling at the Supreme Court, which has refused to intervene.

“So (Khaleda’s) case cannot be considered any differently,” Alam said.

The BNP’s secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam condemned the high court ruling in comments to local media, saying it was aimed at preventing Khaleda from taking part in the election.

The party plans to appeal the high court order at the Supreme Court, its lawyer Khandaker Mahmud Hossain said, adding that it continued to work on securing bail for Khaleda.

Hasina is widely expected to win the election, although analysts say the formation of a joint opposition alliance has meant the race would be more competitive.

The BNP has been in disarray since Khaleda was jailed and scores of its members have been detained and some convicted in recent months on charges it terms as fictitious.

If Khaleda is barred from running, it would be the first time the BNP will go to polls without her at the helm, Islam told reporters earlier in the week, breaking down in tears.

The BNP forged an alliance with three smaller parties last month, seeking to unseat Hasina from her decade-long reign.

But the opposition still does not have a clear prime ministerial candidate, and the alliance leader Kamal Hossain has said he is not seeking a ministerial post.

A decision on who should be prime minister will be taken after the opposition alliance wins, Islam told Reuters last week, adding the coalition had “several eligible candidates”.

Children among 24 injured in Turbat gas cylinder explosion

TURBAT: Twenty-four people, including 12 children, sustained burn injuries after a gas cylinder exploded in a shop.


The blast resulted in a huge fire, which engulfed the shop, located in the city’s main market, and injured people nearby.

Ten students of a school next to the shop were also among the wounded.

The shop sustained serious damage due to the fire.

The injured were shifted to Civil Hospital, Turbat. Later, 13 of them were transferred to Karachi via a flight, the medical superintendent said. Four were discharged after administering first aid while seven are under treatment in the civil hospital.

Commissioner Makran added that all injured would be taken to Karachi.

Chief Minister Balochistan Jam Kamal Khan expressed sorrow over the incident and instructed authorities to provide quality medical care to the injured. He also said that the provincial government will bear all expenses of the medical treatment.

Opening Kartarpur does not imply outset of bilateral talks with Pakistan: Indian minister

As an Indian delegation is currently in Pakistan, attending the ground-breaking ceremony of Kartarpur corridor, Indian Minister for External Affairs Sushma Swaraj announced Wednesday that India will not partake in the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc) conference if it is held in Pakistan.


Brushing off all chances of improvement in ties between the arch-rivals, Indian minister categorically said, “Until and unless Pakistan stops terrorist activities in India, there will be no dialogue and we will not participate in Saarc [conference].”

The unprecedented event of Kartarpur border opening can be termed as another achievement of Pakistan on diplomatic and moral grounds against India, which has continued its hostility with Sushma Swaraj declaring that “opening of Kartarpur corridor does not imply beginning of any bilateral dialogue with Pakistan.”

While talking to journalists in Indian Hyderabad, the Indian foreign minister further claimed that “India had been asking for many years to open Kartarpur corridor but Pakistan gave a positive response just now.”

The Indian official, nevertheless, did not mention the period of time when her country put up this suggestion.

Swaraj on November 23 excused herself from attending the groundbreaking ceremony of the Kartarpur Border, without giving any specific reason.

In a series of tweets, Sushma Swaraj, thanked her Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi for inviting her to attend the ceremony, but she said she was unable to travel to Kartarpur border on the scheduled date.

In a historical event today, Prime Minister Imran Khan has laid the foundation stone of Kartarpur Corridor which will link Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan with India’s Gurdaspur district.

PM’s Office receives over 100,000 complaints through mobile app

ISLAMABAD: The prime minister’s special assistant Iftikhar Durrani on Thursday said more than 100,000 complaints have been received by the PM’s Office through a mobile app, Citizen’s Portal.

Speaking at a news conference in Islamabad, he said around 84,000 complaints were yet to be addressed, while around 16,000 had been resolved.

Mr Durrani said most of the complaints received through the app were about municipal services. Out of 16,770 complaints resolved so far, 6,303 were about the energy sector, he added.

Prime Minister Imran Khan had launched the mobile app to allow the public to voice their grievances.

The PM’s aide said more than 12,000 complaints related to the education sector, while complaints regarding land revenue, law and order, health and other departments had also been received.

More than 4,000 complaints were received from overseas Pakistanis; he said and added so far no complaint with regard to corruption has been received by the PM House.

