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Sotto banking on resiliency in his basketball journey

FILIPINO YOUNG GUN KAI SOTTO — FIBA

SET to take his next basketball journey in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL), Filipino young gun Kai P. Sotto is banking on resiliency and willingness to try to see his goals through.

To play for the Adelaide 36ers in the upcoming season of the NBL, Mr. Sotto, 19, shared that challenges lie ahead, but these are something he is willing to take on, recognizing that they would only help him grow as a player.

“Believe in yourself, just put the work in. On the basketball court, you should not give up easily. The same goes in life,” said the former Ateneo High School standout in a video interview for Smart Double Giga Stories.

“As time goes on, you’ll improve. Through the challenges, you’ll face you get tougher,” he continued.

The 7-foot-3 center went on to say that the support of his family, including father, Erwin, who is a former Philippine Basketball Association player, has been a big help in his push to build a career in basketball.

“The word ‘family’ is big for me. Probably, the biggest word in my vocabulary,” said Mr. Sotto, citing the confidence to try things out as one of the lessons inculcated to him by his family.

“[There will be doubts], but don’t be afraid to fail because it will be part of your journey and lead to your success,” he said.

Mr. Sotto recently played for Gilas Pilipinas in the third and final window of the FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers in Clark, Pampanga, in June.

He averaged 9.3 points, seven rebounds and 1.3 assists in three games in said tournament.

To view Mr. Sotto’s latest video collaboration with Smart, click on the link https://fb.watch/7tzJCmYxGU/.

Smart subscribers can also share their journey in pursuing their passions and spirit of resilience by way of Smart Double GIGA Stories, which give subscribers unlimited access to social media and video streaming apps.

Double GIGA Stories comes with 2GB for Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tiktok, and Kumu guaranteed every day, plus data for all sites. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Spaniard Jon Rahm named PGA of America’s Player of the Year

US Open champion Jon Rahm added further accolades to a stellar campaign on Tuesday as the Spaniard was named the Professional Golfers Association (PGA) of America Player of the Year and also collected the Vardon Trophy for lowest adjusted scoring average.

For world number one Rahm, who finished runner-up to Justin Thomas for the PGA of America honors last year, it marked the first time in his career that he clinched the points-based award that factors in tournament wins, official money and scoring average. Rahm, who finished one shot back of Patrick Cantlay in the season-ending Tour Championship on Sunday in Atlanta, tallied a career-best 75 Player of the Year points.

Rahm, who recorded a PGA Tour-leading 15 top-10 finishes in 22 events, also won the Vardon Trophy with an average score of 69.3. Dustin Johnson finished runner-up (69.619) while South African Louis Oosthuizen (69.714) was third. — Reuters

Griezmann double fires France to victory over Finland

LYON, France — Antoine Griezmann played chief tormentor as France sprung back into life to end a five-game winless streak by beating visitors Finland (2-0) in a World Cup Group D qualifier on Tuesday.

Griezmann struck in each half after his partnership with Karim Benzema bore fruit in satisfying fashion to put the world champions on 12 points from six matches at the top of the group.

Finland, who had a decent opening half, are third on five points, but have two games in hand of the French.

Bosnia is fourth on three points from four games after a 2-2 draw with bottom side Kazakhstan, who also have three points. Ukraine are second on five points from as many matches.

“Even it was not perfect, we showed determination and with that came some more technical quality,” said France coach Didier Deschamps.

“We had more confidence, it was more like us. It’s a very important result for us, now we have to finish the job in November.”

After two 1-1 draws against Bosnia and Ukraine, Deschamps’ tinkering paid off as France started in an usual 5-2-3 formation with Leo Dubois and Theo Hernandez as fullbacks and Griezmann, Anthony Martial and Benzema up front.

But it was Finland who had the first clear chance through Urho Nissila, whose floating strike was tipped over the bar by Hugo Lloris.

Les Bleus, however, were on the attack and Lukas Hradecky pulled off a nice save in the 22nd minute to deny Benzema.

Griezmann found the back of the net when he whipped the ball past Hradecky with the outside of his foot after collecting a clever deflection in the box by Benzema on 25 minutes.

