Nepal Celebrates Day Of The Dog

Nepalis celebrate the day of the dog on Tuesday as part of the wider week-long Tihar festival.

The country’s dogs were adorned with marigold garlands, had vermillion smeared on their foreheads, and were fed special treats.

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Kukur Tihar, or dog festival day, is a ritual among the Hindu majority and is also widely observed by the rest of the population.

The week’s Tihar festivities also honour crows, cows and oxen.

“I don’t have a dog but I enjoy them anyway, so I decided to make garlands for two streets dogs outside my house,” said Kalpana Shakya, who spent her morning plucking flowers for the garlands and making a pot of chicken and rice for the dogs.

“Dogs are the symbol of the protector god, Bhairava, an incarnation of the Hindu god Shiva, ‘’

“They bring us prosperity and they were born to be our friends, so we worship them on this day,” Shakya said.

“I think Nepalese should do this every day, it’s great to love a dog and to show that love,” said Warrick Middleton, an Australian tourist who participated in the ritual.

Others pointed out that Nepal’s stray dogs are not always so feted.

“How is it that these animals, so respected one day, can be neglected the next?” said Uttam Kafle, director of Animal Nepal, who estimates that more than 22,500 dogs live on the streets of Kathmandu alone.

This year the organisation took in more older dogs than usual, he said, partly because so many were made homeless by the devastating earthquake in May, adding that some were also abandoned by their owners when they got sick or old.

Dangote expands to Asia, signs N855bn deal with Chinese firm

In another landmark move following the recent inauguration of its cement plant in Zambia, Dangote Cement Plc has expanded its frontiers to Asia by constructing a 3-million metric tonnes per annum (mmtpa) cement plant in Nepal as part of its new investment of $4.34 billion into 10 African countries.

 

It also signed a N854.98 billion ($4.34 billion) worth of contracts with a construction firm renowned for construction of ultra-modern cement plants worldwide, China’s Sinoma International Engineering Company, to build cement plants across Africa.

 

The chairman of Dangote Cement, Aliko Dangote, who revealed this at the signing ceremony of the new plants to be constructed, in partnership with Sinoma, assured Nigerians that the country will no longer be used as a dumping ground as the company now has capacity to export 10 million metric tonnes of cement outside the country.

 

The company is currently in 15 African countries, excluding Kenya, Niger, and Mali, which are new projects. Its current total capacity stands at 48mmtpa, out of which Nigeria alone has the largest chunk of 29.3mmtpa. The company will also commission its new plant in Cameroon with a total capacity of 1.5mmtpa today.

 

Speaking with newsmen yesterday after the signing ceremony, Dangote said, “We are not only building cement plants in Africa, we have gone far away to Nepal to build a 3-million metric tonnes cement plant capacity and by the time all these new projects are completed in the next two years, Dangote Cement will have more than 70 million capacity. But we are not going to stop there, hopefully, by 2020, our targets is getting to somewhere around 100 million tonnes capacity.

 

“I can assure you categorically that Africa will not lack cement now and even in the future…Africa will be self -sufficient rather than be a dumping ground for other manufacturers of cement.”

 

The agreement was signed for the construction of the following plants: 3mmtpa in Nepal; 2.5mmtpa in Ethiopia; 3mmtpa in both Kenya 1&2; 1.5mmtpa in Zambia; 1.5mmtpa in Senegal; 1.5mmtpa in Niger; 1.5mmtpa in Mali. Cameroon, Cote D’Ivoire, and Ghana, also have plants of 1.5mmtpa capacity respectively.

 

Dangote Cement recently commissioned its 1.5mmtpa capacity cement plant valued at $400 million with a 30 megawatts coal plant to power the factory.

 

Source : Leadership

US Fighter Jet Crashes In Persian Gulf; Marine Helicopter Missing In Nepal

The US military says one of its warplanes has crashed shortly after taking off from an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf, while one Marine helicopter has gone missing in Nepal.

The F/A-18F Super Hornet fighter jet took off from the USS Theodore Roosevelt at around 5:30 pm on Tuesday, but crashed shortly afterwards.

The Navy did not immediately offer the reason for the crash but suggested it was an accident. “The crash was not a result of hostile activity,” the US Navy said in a statement that was issued by Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for the area where the USS Theodore Roosevelt is deployed.

The Navy is investigating the cause of the crash. The two personnel from fighter jet ejected and were quickly recovered by search and rescue personnel from the carrier, the statement said.

The aircraft carrier was in the Northern Persian Gulf, to support the US-led airstrikes against the ISIL Takfiris wreaking havoc in Syria and Iraq.

