Some India doctors stay off job after strike over colleague’s rape and murder

Some India doctors stay off job after strike over colleague’s rape and murder
Indian protesters hold placards during a protest against the rape and killing of a trainee doctor at a government hospital in Kolkata last week, in Mumbai, India, on August 18, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 18 August 2024

Some India doctors stay off job after strike over colleague’s rape and murder

Some India doctors stay off job after strike over colleague’s rape and murder
  • Doctors across India have held protests and refused to see non-emergency patients in the past week after the killing of 31-year old postgraduate student
  • Women activists say the incident at the R.G. Kar Medical College and Hospital has highlighted how women in India continue to suffer despite tougher laws

KOLKATA: Some Indian junior doctors remained off the job on Sunday, demanding swift justice for a colleague who was raped and murdered, despite the end of a 24-hour strike called by the country’s biggest association of doctors.

Doctors across the country have held protests, candlelight marches and have refused to see non-emergency patients in the past week after the killing of the 31-year old postgraduate student of chest medicine around the early hours of Aug. 9 in the eastern city of Kolkata.

Women activists say the incident at the British-era R.G. Kar Medical College and Hospital has highlighted how women in India continue to suffer despite tougher laws following the gang-rape and murder of a 23-year-old student on a moving bus in Delhi in 2012.

“My daughter is gone but millions of sons and daughters are now with me,” the father of the victim, who cannot be identified under Indian law, told reporters late on Saturday, referring to the protesting doctors. “This has given me a lot of strength and I feel we will gain something out of it.”

India introduced sweeping changes to the criminal justice system, including tougher sentences, after the 2012 attack, but campaigners say little has changed and not enough has been done to deter violence against women.

The Indian Medical Association, whose strike ended at 6 a.m. (0030 GMT) on Sunday, told Prime Minister Narendra Modi that as 60 percent of India’s doctors are women, he needed to intervene to ensure hospital staff were protected by security protocols akin to those at airports.

“All health care professionals deserve peaceful ambience, safety and security at workplace,” it wrote in a letter to Modi.

But in Modi’s home state of Gujarat, more than 6,000 trainee doctors in government hospitals continued to stay away from non-emergency medical services on Sunday for a third day although private institutes resumed regular operations.

“We have unanimously decided to continue our protest to press for our demands,” said Dr. Dhaval Gameti, president of Junior Doctors’ Association at B.J. Medical College in Ahmedabad.

“In the interest of patients, we are providing emergency medical services but not taking part in out-patient department or routine ward work.”

'COULD STOP EMERGENCY SERVICES'

The government has urged doctors to return to duty to treat rising cases of dengue and malaria while it sets up a committee to suggest measures to improve protection for health care professionals.

Most doctors resumed their usual activities, IMA officials said, although Sunday is generally a holiday for non-emergency cases.

“The doctors are back to their routine,” said Dr. Madan Mohan Paliwal, the IMA head in the most populous state, Uttar Pradesh. “The next course of action will be decided if the government does not take any strict steps to protect doctors... and this time we could stop emergency services too.”

But the All India Residents and Junior Doctors’ Joint Action Forum said on Saturday it would continue a “nationwide cease-work” with a 72-hour deadline for authorities to conduct a thorough inquiry and make arrests.

Dr. Prabhas Ranjan Tripathy, additional medical superintendent of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in the eastern city of Bhubaneswar, said junior doctors and interns had not resumed duty.

“The demonstrations are there today too,” he told Reuters. “There is a lot of pressure on others because manpower is reduced.”

R.G. Kar hospital has been rocked by agitation and rallies for more than a week. Police banned the assembly of five or more people around the hospital for a week from Sunday and deployed police in riot gear.

Blocking meetings, demonstrations and processions was justified to prevent “breach of peace, disturbances of the public tranquillity,” Kolkata Police Commissioner Vineet Goyal said in an order.

Reuters reporters saw no doctors at their usual protest site around the gates of the hospital on Sunday, as it rained in the area.


Reintegrating millions of Afghan refugees is critical to a peaceful future, a UN official says

Updated 3 sec ago

Reintegrating millions of Afghan refugees is critical to a peaceful future, a UN official says

Reintegrating millions of Afghan refugees is critical to a peaceful future, a UN official says
Stephanie Loose, a country program manager at UN Habitat, said reintegrating these millions was critical for a peaceful future in Afghanistan
It is important for people to understand that those returning are not a burden

ISLAMABAD: Reintegrating Afghan refugees is critical to the country’s peaceful future as social cohesion will be reduced without it, a UN official said Friday.