Finland continued to threaten on the break, but France proved clinical early in the second half.

After some more nice work from Benzema, Dubois found Griezmann in the area and the forward sneaked the ball between Hradecky and the left-hand post to give the hosts some breathing space in the 53rd.

He has now scored 41 international goals to become France’s joint third all-time top scorer alongside Michel Platini.

Shortly afterwards, Martial missed Hernandez’s cross for what would have been France’s third.

France controlled the end game, keeping the ball high on the pitch and creating a few chances through Benzema, who had a night to remember on his visit to his former stadium, 12 years after leaving Olympique Lyonnais for Real Madrid. — Reuters

NFL: Quarterbacks old and new battle for glory as season kicks off

LOS ANGELES — Veteran quarterbacks including Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers will look to maintain their dominance amid an influx of new talent in the sport’s most crucial position when the National Football League (NFL) season kicks off this week.

A record eight QBs were taken in the first three rounds of this year’s draft, but it is the sport’s biggest names who are best positioned for further success.

Brady led Tampa Bay to a blowout Super Bowl victory last season in his first year with the franchise to claim his record-extending seventh championship ring.

The 44-year-old is looking to improve in his 22nd season and make the Buccaneers the first team in 16 years to win back-to-back titles, leaving desperate fans in the NFC South to ponder whether there is any hope for a postseason.

“(Offensive coordinator) Byron Leftwich said something really good the other day: It’s a very simple game that’s so hard to execute,” Brady said in an interview with NBC Sports.

“It’s a totally imperfect game that you’re trying to do as perfectly as possible. Every day, I come out trying to do it. I’m hoping this is my best year.”

Brady said he planned to play until he is no longer a “championship-level quarterback,” which could be another several years given his mastery of the position.

Reigning league MVP Rodgers could also have renewed focus following a drama-filled offseason where it appeared the 37-year-old might not return to Green Bay.

The Packers raised eyebrows when the team traded up to select quarterback and possible eventual Rodgers replacement Jordan Love in the 2020 draft.

Rodgers said his future with the team was uncertain after falling to the Bucs in the NFC Championship last season.

But the fiercely competitive Rodgers will be back under center for the Packers and if he can channel any lingering frustration into his play on the field, the rest of the league better look out.

Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes will look to avenge last season’s Super Bowl thumping at the hands of Brady and the overpowering Bucs defense.

Mahomes, 25, was touted as the future of the league after he led the Chiefs to a come-from-behind victory over San Francisco in Super Bowl LIV and will be out to prove that his lethal combination of speed and accuracy is the future of the position.

Mahomes last year signed a blockbuster 10-year, $503-million contract extension, the biggest in NFL history.

ROOKIE CALLERS
But rookie signal callers are also poised to make their presence felt.

First overall draft pick Trevor Lawrence will make his debut for the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday while second pick Zach Wilson will be handed the keys to the struggling New York Jets franchise.

Mac Jones, selected in the first round by New England, will also be thrown right into action after the Patriots’ surprising decision last month to part ways with veteran quarterback Cam Newton, who underwhelmed last season after a strong start.

Jones has impressed during the preseason and will look to keep that momentum going in the league’s expanded, 17-game regular season.

Quarterback drama could play out in San Francisco, where the 49ers will have to decide whether to stick with the established, but often-injured Jimmy Garoppolo or hand the reigns to rookie Trey Lance, who the team took with the No. 3 pick.

And fans will be fascinated to see how Matthew Stafford and Jared Goff respond after switching teams this offseason, with Stafford now part of the Los Angeles Rams and Goff a member of the Detroit Lions.

The NFL’s 102nd season begins on Thursday when the Bucs host the Dallas Cowboys. — Reuters

Alcaraz retires to send Auger-Aliassime into US Open semifinals

NEW YORK — Felix Auger-Aliassime moved into the US Open semifinals on Tuesday when Spanish teenager Carlos Alcaraz retired due to an abductor injury while trailing (6-3, 3-1).

The 18-year-old Spaniard showed no signs of distress as Auger-Aliassime took the opening set, but after the Canadian broke to open the second Alcaraz slumped.

