Foreign News
Australia’s Victoria to Lock Down Over British Variant Cases

The Australian state of Victoria will undergo a circuit breaker lockdown for five days amid fears the British coronavirus variant has spread into the community, state premier Daniel Andrews announced on Friday.
The state will lock down from just before midnight on Friday until the end of Wednesday next week, Andrews said.
There are 19 active coronavirus cases in Victoria.
Five new cases from the last 24 hours are all close contacts of infections linked to an outbreak at the Holiday Inn at Melbourne Airport, which was being used to quarantine returned travellers.
Though the confirmed cases are all among close contacts of known infections, the speed at which the British strain is spreading is making contact tracing increasingly difficult, Andrews said.
Secondary contacts were found to already be infectious by the time contact tracers reached them, authorities said.
Andrews warned that the “hyperinfectivity and the speed” of the British variant means authorities must assume there are further undetected cases in the community.
“It is moving at a velocity that has not been seen anywhere in our country over the course of the last 12 months,” he said.
Waiting to see if there are indeed cases in the community would put the state at risk of being locked down later until a vaccine is rolled out, he added.
Under the lockdown, the public will only be allowed to go out to shop for necessities, care giving reasons, essential work or permitted education or exercise for two hours per day.
They must stay within five kilometres of home and masks must be worn everywhere outside the home.
Victoria, Australia’s second-most populous state, in 2020 endured one of the world’s longest and harshest lockdowns, which in total saw the capital city Melbourne under “stay at home” orders for 112 days.
Andrews had put the state under a strict police-controlled lockdown on Aug. 2, when new daily infections were nearing 700 and there were 6,322 active cases.
Melbourne, a city of 4.9 million residents, only fully emerged from the tight restrictions on October 28.
On Friday, the premier warned that the current outbreak “is not the 2020 virus, this is something very different.”
The government had reworked the state’s hotel quarantine programme after 2020 debilitating second-wave, which was linked to breaches in the system. (dpa/NAN)
Foreign News
Philippine President Calls for Resignation of All Cabinet Secretaries

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has asked all of his Cabinet secretaries to submit their resignations on Thursday in what he called a “bold reset” of his administration following last week’s mid-term elections.
The elections saw more opposition candidates win crucial Senate seats, signaling shifting political tides.
Marcos, the 67-year-old son of the late Philippine dictator overthrown in 1986, won the presidency in a landslide in 2022, a stunning political comeback marked by a call for national unity.
However, his vice-presidential running mate, Sara Duterte, also widely popular, later distanced herself from Marcos in a falling-out that had sparked intense political discord.
Marcos had since emerged as one of the region’s most vocal critics of China’s aggression in the disputed South China Sea, bolstered by support from the United States and other allies. Domestically, he continued to face significant challenges, including high inflation, unfulfilled promises to lower rice prices, and growing concerns over kidnappings and other crimes.
“This is not business as usual,” Marcos said in a government statement.
“The people have spoken and they expect results, not politics, not excuses. We hear them and we will act.” (AP/NAN)
Foreign News
Pakistan Blames India for School Bus Attack That Killed 5

Three children and two adults were killed in a blast on Wednesday that targeted a school bus in south-western Pakistan, with Islamabad blaming India for the attack.
Terrorists targeted the bus in the city of Khuzdar, in the restive province of Balochistan, as it took students to a military-run school, Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti said.
Preliminary findings suggested that it was not a suicide attack, he said at a press conference.
The dead included three young girls who were students of grades 6, 7 and 10. More than 40 students were wounded, many of them said to be suffering severe wounds.
Bugti said that his government had intelligence reports that Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval was planning something in Balochistan but did not expect him to target innocent children.
“After facing a humiliating defeat on the battlefield, India has resorted to despicable and cowardly acts,” the media wing of Pakistan’s military said in a statement.
“Planners, abettors and executors of this cowardly Indian sponsored attack will be hunted down and brought to justice and heinous face of India will be exposed in front of the entire world,” the statement added.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will make an emergency visit to the province where he would be briefed on the attack by terrorists, allegedly backed by India, said a statement issued by his office.
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a rebel group fighting for the independence of the region from Pakistan, earlier claimed it targeted the bus, but said it was transporting the soldiers.
Islamabad claims that the BLA is backed by India.
Violence orchestrated by sub-nationalist rebels has surged in Balochistan, a region that borders both Afghanistan and Iran, and is a hub of Chinese investment and connectivity projects.
Earlier this month, India and Pakistan carried out tit-for-tat drone, missile and airstrikes targeting each other’s military installations and airbases.
The nuclear-armed rivals agreed to the ceasefire on May 10 but continue to accuse each other for terror incidents. (dpa/NAN)
Foreign News
Thousands Protest in Pakistan After Drone Strike Kills 4 Children

Thousands of people in north-west Pakistan on Tuesday blocked a highway by placing the coffins of four children who were killed by a suspected drone strike.
The protests in the Mir Ali area of North Waziristan region began earlier on Monday after a family home was hit, local resident Mohamed Jamal Dawar said.
It is not clear who was behind the incident.
Local activist Zahid Wazir said the drone was operated by the Pakistani military.
He said the home was likely mistaken as a hideout used by Islamist militants.
Pakistani intelligence officials said the explosives were fired by a quadcopter that was being operated by the Taliban militants to target a nearby military post, but that it missed the target.
An independent verification was not possible as the region is inaccessible to outsiders.
Activists of a local rights group, the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, which is against the militarisation of the region by both the military and the Pakistani Taliban, vowed to continue the protest.
“We will continue to demand justice for our kids,” Wazir said.
The Pakistani military and Islamist militants have been fighting each other in the region for more than two decades.
More than 80,000 Pakistanis, an overwhelming majority of civilians, have lost their lives in years of violence. (dpa/NAN)