Some 2.2 million Afghans have crossed the border from Iran and Pakistan since the start of the year, according to the latest figures from the UN refugee agency. They arrive in a country struggling with climate change, a stagnant economy and a humanitarian crisis. Some 60 percent of those returning to Afghanistan are under 18.

Stephanie Loose, a country program manager at UN Habitat, said reintegrating these millions was critical for a peaceful future in Afghanistan.

“If you come back to a country where resources are already scarce, there’s a lot of competition already for jobs, land, housing, any sort of services, it’s clear that if you don’t foster dialogue between the local population and those arriving, this feeling of competition will grow and reduce social cohesion, which is like creating another root cause for war and conflicts,” Loose told a media briefing in Geneva. “And the country has seen enough of that.”

It is important for people to understand that those returning are not a burden, she added. They come with skills and are part of a solution for social and economic stability.

People bring what they can carry from Iran and Pakistan, leaving behind their homes and the majority of their belongings. Afghan authorities offer support at the border with cash, food, shelter, health care and onward transport to settlements across the country.

The Taliban have urged their neighbors to avoid forcibly returning Afghans and to treat them with dignity. Iran and Pakistan deny targeting Afghans, saying they are expelling foreigners living in their countries illegally.

Women and girls are particularly hard hit once they return to Afghanistan, where education is banned for females beyond grade six and the Taliban restrict access to many jobs and public spaces.

Loose said Afghan women and girls lacked social, educational and economic development opportunities. Requirements to have a male guardian when leaving the home created further barriers for women-headed households.

Putin discusses agreements to meet with Trump in call with Lukashenko

Putin discusses agreements to meet with Trump in call with Lukashenko
Updated 7 min 42 sec ago

Putin discusses agreements to meet with Trump in call with Lukashenko

Putin discusses agreements to meet with Trump in call with Lukashenko
  • Putin had also spoken to the leaders of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed his meeting with Steve Witkoff, the envoy of US President Donald Trump, and the US proposals for peace talks between Russia and Ukraine in a phone call with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on Friday, the Belarusian state news agency Belta reported.

Putin also informed Lukashenko about his agreement to hold a meeting with Trump, Belta reported, adding that the venue of the meeting was being determined.

The Russian state news agency TASS earlier said Putin had also spoken to the leaders of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan and briefed them on talks he held this week with Witkoff on the Ukraine war.


Bengali Muslims fear detention amid immigration crackdown in India

Bengali Muslims fear detention amid immigration crackdown in India
Updated 08 August 2025

Bengali Muslims fear detention amid immigration crackdown in India

Bengali Muslims fear detention amid immigration crackdown in India
  • India is called home by about 35m Bengali-speaking Muslims
  • Crackdown follows deadly April attack on tourists in Kashmir

NEW DELHI: Bengali-speaking Muslims in India say they are living in fear of detention and deportation amid an increasing police crackdown on “illegal immigrants” that have seen hundreds being unlawfully forced into Bangladesh, despite many being Indian citizens.

More than 1,500 Muslim men, women and children were expelled across the border between May 7 and June 15 without due process, according to a July report by Human Rights Watch, citing Bangladeshi authorities.

While crackdowns on alleged illegal immigrants from Muslim-majority Bangladesh are not new in India, the current wave followed a deadly attack in Jammu and Kashmir in April, where gunmen opened fire on visitors at a popular Himalayan tourist hotspot, killing 26 people and critically injuring many others.

As Delhi blamed the attack on “terrorists” from Pakistan, Indian states governed by officials from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party have since rounded up thousands of Bengali Muslims, calling them suspected “illegal immigrants” and a potential security risk.

Khairul Islam, a 53-year-old Indian citizen and former schoolteacher from Assam state, told Arab News he was detained at his home by the police on May 24, and then forced into Bangladesh with 14 other people.

“It was a horrible experience, I was pushed into a no-man’s-land between India and Bangladesh. When I tried to enter India the Indian border guards started firing rubber bullets,” he said.

Islam was able to return about a week later, after his wife and relatives showed Indian authorities documents to prove his citizenship.

“My grandfather was from India. I have a copy of his schooling in India. His eighth-standard certificate. My father got a gun license from the government in 1952. I was a government employee and got a job as a teacher in 1997,” he said.

“This is simple harassment. Being a Bengali Muslim has become a crime in Assam. Our life has turned into a hell … They call me a foreigner just because I am a Muslim and a Bengali. Many families have been destroyed in this witch hunt … I hope justice will be done to us.”

While Bengali is the main language of Bangladesh, there are an estimated 100 million Bengali speakers in India, who mainly reside in the states of Assam, West Bengal, and Tripura. About 35 million of them identify as Muslims.

