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Prateek Sadhu: Satiate your sweet tooth

India — DIY vegan dessert

I’m trying to turn vegan but keep getting swayed by sweet treats. What’s the most delectable vegan dessert I can whip up at home?

-Sagar, Via Email

There are many options you can try at home. One of them is to take almond, coconut, cashew nut or any nut milk and soak flax or chia seeds in it. Since mangoes are in season now, add a generous helping of that, or any other fruit that you like. Add a layer of nuts or seeds like pumpkin seeds or magaj seeds. Mix it all together. Add a dash of honey or jaggery powder. Put it in a container and refrigerate it for an hour-hour and a half, and you are good to go!

Prateek’s signature restaurant, Masque, is changing India’s culinary landscape and was awarded the One To Watch Award by Asia’s 50 Best in 2020

From HT Brunch, April 25, 2021

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Connect with us on facebook.com/hindustantimesbrunchFor any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at contentservices@htlive.comHT Digital streams Ltd

India sees over 300,000 Covid-19 cases for fourth straight day

India — India’s new daily cases of the coronavirus disease (covid-19) crossed 300,000 for the fourth straight day as the Union ministry of health and family welfare (MoHFW) said on Sunday morning that 349,691 fresh infections were detected across the country in the last 24 hours, taking the infection tally to 16,960,172.

‘Unless world is vaccinated, variants will grow’: Dr Drew Weissman

India — Covid-19 will continue to be a problem and “variants will keep getting scarier and scarier” until at least two-thirds of the global population is vaccinated, one of the world’s foremost scientists has said, calling for efforts to minimise the inequity that has left large parts of the world without access to doses.

The comments were made by Dr Drew Weissman, professor of medicine at University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman medical school, who, along with his long-time collaborator Dr Katalin Kariko, is credited with the research that underpins the success of mRNA vaccines by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

“There are two things that have to happen for us to get the pandemic under control and stop the variants from appearing. We have to vaccinate the entire world and countries need to have a high enough percentage of people vaccinated – somewhere between 75-85% in order to reach herd immunity. Until that happens, variants will keep appearing and they are going to keep getting scarier and scarier,” he said in an interview over a video call.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said in a report on Friday that even after nearly a billion doses being given out, coronavirus vaccines remain out of reach in the poorest countries. “Over 81% have gone to high- or upper middle-income countries, while low-income countries have received just 0.3%,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a briefing.

“The world really needs to get moving on this,” Dr Weissman said, while adding that vaccine hesitancy too needs to be tackled. “What people who are hesitant do not realise is that if they don’t take it, we are never going to reach herd immunity and Covid is going to be a problem for years and years to come,” he said.

The Penn professor also said that he expects mRNA vaccines to become cheaper over time and that he and his colleagues at the university were working on making such vaccines more stable at refrigerator temperature so that they can be moved around more easily. “All of those advances I think are going to come over the next few months,” he said.

“It (mRNA vaccines) is expensive because it’s brand new. The companies have just figured out how to make 100 million doses a month. Over time, I believe it is going to get less and less expensive.”

RNA is genetic material that human cells read to make specific proteins. For decades, scientists attempted to leverage RNA to create therapeutics. RNA allowed scientists to instruct the body to create the proteins they intended to (in the case of Covid-19 vaccines, it is the spike protein the coronavirus uses to latch onto cells).

But scientists discovered it was not easy to deliver the RNA, since the immune system recognised and destroyed it before it could enter cells and start issuing instructions. It was this problem Dr Weissman and Dr Kariko, who is also known as Kati by her colleagues, solved and reported in a paper published in August 2005.

“We spent a bunch of years studying that inflammatory activity and finally figured out how to get rid of it, which was by modifying a part of the RNA code,” Dr Weissman said, referring to what was scientifically known as a nucleoside modification.

“Kati then moved to BioNTech where she developed the LNP technology (liquid nano particles), which is also a crucial part of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines,” Dr Weissman added. LNPs are microscopic bubbles in which the RNA of the vaccine is wrapped, helping evade the body’s natural defences till it achieves what it’s meant to do: teach a cell how to recreate the Sars-Cov-2 spike protein so that the immune system can recognise it and fight off the real virus.