During the first changeover of the second set, Alcaraz called for the physiotherapist, but did not receive any treatment. A game later, however, the Spaniard turned and indicated he could not go on.

“It’s really tough to end a great tournament like this,” said Alcaraz. “I had no choice to still playing.

“First of all, I have to take care of my body.

“I didn’t feel good to still playing, so I had to retire.”

Coming off grueling back-to-back five-set matches, including a third-round win over Stefanos Tsitsipas, Alcaraz stepped onto the court with both legs heavily strapped and seemed to lack the power and energy that had carried him to the quarterfinals.

“I didn’t see it coming. It’s unfortunate to finish like this,” said Auger-Aliassime. “I didn’t really see anything.

“Either I was too focused on my game or I’m not seeing things.”

Auger-Aliassime becomes the first Canadian man to reach the US Open semifinals where he will take on second seeded Daniil Medvedev of Russia.

The 21-year-old joins compatriot Leylah Fernandez, who booked her spot in the women’s last four earlier in the day by beating Elina Svitolina.

“It’s great for Canada. It’s great for Quebec,” said Auger-Aliassime. “I never thought a day like this would come.

“Both a little girl and a little boy from Montreal, both at the same time in the semifinals of the US Open.

“It’s special.

“I hope the people back home appreciate the moment also.

“It’s great, but it would be amazing if we were both in a final.” — Reuters

Ahead of 9.9 sale, environmental groups call on Lazada and Shopee to lead zero-waste initiatives

Image courtesy of Bataris/Greenpeace

Environmental groups are demanding that e-commerce giants Lazada and Shopee commit to concrete forms of environmental sustainability. This comes a day before the much anticipated 9.9 sale on both platforms. 

More than 14,000 individuals signed an online petition by Youth for Climate Philippines calling for transparency on plastic packaging waste.  

In a statement, Youth Strike for Climate Philippines, Greenpeace Philippines, and JuanBag petitioned Lazada and Shopee to reveal data on waste estimates; reduce current waste production by introducing reduction targets; and redesign current systems by exploring reusable and returnable packaging and incentives for both buyers and sellers. 

“The global e-commerce plastic packaging market will continue to expand at a projected annual growth rate of 14.2%,” said Marian Frances T. Ledesma, Greenpeace Philippines Zero Waste Campaigner, citing a 2020 study on the plastic problem by Oceana, a nonprofit ocean conservation organization.  

“That’s why it’s imperative that e-commerce platforms like Lazada and Shopee act on our calls,” she said in a press briefing Tuesday.   

Although Lazada previously organized roundtable discussions on reducing plastic waste and Shopee mounted a campaign to “shop green” by providing discounts for eco-friendly products, neither has displayed a more concrete course of action, according to Greenpeace Philippines.  

Instead of using the same packaging for all kinds of items, Ms. Ledesma recommended reusable packaging for non-fragile items that don’t need to be carefully and thickly packaged in plastic.  

One option is JuanBag, a returnable and reusable packaging provider that picks up plastic bags and other wrapping materials to be sanitized and upcycled, care of their partner weavers.  

The products are offered to online sellers as alternative packaging, which consumers can choose upon check-out then return via pick-up points for repair and reuse.   

“We want to create a culture shift through packaging,” said Rachelle Lacanlale, JuanBag’s founder. “We’re lowering the cost of packaging and increasing consumers’ engagement with environmental solutions. We’re also providing income to vulnerable communities through sanitation and repair.”  

To mitigate additional cost (which consumers have to shoulder when they choose returnable packaging), Ms. Lacanlale suggested that e-commerce platforms partner with malls, convenience stores, and logistics providers. 

According to Jefferson M. Chua, campaigner for Greenpeace Philippines, environmental sustainability can be profitable. Reports on the future of e-commerce have shown that consumers today are willing to patronize more environmentally sustainable brands. 

“If these e-commerce platforms are able to lead the way and introduce more rational approaches to packaging, we can all work together to make packaging less environmentally harmful,” he said.