He said over 21,000 people gave suggestions about the mobile app. He said that the app was downloaded 454,000 times in just 24 days and those who downloaded the app included 54 percent men and 6 percent women.

Last month, Prime Minister Imran Khan had launched a public complaint cell, Pakistan Citizens’ Portal, to hear and address people’s problems.

The portal has been set up at the Prime Minister’s Office with an aim to timely address complaints of the people and get their feedback.

Mega cage fishing projects on the cards, says minister

ISLAMABAD: Ambassador of Korea in Pakistan Kwak Sung-Kyu along with the Korean Economic Counselor called on Federal Minister for National Food Security & Research Sahibzada Muhammad Mehboob Sultan here in Islamabad today.


The meeting basically focused on agro-cooperation between the two friendly nations, according to a statement.

The minister was apprised that in the first week of December 2018 a delegation of Korean agricultural experts is visiting Pakistan Agriculture Research Council (PARC) and National Agriculture Research Council (NARC) to monitor the research facilities and identify the areas where the mutual cooperation could be extended in the field of research.

Pakistan has backed and supported the establishment of World Fisheries University (WFU) in Korea as an international forum.

Mehboob Sultan said that MoU in the field of agriculture with the Republic of Korea will formally be signed and it will include wider areas of cooperation.

“We need a close partner in the region and Korea equipped with modern agro technology could be very viable choice when it comes to small agro machinery as there is at least 50,000 tractors shortage and also in the field of seed/cage fishing, rice improvement, integrated pest management and animal sciences sector,” he said.

The federal minister further was of the view that Korea is getting small amount of food items from Pakistan especially mango, rice, kinnow and dates but the scope needs to be widened and in this regard Korean experts could provide assistance by way of modern technologies, and assist for value addition in vegetables, fruit and dairy products.

He further said that a mega cage fishing project is likely to be announced soon in all four provinces which will promote cage fishing culture and will also identify the potential to augment the production of cold water fish in KPK and Gilgit Baltistan as Pakistan is targeting to increase its fisheries exports from $40 million to $1 billion.

He said since Korea is expert in deep sea fisheries and cage fishing, Pakistan could seek assistance in the sector from Korea.

Korean Ambassador Sung-kyu told the minister that the Republic of Korea could facilitate Pakistan in cage fishing by providing cage material, seed fish, storage, transportation facility according to international standards.

He further said that Korea is looking forward to train Pakistan Fisheries experts/scientists through trainings and thereby equip them with technologies which would be internationally viable.

PM Khan invites India to move forward by leaving past experiences behind

NAROWAL: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday said that Pakistan and India should move forward by leaving ‘bitter’ experiences of past behind, ARY News reported.

Addressing the groundbreaking ceremony of Kartarpur Border aimed to facilitate Sikh pilgrims in performance of their rituals, the prime minister said, both [Pakistan and India] committed mistakes in the past but “we need to stop living in the past for the better and prosperous future of the people of both the countries.”

Highlighting the Kashmir issues, the prime minister said, the issue can be resolved, if India sits together on decades long unresolved issues, “Pakistan will take two steps forward, if India takes ones”, he continued.

Ruling out the chances of war between the two countries, he said “its foolish to think that there will be a war between the two nuclear countries, issues can be resolved on the table of talks, he maintained.

On the occasion, PM Imran thanked the Indian minister and foreign delegates for attending the historic event. “The happiness that Muslims feel after arriving in Medina, the same I can see on the faces of Sikh community today,” PM said to the Sikh delegates.

Mr. Khan said, we will keep improving Kartarpur corridor and in the next year, you will see all facilities will be available there,” he vowed.

The prime minister underlined the need of opening of the borders in order to eradicate poverty from both the countries.

Speaking about his cricketing days, PM Imran said, “There were two kinds of cricketers — one who were afraid of losing and took no chances and the others who took risks and were always successful.”

The premier continued that when he entered politics he also came across two kinds of politicians. “One who sacrificed the public good for their own benefit and the other who thought about the society, did not spread hate, took chances and big decisions as well.”

Earlier today, Prime Minister Imran Khan had laid the foundation stone of Kartarpur Corridor which will link Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan with India’s Gurdaspur district.

The ground-breaking ceremony was attended by Chief of the Army Staff Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and other government officials.