The platform is also easy and quick to tweak, which will likely be an important tool to create new vaccines in case the Sars-Cov-2 mutates to become more resistant.

“The minute new variants that look concerning appear, you can take the sequence and plug it into an RNA vaccine. It will take you literally weeks to make a new vaccine. That’s because the technology is the same no matter what the sequence. (But) if you have to make an adenovirus or an inactivated virus vaccine, you have to make the virus, grow it, inactivate it — all that takes a lot of time,” Dr Weissman said

The scientist said that he and his lab are working on multiple projects to help make vaccines accessible to more parts of the country. “My lab and me personally have had a big issue with equality of vaccine access. Early last spring, we started working with the government of Thailand to build their own RNA vaccines. They are going to be able to make the vaccine in Thailand and supply it to seven surrounding LMIC. I am also working with WHO to do the same thing in Africa so that same access is available,” he said.

The professor expects some of these to become available by the end of the year.

Canadian PM, wife get AZ vaccine jab

India — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire received their first jab of the Covid-19 vaccine on Friday, with both getting the AstraZeneca injection what was symbolic support for it.

The Trudeaus received their injection at a pharmacy in Ottawa, and just before getting the jab, the Prime Minister said he was “very excited”. That inoculation came as the National Advisory Council on Immunisation or NACI also lowered the age threshold for getting the AZ vaccine from those over 55 to the 30-plus category.

The AZ vaccine has resulted in rare side-effects, blood clots with lower platelets, and one more case of this adverse reaction was reported in the province of Ontario, taking the countrywide total to four, following similar instances in Quebec, Alberta and New Brunswick earlier. The Ontario case was also linked to the AZ version manufactured by the Serum Institute of India under the brand name Covishield.

In its recommendation, NACI said the complete series of the AZ vaccine could be offered to those over 30 without contraindications, but “only if the individual does not wish to wait for an mRNA vaccine” and if it is determined “that the benefit of earlier vaccination with the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine outweighs the risk of Covid-19 while waiting for an mRNA Covid-19 vaccine.”

Health Canada has “concluded that the benefits of this vaccine continue to outweigh the potential risks”. The adverse event has been referred to as Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia or VITT and is estimated to occur in one in every 100,000 to one in every 250,000 people vaccinated with the AZ jab.

NACI also said the AZ vaccine has demonstrated an efficacy of 62% in the 18 to 64 age bracket while those older “who received one dose of AstraZeneca, real-world observational data of vaccine effectiveness have shown a reduction in the risk of symptomatic disease and hospitalization”. It also noted that the AZ vaccine and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines provide against the B117 variant of concern first detected in the United Kingdom.

In a statement, the Council of Chief Medical Officers of Health said, “All of Canada’s approved Covid-19 vaccines provide a high level of. Through earlier access to vaccination, we have the opportunity to vaccinate more people faster, protect our health care system, reduce severe illness and save lives.”

It added that their “overall goal” remains focused on “enabling as many people as possible to be immunised as quickly as possible against Covid-19 with a safe and effective vaccine, while ensuring that high-risk populations are prioritized”.

Fatal accident at Ubi construction site, Bangladeshi workers dies after excavator falls on him

Singapore – A 37-year-old Bangladeshi migrant worker died at a worksite in Ubi after a part of an excavator fell on him on Thursday (Apr 22).

According to a Ministry of Manpower (MOM) representative on Friday (Apr 23), the man was helping his co-worker lift some steel frames using an excavator fitted with a concrete breaker attachment.

The attachment detached and fell on the man, said the MOM spokesperson.

He was conveyed to the Changi General Hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries.

Reports noted that the accident happened at a construction site at Ubi Road 3 and Ubi Avenues 1 and 2.

The man is employed under Right Construction, a company involved in general building, civil engineering and piling work. Right Construction is also the occupant of the worksite.

“MOM is investigating the incident and has instructed the occupier to stop the use of excavators in the worksite,” said the representative to Channel News Asia.