The aircraft belongs to the Strike Fighter Squadron 211 based at Naval Air Station Oceana, Virginia, and is assigned to Carrier Air Wing One.

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Another Earthquake Hits Nepal

Magnitude 7.3 earthquake strikes two weeks after massive quake killed thousands in Himalayan nation.  A magnitude 7.3 earthquake has struck Nepal, two weeks after a devastating quake killed more than 8,000 people in the Himalayan nation, the USGS has reported.

USGS had earlier reported the magnitude at 7.1 but later upgraded it to 7.3. The quake, which struck 18km southeast of Kodari, near the base camp for Mt Everest, was measured at a shallow depth of about 18km.

Al Jazeera’s Annette Ekin, reporting from the capital, Kathmandu, said that there was “utter panic” in the capital. “The earth just started rolling. Everyone ran out onto the streets and all of the shops are now shuttered,” she said, adding that the quake seemed to last about 30 seconds.

A woman who works for a finance company in Thamel, in Kathmandu, told Al Jazeera that she had clung on to a pillar inside her building when the quake struck. “I was screaming. It felt like the house was falling,” she said.

Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons, also reporting from Kathmandu, said the quake was so powerful that it made the building he was in “feel like jelly”.

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Nepal Declares Three Days Of Mourning Over Earthquake

Prime Minister Sushil Koirala thanks donors as rescue operation continues with helicopters crisscrossing mountains.  Nepal’s prime minister has declared three days of national mourning for the victims of Saturday’s devastating earthquake which has left at least 4,700 people dead.

Rescue operations continued on Tuesday, with helicopters ferrying the injured and delivering emergency supplies to remote villages near the epicentre. PM Sushil Koirala also thanked donors in a televised address to the nation.

He had earlier warned that the number of people killed in the country’s worst earthquake in decades could reach 10,000. With the UN estimating eight million people have been hit by the disaster, Koirala said getting help to some of the worst affected areas was a “major challenge”.

He said authorities were overwhelmed by appeals for help from remote Himalayan villages left devastated by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake. Aid workers who had reached the edges of the epicentre described entire villages reduced to rubble.

“In some villages, about 90 percent of the houses have collapsed. They’re just flattened,” said Rebecca McAteer, a US physician who went to the earthquake zone from the distant Nepal hospital where she works.

Two rescue helicopters on Tuesday reached Ranachour village, in Gorkha district, evacuating eight women, two of them clutching babies, and a third heavily pregnant, to the nearby town of Gorkha.  “There are many more injured people in my village,” said Sangita Shrestha, who was pregnant and visibly downcast as she got off the helicopter.

In Barpak, further north, rescue helicopters were unable to find a place to land. On Tuesday, soldiers had started to make their way overland, first by bus, then by foot. Helicopters dropped food packets in the hope that survivors could gather them up.

Meanwhile, an avalanche struck a village on Tuesday in Rasuwa district, a popular trekking area to the north of Kathmandu. Uddhav Bhattarai, the district governor, said up to 250 people were missing.

UNICEF Says Nearly A Million Children ‘Severely Affected’ In Nepal

Nearly a million children have been “severely affected” by a severe earthquake in Nepal that has killed more than 3,200 people, a spokesman for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said, as rescue and aid workers struggle to cope.

With hundreds of thousands of Nepalis sleeping out in tents or in the open, UNICEF said its relief workers were watching for waterborne and infectious diseases. “What we know that at this point is there are nearly a million children who are severely affected. Our biggest concern for them right now is going to be access to clean water and sanitation, we know that water and food is running out,” UNICEF’s Christopher Tidey said by telephone.

A total of 3,218 people were confirmed killed in Saturday’s 7.9 magnitude quake, a police official said on Monday, the worst in Nepal since 1934 when 8,500 died. More than 6,500 were injured.

Creditreuters

Nepal Steps Up Rescue Effort Amid Global Aid Rush

Tonnes of aid material reaches Kathmandu airport as relief and rescue operation under way as death toll crosses 3,700.  Rescue efforts have intensified in Nepal amid a stream of foreign aid reaching the capital Kathmandu in the wake of the devastating earthquake that has claimed more than 3,700 lives and injured up to 6,500 others.

Police said on Monday that the death toll may go further up as rescuers struggle to reach remote regions in the mountainous country of 28 million people and as bodies buried under rubble are recovered. Aid effort is being stepped up, Al Jazeera’s Sohail Rahman reported from Kathmandu’s Durbar Square, one of the worst affected areas in the capital.

The first nations to respond were Nepal’s neighbours – India, China, and Pakistan, all of which have been jockeying for influence over the landlocked nation. Nepal remains closest to India, with which it shares deep political, cultural and religious ties.

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