On Sept. 9, Lazada responded with a statement that reads in part: We believe that everyone plays a vital role in preserving our planet and we continue to be staunchly committed in working with all of our industry partners in building a sustainable eCommerce ecosystem and in addressing the environmental impact of waste in-line with the UN Sustainable Development Goal 12.

LazMall recently partnered with Starbucks to offer accessories and drinkware made from recycled coffee grounds. It also launched a beauty e-commerce sustainability program with the L’Oréal Group wherein customers who purchase products from Garnier, Maybelline, and L’Oréal Paris via the respective LazMall flagship stores will receive parcels that use alternative sustainable packaging materials. — Brontë H. Lacsamana

95% herd immunity vs Delta is ‘a myth,’ says infectious disease expert

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

Targeting 95% herd immunity against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is unachievable in light of the highly transmissible Delta variant of the coronavirus, according to Tikki E. Pangestu, an infectious disease expert and visiting professor at the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine in Singapore. 

With the Delta variant now dominant in most countries, the target should instead be disease immunity, or the prevention of severe disease and deaths from the virus, he said at a Sept. 8 event organized by pharmaceutical company MSD.  

“With the Delta variant having a multiplication value close to 8, getting a herd immunity of 95% is a myth,” Mr. Pangestu said. “For me, the target of COVID-19 vaccines is not to stop the spread of infection, but to stop severe disease [and] prevent people from ending up on a ventilator and dying.”  

The basic reproductive number (Ror R-naught) for the Delta variant ranges from 3.2 to 8, according to the Journal of Travel Medicine. To compare, the R of the influenza virus is between 0.9 and 2.1 

R0 is the average number of people that one infectious individual is likely to infect in a population without any immunity or any interventions.   

Mr. Pangestu also cautioned against comparing countries like the Philippines and Indonesia with countries like Singapore, which has already fully vaccinated close to 80% of its population 

The comparison is unrealistic, he said. “The logistical challenges in countries like the Philippines and Indonesia are more challenging than small island [nations] like Singapore.”  

Ending the pandemic and securing global recovery, according to the World Health Organization, depends on vaccine equity.  

“Equity is a problem,” said Dr. Lulu C. Bravo, emeritus professor of pediatric infectious and tropical diseases at the University of the Philippines Manila. “We have made recommendations that ensure that those in high density areas are given priority.”  

The country, she added, has the infrastructure to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to those who need them the most.  

“We have midwives and LGUs [local government units]. We have a home delivery system that can bring vaccines to far-flung areas. It’s the supply we have to be concerned about,” Dr. Bravo said, adding that poor nations should be vaccinated before rich ones start considering booster shots. 

A concurrent concern is vaccine hesitancy, or the reluctance or refusal to vaccinate despite the availability of vaccine services.   

“Vaccine hesitancy is a spectrum, a broad continuum of opinion,” said Mr. Pangestu, adding that efforts should focus on the 70% who sit in the middle of this spectrum — those who will ultimately refuse, delay, or eventually accept vaccination.  

If there’s a silver lining in the pandemic, it’s the unprecedented solidarity of different stakeholders coming together for collective action, said Lynn D’Silva Cinelli, MSD’s executive director for manufacturing operations.   

“That’s what a crisis does. It gives you focus,” she said. MSD partnered with Johson & Johnson to expand the manufacturing capacity of its COVID-19 vaccine. — Patricia B. Mirasol 

Globe At Home makes internet access more affordable to bridge the digital divide on e-learning

The global health crisis has exposed the technological gap especially in the education sector as more households still clamor for decent and accessible connectivity to cope with learning from home.  In response to this, Globe At Home continues to pursue an aggressive cell site build and network improvement program, while delivering an evolving product portfolio that prioritizes accessibility and convenience for the Filipino family.

According to a report published by The World Bank late last year¹, most Filipino households are lagging behind digital adoption given that internet connectivity is a luxury for them.

To bridge the digital divide and address the continuously rising need for stable connectivity among the underserved, Globe ramped up its rollout of high-speed broadband lines across the country, reporting over 600,000 Fiber-to-the-Home lines delivered in 1H21 versus FY20 build.