The incident is the latest in a series of fatal workplace accidents this year.

In Feb, three workers died from injuries after an explosion involving potato starch powder at an industrial building in Tuas.

Senior Minister of State for Manpower Zaqy Mohamad took to Facebook on Apr 19 to highlight six workplace fatalities in the manufacturing sector last year compared to four in 2019.

“The sector also had the highest number of non-fatal injuries in 2020,” said Mr Zaqy.

In particular, machinery accidents accounted for nearly 30 per cent of all injuries, and is one of the leading cause of non-fatal injuries overall, said Mr Zaqy.

During an inspection at a manufacturing company, Mr Zaqy and MOM officers uncovered several lapses, including lack of traffic management and poor machinery maintenance like forklifts. Said company will be issued a Stop-Work Order by MOM, added Mr Zaqy.

“Companies need to step up their safety efforts, especially in machinery safety,” he noted.

“From May to June, MOM will be conducting an enforcement operation Ops Ibis, with 400 inspections targeting high-risk sectors such as manufacturing and construction, with a focus on machinery safety.”

He urged employers and employees to play their part and take greater ownership of safety at their workplaces./TISG

Read related: 3 migrant workers die after 10 injured in Tuas industrial building blast

3 migrant workers die after 10 injured in Tuas industrial building blast

WP leaders past and present meet in the Leader of the Opposition’s office

Singapore — Prominent members of the Workers’ Party (WP) recently gathered at the office allocated to Mr Pritam Singh as the Leader of the Opposition (LO).

They were happily smiling in the picture Mr Singh posted on Facebook on Thursday (Apr 22).

“It was cool to have all of them in the LO’s office looking back and reflecting on their experiences with the Workers’ Party,” he wrote.

The party has indeed come a long way.

In the 1980s, recalled Mr Singh, former WP chief Low Thia Khiang and Mr Lim Ee Ping, a party member since 1959, “would be out selling the party newsletter, The Hammer. Mrs Low would also join in, with a stack in her hand. But no one would buy a copy. Or if they did, it would be with a peek over their shoulder or with furtive glances.”

Now Mr Singh has his own office in Parliament House and the Workers’ Party has gained support. It has 10 of the 93 elected Members of Parliament.

 

 

Reflecting on the changes and the old times, Mr Singh wrote: “Uncle Ee Ping joined the party in 1959 and after the last elections he gifted me a 🔨 (hammer) which is displayed prominently on a bookshelf in the office! Since its founding, the party and those who stood with it have been through many trials and tribulations.”

He ended with a tribute to his predecessor: “But Mr Low’s endeavour to make the WP commit to a brand of rational, responsible and respectable politics was, if not a turning point, a critical waypoint”.

“There is a lot of work ahead yet”, he added. /TISG

Joe Jonas says he apologised to Frankie Jonas ‘behind closed doors’ for ‘hurtful’ Bonus Jonas nickname

India, April 24 — Franklin aka ‘Frankie’ Jonas, the younger brother of Jonas Brothers – Joe Jonas, Nick Jonas and Kevin Jonas, has talked about his intense dislike for the ‘Bonus Jonas’ nickname. Joe also revealed that he apologised to his little brother after realising how hurtful it was.

In an interview with Bustle, Frankie said that as a young boy, the nickname made him feel like he was relevant only as an extension of the Jonas Brothers. “I always hated that nickname. A lot of my problem with being in the public eye was that I was seen as this commodified vision of myself.”

Joe said that once he was made to realise how the nickname hurt Frankie, he apologised and stopped using it. “I refused to call Frankie ‘Bonus Jonas’ after he opened up to me about how that was hurtful to him. It completely makes sense, and we’ve had lengthy conversations and apologies behind closed doors that showcased my understanding and respect for his wishes. I think to feel like you are second, third, or fourth best from something is unfair; we are all equals,” he said.

