IMF Chiefs Say Africa’s Recovery Needs Billions and Reforms

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IMF Chiefs Say Africa’s Recovery Needs Billions and Reforms

Himachal Lifts Curb On Travel, No COVID-19 Passes Needed
September 15, 2020
Home  »  Website  »  National  »  Himachal Lifts Curb On Travel, No COVID-19 Passes Needed

Himachal Lifts Curb On Travel, No COVID-19 Passes Needed

Local residents, however, fear that this could lead to a spike in infections.

Himachal Lifts Curb On Travel, No COVID-19 Passes Needed
Opposition MLAs led by leader of opposition Mukesh Agnihotri hold a dharna outside Speaker Vipin Singh Parmar's office in Shimla September 15, as Minister of Parliamentary affairs Suresh Bhardwaj and Parmar urge them to attend House proceedings.
Himachal Lifts Curb On Travel, No COVID-19 Passes Needed
outlookindia.com
2020-09-15T22:02:26+05:30
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On a day when Himachal Pradesh crossed the 10,000 mark in coronavirus cases, with eight reported deaths in a single day, the state cabinet decided to lift both outbound and inbound inter-state travel restrictions.

“Now, anyone can enter or exit the state without e-pass or COVID-19 negative test report,” said an official here, hurriedly adding that a complete plan will be announced in the state assembly on Wednesday by Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur. However the inter-state movement of public transport buses will still remain suspended.

The move is likely to benefit the hotel lobby, which has been badly hit by the restrictions which have severely impacted tourism. The Manali Hoteliers Association had announced their decision to resume businesses from October 1, while those at Dharamshala and Shimla too favoured easing of the COVID norms to enable tourists to visit Himachal Pradesh. Bars and restaurants serving liquor have already opened from September 15.

But common citizens of the state are worried over the cabinet’s decision to waive the mandatory COVID -19 test report for inbound tourists. People planning to visit Himachal Pradesh will no longer be required to get themselves registered at e-COVID portal.

Earlier in the day, Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur had hinted that the Ministry of Home Affairs had been putting pressures on the state to remove restrictions on inter-state mobility.

“There shall be no additional restrictions on movement of the men and goods except those imposed by the MHA,” says a letter written by Union Home secretary.

The opposition Congress had created a ruckus in the state assembly Tuesday, accusing the state government of failing to to deal with the COVID crisis and provide proper medical care to the patients admitted in govetnment institutions.

“Senior most cabinet minister Mohinder Singh Thakur,who was tested positive ,had to leave the hospital because there was no care ,and lack of facilities in the Indira Gandhi Medical College (IGMC) hospital,” alleged opposition leader Mukesh Agnihotri.

The Chief Minister admitted that a large number of doctors, paramedical staff and health personnel have either tested positive themselves or were sent to quarantine after they came in contact with patients who tested positive.

In Kangra, the state's largest district, the entire family of Deputy Commissioner Rakesh Prajapati, a young IAS office who had earned public appreciation for handling COVID spread and lockdown most efficiently, was placed under quarantine after they tested positive. After his condition became critical, Prajapati was shifted to Dr Rajendra Prasad Medical College,Tanada. Among those tested positive in his family include his one and half year old daughter and wife .


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IMF Chiefs Say Africa’s Recovery Needs Billions and Reforms

Indian-origin Debutante Writer Avni Doshi Among Six Authors on Booker Prize 2020 List
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Indian-origin Debutante Writer Avni Doshi Among Six Authors on Booker Prize 2020 List

Avni Doshi.

Avni Doshi.

Doshi, born in the US and now living in Dubai, has previously spoken about the long journey to her first novel, which was released in India last year as ‘Girl in White Cotton’ and for its UK release in July.

  • Last Updated: September 15, 2020, 10:03 PM IST

Dubai-based Indian-origin author Avni Doshi is among the six authors shortlisted for the 2020 Booker Prize for her debut novel ‘Burnt Sugar’.

