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9 May 2013
The World News Headlines Patak unveils desi cooking campaign
This Week Tokyo stock market soars
Shares in Tokyo have soared, closing at their highest level in five years, with the market driven by a weakening Japanese currency and after Wall Street hit fresh all-time highs on solid jobs data. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index gained 3.55 percent, or 486.20 points, to 14,180.24 on Tuesday, its best finish since June 2008.
P
atak’s has unveiled its 3-2-1 Desi Cooking campaign which aims to show people how to cook a variety of mouth-watering desi khanas. By using Patak’s masala pastes, the 3-21 Desi Cooking videos on YouTube demonstrate how to cook a number of delicious dishes - the kind that take you back to your roots and brings families together. “Our masala pastes have been expertly crafted with the finest spices and ingredients and we are extremely proud of them. The 3-2-1 Desi Cooking videos on YouTube allow us to share just some ways people can create variety of mouth-watering dishes using one jar of Patak’s masala paste, said Sneha Beriwal, Patak’s Brand Manager. “We will help you enhance the desi flavours in one easy step. So you have more time to enjoy delicious khana with your family and friends!” Patak’s ranges of masala pastes not only enhance flavours to create flavoursome desi dishes but also let people experiment with flavours they have always wanted to try. Patak’s 3-2-1 Desi Cooking videos feature popular UK based desi foodies, each cooking with their favourite masala paste to create three different dishes.
UN unsure on chemicals
Rushanara Ali MP calls for urgent action on aid
R
ushanara Ali has said there is an urgent need for the UK Government to step up its response to future humanitarian crises. Last week, a report released by the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation and the Famine Early Warning Systems Network estimated that the number of people who died during the 2011 Somalia famine was much higher than initially anticipated at almost 260,000. Shadow Minister for International Development, Rushanara Ali, has urged the need for the UK Government to ensure that warnings for similar humanitarian crises are responded to much earlier and faster in order to avert the huge loss of life witnessed during the recent East Africa famine. Ms Ali said: “This study has highlighted the shock-
ing reality and the immense impact this famine has had on Somalia and its people the worst drought to have hit East Africa in a quarter of a century affecting 13 million people. With almost half of the estimated 260,000 people who had died being children below the age of 5, it is deeply concerning that the international community – who had dealt with a similar crisis in the “the long tailed” mid1970s drought – failed to act fast and could have saved the lives of thousands of people in Somalia during this famine. “Somalia’s politics has played a major role in exacer-
bating the countries droughts and there is a real concern that early interventions for such crises are being made avoidable for this reason. This report suggests that the early warning signals should have been acted on instantaneously by western donors but action was only taken once the famine had been officially declared and at that point thousands were already suffering and the crisis could sadly no longer be averted. “Reacting to a humanitarian crisis early to avert the deaths of thousands is paramount for Somalia’s future. The UK Government now
‘Reacting to a humanitarian crisis early to avert the deaths of thousands is paramount for Somalia’s future’
has the opportunity to outline its agenda in the Somali Conference today. What the UK Government must take away from this study, is the importance of the UK’s commitment to continue providing 0.7% of aid in international development – a commitment that cannot be turned back on and must be enshrined in law. The UK Government must also ensure that it is engaging with its counterparts in the Somali government so that aid is reaching those in need and that future early warning systems are acted on immediately.” Last year, Rushanara visited East Africa where she witnessed first-hand the work of NGOs on the ground assisting those struggling to cope with the impact of climate change that have destroyed their traditionally nomadic way of life.
Death toll in Dhaka factory collapse passes 800
T
he death toll from the collapse of an eight-storey factory building near the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, has passed 800, officials say. The announcement came after workers pulled dozens more bodies from the rubble. Many people are still missing. Several people, including the building’s own-
er,
have been arrested. The collapse of the Rana Plaza on 24 April stands as Bangladesh’s worst industrial disaster. It sparked outrage among workers in the country. The previous most deadly structural failure in modern times - excluding the 9/11 terror attacks in New York - was the Sampoong department
store in Seoul, South Korea, in 1995, in which 502 people died. The death toll from Bangladesh now stands at 705. Officials say about 2,500 people were injured in the collapse and that 2,437 people have been rescued. Rescue officials also say they do not know exactly how many people are still missing as factory owners have not
given them precise figures. It came as hundreds of garment workers who survived the collapse protested by blocking a highway close to the accident site demanding unpaid wages and benefits. Reports say many of them were working in some of the factories housed in the illegally constructed building.
A UN team of investigators has said it has not reached “conclusive findings” that chemical weapons have been used by any parties in the Syrian conflict, distancing itself from an earlier statement from one of its members who suggested the likely use of sarin gas by rebels. The US said if anybody had used chemical weapons, it was probably the Syrian government.
Afghan-Pak border clashes
Cross-border clashes between Afghan and Pakistani security forces have broken out for the second time in three days, escalating tensions between the two countries, officials have said. Afghan officials said Monday’s crossfire started after Pakistani troops tried to repair a gate on the border in the Afghan district of Goshta, where last week an Afghan border policeman was killed, and two Pakisanis were injured, in an exchange of fire.
US plane down in Kyrgyzstan Rescuers recovered the bodies of two US pilots whose refuelling plane crashed in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan shortly after taking off from a base that serves as a hub for military operations in Afghanistan, the emergency situations ministry said. “The bodies of two pilots were found … near the site of the crash. The search operation is continuing, the body of the third crew member has not yet been found,” a spokesman for the Kyrgyzstan emergency situations ministry said.
Protest against drones
Anti-war campaigners have marched to an airbase in eastern England military to voice their opposition to Britain’s use of armed drones in Afghanistan. Saturday’s demonstration comes after the operation of the 10 unmanned aircraft was relocated from a base in Nevada in the US to the UK for the first time earlier this week.