Last month, in a TikTok video, Frankie opened up about overcoming his drug addiction and battling suicidal thoughts. Replying to a fan, he said, “This is by no means the eloquent explanation I hope to give on a much more serious mode than this. However, from a very young age, I struggled with drinking and drugging as an escape because I hated life, and I didn’t want to be here. I eventually, after many years of trying to kill myself accidentally, came to a point where I was going to do it for real.”

Frankie’s life was saved as ‘something intervened’; he went to treatment and kicked his addiction to the curb. “And I couldn’t be more grateful for the fact that I’m alive today because my world has changed so beautifully and so astronomically, and I am not that person anymore. I couldn’t be more grateful that I’m alive and happy,” he said.

If you need support or know someone who does, please reach out to your nearest mental health specialist. Helplines: Aasra: 022 2754 6669; Sneha India Foundation: +914424640050 and Sanjivini: 011-24311918

Caught on camera: False ceiling near Golden Mile Complex entrances collapses

Singapore – A section of a false ceiling near the entrance of Golden Mile Complex in Beach Road was caught on camera collapsing on Friday (Apr 23).

The impact left a cloud of dust in the area as nearby members of the public witnessed the scene.

Photo: FB screngrab

Meanwhile, photos circulating in WhatsApp showed a large section of ceiling boards attached to a wooden frame, nails, and wiring exposed, strewn across a portion of the stairs near the taxi stand.

Photo: Taken from WhatsApp
Photo: Taken from WhatsApp

According to a Straits Times report, no injuries were reported.

An eyewitness shared with Chinese newspaper Lianhe Wanbao that she heard the sound of something breaking seconds before the ceiling collapsed.

A Singapore Civil Defence Force representative noted that it was not alerted to any incident at the shopping centre.

The area where the ceiling collapsed was cordoned off, and workers were spotted cleaning the rubble later in the evening, reported Wanbao.

In response to the news, members from the online community urged authorities to review the safety of old buildings.

“Building Construction Authority must make sure that buildings in Singapore are designed, constructed and maintained to high standards of safety. The focus must be more on old buildings to ensure public safety,” noted Facebook user MC Lee.

A video of the aftermath can be watched here. /TISG

Read related: Ceiling collapses at Northpoint City; no reported injuries

Ceiling collapses at Northpoint City; no reported injuries

Lawrence Wong: Will the next Finance Minister become the next PM – this time?

Finance Ministers do not necessarily become Prime Ministers. But being a Finance Minister at a time like now is significant. So I would say Lawrence Wong is very much the man of the hour. Watch this space. Do not take your eyes off this tea leaf swirling in the midst of a leadership-testing pandemic.

Of course, former Finance Ministers Goh Keng Swee, Lim Kim San, Hon Sui Sen, Tony Tan, Richard Hu and Tharman Shanmugaratnam did not become PM (one, Tony Tan, went on to be the President by the skin of his teeth and contributed to the birth of the Progress Singapore Party because of a disgruntled Tan Cheng Bock). But Goh Chok Tong and Lee Hsien Loong did. Heng Swee Keat would have been the third FM to be PM. He was meant to be the DPM and Finance Minister leading the party and nation through Covid-19 and GE2020 on his way to the Istana. But we know what happened to him, with all due respect to his undoubted performance as FM.

In the original PAP 4G Leadership Transition Plan, there were really two contenders to be future PM – the ultimate government insider and economic tsar (Heng) versus the helicoptered let’s have a show of hands SAF general (Chan Chun Sing). Both turned out to be poor public communicators, for different reasons, which might not have been such a hurdle in the pre-Internet days but can lose the ruling party chunks of votes and dampen public trust and confidence nowadays especially when Opposition rivals are getting better than you in relating to the ground or in live parliamentary debates or any kind of open debate captured on Skype, Zoom or YouTube.

Heng has opted out, Chan is still plugging on but this time he is no longer so pre-eminent. He is merely one of a trio – he, Ong Ye Kung and Wong – in the race to be PM.

The odds favour Lawrence Wong. He has a number of factors in his favour.