Authorities in Hindu-majority India have claimed that the expulsions were conducted to reverse irregular migration, with Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma saying that “Muslim infiltration” from Bangladesh is threatening India’s identity.

“We are fearlessly resisting the ongoing, unchecked Muslim infiltration from across the border, which has already caused an alarming demographic shift. In several districts, Hindus are now on the verge of becoming a minority in their own land,” he wrote on X on July 29.

Meenakshi Ganguly, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said India’s approach to undocumented migrants is showing the country in a poor light.

“While governments can tackle irregular immigration, it has to be done with due process, as opposed to randomly rounding up Bengali-speaking Muslim workers in various BJP-governed states, and assuming that they are Bangladeshi nationals,” she told Arab News.

States like Assam have also seen a recent surge in evictions of thousands of families who Indian authorities accuse of staying illegally on government land.

“The ongoing evictions seem like a state policy to discriminate on religious or ethnic grounds, violating constitutional protections,” Ganguly said.

Assam residents like Shaji Ali, who was evicted from his home in Golaghat district, are also questioning the official narrative. “I was born here. My father came here from Naogaon district (in Bangladesh) more than 40 years ago. It was the previous government that settled us here.

“We have all the government facilities here. How did we become encroachers?” he told Arab News. “For the (current) government, our Bengali-Muslim identity is a problem.”

Minnatul Islam, secretary of the All Assam Minority Students Union, believes that politics is behind the ongoing clampdown.

“An inhumane situation is prevailing in Assam today. Bengali-speaking Muslims are living in great fear … This is a political move and the government of Assam is preparing for the 2026 elections and the eviction is part of the electoral agenda,” he told Arab News.

“The target is Bengali-speaking Muslims. There would be around 9 million Bengali Muslims. It’s clear that there is no Bangladeshi in Assam. Whatever the government is doing … is not healthy, it’s just targeting Muslims to serve the political interests.”


Flash floods kill at least 10 people and leave 33 missing in northwestern China

Flash floods kill at least 10 people and leave 33 missing in northwestern China
Updated 08 August 2025

Flash floods kill at least 10 people and leave 33 missing in northwestern China

Flash floods kill at least 10 people and leave 33 missing in northwestern China
  • The downpour knocked out power and telecommunications services in the Xinglong Mountain
  • Three people were missing after a landslide in the village of Maliantan

BEIJING: At least 10 people died and 33 were missing after flash foods in Yuzhong County in China’s northwestern Gansu province, Chinese state media reported Friday.

Heavy rains since Thursday had triggered flash floods and at least one landslide in mountainous areas near the city of Lanzhou, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

The downpour knocked out power and telecommunications services in the Xinglong Mountain area, stranding more than 4,000 people across four villages.

Three people were missing after a landslide in the village of Maliantan in Yuzhong County late Thursday.

Maximum rainfall in the area had reached 195 millimeters (7.7 inches) by early Friday, according to Lanzhou local authorities.

Chinese President Xi Jinping urged all-out rescue and flood prevention efforts.

Several parts of China are being battered by heavy rains. In the southern metropolis of Guangzhou, seven people died and seven others were injured after a flood-triggered landslide buried homes in the city’s northern Baiyun district Wednesday.

In Zhengzhou, the capital of the central Henan province, local authorities shut down schools, offices and factories and closed traffic in parts of the city, which saw catastrophic floods that killed at least 292 people in 2021.


UK detains Iranian after BBC probe into people smuggling 

UK detains Iranian after BBC probe into people smuggling 
Updated 08 August 2025

UK detains Iranian after BBC probe into people smuggling 

UK detains Iranian after BBC probe into people smuggling 
  • Arrest comes amid ongoing trafficking of migrants across English Channel in small boats
  • Government announces £100m package to ‘tackle criminal networks head on’

LONDON: A 22-year-old Iranian has been arrested in the UK on suspicion of conspiring to facilitate illegal immigration.

The man, who was arrested in the city of Birmingham, was detained following a BBC investigation into people-smuggling activities by gangs transporting people in small boats across the English Channel.

He is due to be questioned by National Crime Agency officers about human trafficking of migrants from northern France to the UK.

The NCA said it is investigating 91 groups or individuals involved in people smuggling and other serious immigration offenses.

Jacque Beer, the NCA’s regional head of investigations, told the BBC: “People smugglers operate for profit without concern for the safety of those they transport.”

Dame Angela Eagle, the UK’s minister for border security, said she would “not stand by and let this vile trade continue,” adding that the government had “announced the investment of a further £100 million ($134.36 million) this week to tackle the criminal networks head on.”