The shortlist was unveiled virtually in London on Tuesday after judges re-evaluated the 13 longlisted novels published in the UK or Ireland between October 2019 and September 2020 to whittle down the shortlist for the GBP 50,000 literary prize in November.

“This utterly compelling read examines a complex and unusual mother-daughter relationship with honest, unflinching realism – sometimes emotionally wrenching but also cathartic, written with poignancy and memorability,” the judges said of Doshi’s entry.

Doshi, born in the US and now living in Dubai, has previously spoken about the long journey to her first novel, which was released in India last year as ‘Girl in White Cotton’ and for its UK release in July.

The rest of the shortlist includes Diane Cook for ‘The New Wilderness’, Zimbabwean writer Tsitsi Dangarembga for the third novel in her trilogy – ‘This Mournable Body’, Maaza Mengiste for ‘The Shadow King’, Douglas Stuart for ‘Shuggie Bain’ and Brandon Taylor for ‘Real Life’.

Literary heavyweight and former double Booker winner Hilary Mantel, in the running for her final instalment in her series set in King Henry VIII's 16th century England "The Mirror and the Light", failed to make the shortlist cut.

"The shortlist of six came together unexpectedly, voices and characters resonating with us all even when very different. We are delighted to help disseminate these chronicles of creative humanity to a global audience," said Margaret Busby, literary critic and chair of the 2020 judges.

“As judges, we read 162 books, many of them conveying important, sometimes uncannily similar and prescient messages," she said.

"The best novels often prepare our societies for valuable conversations, and not just about the inequities and dilemmas of the world − whether in connection with climate change, forgotten communities, old age, racism, or revolution when necessary − but also about how magnificent the interior life of the mind, imagination and spirit is, in spite of circumstance,” she said.

The organisers said that readers of the chosen books will travel to India to unpick an unsettling mother-daughter relationship redefined by dementia with Doshi''s entry; explore the tender story of a mother''s battle to save her daughter in a dystopian city made inhospitable by the climate crisis; witness a woman confronting the realities of life and morality in Zimbabwe as she descends into poverty.

They will uncover the extraordinary tales of the African women who went to war during Italy’s 1935 invasion of Ethiopia; find humanity and humour in the harsh realities experienced by a marginalised family in 1980s Glasgow; and question what ‘real life’ is in a fresh take on the campus novel, which offers a nuanced account of racism and homophobia.

Gaby Wood, Literary Director of the Booker Prize Foundation, said: “Every year, judging the Booker Prize is an act of discovery. What’s out there, how can we widen the net, how do these books seem when compared to one another, how do they fare when re-read? These are questions judges always ask themselves, and each other.

“This year there has perhaps been more discovery than usual, both in the sense that debut novels are in the majority, and due to the fact that the judges themselves were surprised to find that was the case. Why were they surprised? They were focussing on the books," she said.

"No one wins the Booker Prize because of who they are. A book wins because of what it does. What has transpired is a testament to the judges’ faith in – among other things – first fictions: they have found these writers to have much to say, and found them to have said it in a way that became even richer on a second reading.”

The Booker Prize for Fiction is open to writers of any nationality, writing in English and published in the UK or Ireland. The shortlist of six books will be announced on September 15, with each shortlisted authors receiving 2,500 pounds and a specially bound edition of their book at the prize ceremony scheduled for November.

The 2019 Booker Prize for Fiction was won jointly by ‘The Testaments’ by Margaret Atwood and ‘Girl, Woman, Other’ by Bernardine Evaristo. First awarded in 1969, the Booker Prize is recognised as the leading prize for literary fiction written in English.

The rules of the prize were changed at the end of 2013 to embrace the English language "in all its vigour, its vitality, its versatility and its glory", opening it up to writers beyond the UK and Commonwealth, providing they were writing novels in English and published in the UK.

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