His co-chairmanship of the Multi-ministry Task Force to handle Covid-19 shot him into contention for top level Cabinet posts even before he was being touted as a possible PM. Every other night, even as the virus raged through the foreign workers’ dormitories, he showed he was on top of the facts as he explained, with Kenneth Mak, MOH director of medical services, and Health Minister Gan Kim Yong, what was happening and the steps being taken to deal with each development. He has been doing this quite impressively since the outbreak of Covid-19 in early 2020 and the last press conference just took place on April 22, 2021. New Health Minister Ong will join him as co-chair of the MTF and will also be at the press conferences. He has some catching up to do, although as Transport Minister, he has had enough front-line experience in dealing with the public.

If the People’s Action Party is genuinely keen to have a post-Heng/Chan reset, the race will obviously be down from a trio to just a pair – Wong and Ong.

Of the two, Wong does not have historical baggage. He has not lost any election (as Ong had in the Aljunied GRC in GE2011), so does not have a loser’s tag should he go on to be the next PM. It is unfair to Ong but it may a factor in a everything being equal situation.

I have every confidence that Ong will buckle down in his new appointment as Health Minister and probably be a good one, like Gan Kim Yong. But, for the time being, he may be slightly in the shadow of Lawrence Wong.

Wong has a huge job and big boots to fill. Finance has always been a key ministry from the start of Singapore’s independence. All the names mentioned in the second paragraph of this column are mostly men of calibre, with unquestioned integrity and financial expertise. One or two were even legendary.

In normal times, the search for a competent Finance Minister would have been demanding in itself. Today, getting the right person for the post of Finance Minister of Singapore – a financial centre and a country with a growing economy – is even more exacting.

On top of everything, Wong has now to step into Heng Swee Keat’s role to deal with the economic disruption caused Covid-19.

Being appointed Finance Minister at a time like this when billions of dollars have to be justified and spent says something about Wong’s leadership trajectory. If he can continue to co-lead the MTF in the same unruffled and focused way that has won him no small measure of public confidence, Singapore’s next Finance Minister may well be the next PM – this time.

 

Tan Bah Bah, consulting editor of TheIndependent.Sg, is a former senior leader writer with The Straits Times. He was also managing editor of a local magazine publishing company.

 

 

 

Say what? Actor Shane Pow may be charged for DUI again!

Singapore – Things aren’t looking too great for actor Shane Pow after his recent charge for driving under influence!

On Apr 22, the actor attended a hearing at the State Courts and was charged with a count of DUI. With that, his second hearing is set for June 3.

Unfortunately, if he’s found guilty, he’ll be a repeat offender and may endure a driving ban of at least five years. Not to mention, he may face up to two years of jail time and a fine starting at S$5,000 to S$20,000.

According to other news sources, it was on Sep 17 last year (2020) when Pow was caught drunk driving at about 11.20 pm. The star was apparently driving on Java Road on the way to Nicoll Highway with 49mcg of alcohol in 100ml breath – higher than the legal limit of 35mcg in 100ml breath.

This would be Pow’s second DUI conviction, as his previous took place in July 2014.

News outlet 8days.sg has reportedly contacted Pow’s girlfriend slash 987FM radio DJ Kimberly Wang for comment but nobody responded.

However, this isn’t the first time he’s gotten into trouble with the law in the past few months.

Back in December, Pow and 13 other people were charged for breaching social distancing measures after they gathered at a condominium unit to celebrate Jeffrey Xu’s birthday in October. Among this group of people were local celebrities such as Terence Cao, Jeremy Chan, Julie Tan, Dawn Yeoh, and Sonia Chew.

Two of them, Cao and a non-celebrity were charged in court while the 11 others were each fined S$300  instead of facing prosecution due to their “level of culpability”.

The second phase of Singapore’s social distancing measures stated that group gatherings must be limited to five people at most.

Despite the potential charges he may face soon, Pow isn’t the only celebrity who has committed traffic offences.

In 2007, actor Christopher Lee was convicted of DUI. He had to serve six weeks in prison and pay a fine of S$4,500.

In 2013, Quan Yifeng knocked a pedestrian down. She was banned from driving for three months and had to pay a fine of S$800. /TISG