Apart from build improvements, some of Globe At Home current customer offerings and innovations are designed so that they may uplift and be of further service especially to struggling households.

One of which is Globe At Home’s fast and secure community WiFi service, KonekTayo. Ideal for highly-dense communities, the goal of KonekTayo is to uplift low-income families by providing them with an affordable internet connection and enable home-based learning even with the ongoing pandemic. As of July 2021, there are 43 KonekTayoWiFi sites reaching 45,607 households in different areas from Luzon to Visayas.

Globe also has reliable yet affordable WiFi devices that’s useful for both on-the-go or for-the-home.

One is Globe At Home Prepaid WiFi which is Globe’s budget-friendly connectivity option for families seeking reliable yet affordable internet. It offers bigger data allocations that can be shared among family members. For a limited time only, Globe At Home Prepaid WiFi modems will be available for only Php 499 for the until the end of August.

Globe At Home is also offering its lowest most affordable fiber plan for postpaid subscribers with UNLI FIBER UP Plan 1499. The wallet-friendly price comes with up to 35 Mbps internet speed and is reliable enough to support each family members’ connectivity needs, especially the learners.

Globe MyFi, Globe’s pocket device, is currently priced at Php499 at the end of August to make it more accessible to individuals with heavier digital daily needs. Today’s learners can already have a pocket wifi device with free 9GB all-access data good for 7 days. The ultimate companion for today’s e-learners, Globe MyFi is a portable heavy data-lifter that can carry hours of online classes as well as downloading modules for the e-learners.

“We hope to play a role in the struggles of e-learners caused by the health crisis by providing them with an affordable internet connection for their educational needs. This is just one of the many ways that Globe At Home shows its commitment to provide affordable and accessible internet for all, including the masses,” said Barbie Dapul, Vice President for Marketing of Globe At Home.

Globe continues to provide solutions to push affordable and equitable internet for all, in order to bridge the digital divide most especially in the education sector.

This is part of the telco’s larger commitment to carry out its contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDG), one of which is UN SDG No. 4 which aims to provide equitable and quality education to all, especially to those most in need.

To know more about Globe’s sustainability initiatives, visit https://www.globe.com.ph/about-us/sustainability.html

To know more about Globe At Home’s tools to support e-learning, visit: https://www.globe.com.ph/broadband

¹ Harnessing Digital Technologies Can Help Philippines Overcome Impact of Pandemic, Hasten Recovery


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Hong Kong police arrest 4 members of group behind Tiananmen vigil

Activist and barrister Chow Hang Tung in 2017. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

HONG KONG — Hong Kong police on Wednesday arrested four members of a pro-democracy group that organizes the annual June 4 rally to commemorate those who died in the bloody 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, in the latest blow to the opposition movement.  

Activist and barrister Chow Hang Tung of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China was arrested along with three others, the group said.  

“I want to tell Hong Kongers that we need to continue to resist, don’t surrender to the unreasonable power quickly and easily,” Ms. Chow told media on Tuesday when she went to police headquarters to tell officers she would not provide information they had requested.  

Police sent a letter to the alliance in August requesting information about its membership, finances and activities by Sept. 7, according to a copy the group sent to reporters.  

The letter accused the alliance of being “an agent of foreign forces.” Failure to provide the information by the deadline could result in a HK$100,000 fine and six months in jail, the letter said.  

The National Security Department said it had arrested three men and one woman, aged 36 to 57, for failing to comply with national security law requirements. It did not identify them.  

The department said investigations were ongoing and it did not rule out further arrests.  

The national security law punishes what authorities broadly refer to as secession, subversion, terrorism, and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison.  

Ms. Chow’s arrest came hours before she was due to represent detained opposition politician Gwyneth Ho, who is charged with conspiracy to commit subversion under a Beijing-imposed national security law, at a bail hearing.  

Ms. Ho withdrew her bail application at the High Court after Judge Esther Toh declined her request to lift reporting restrictions for the hearing.  

Alliance leaders Albert Ho and Lee Cheuk-yan are already in jail over their roles in anti-government protests that roiled the city in 2019.  

The group said in July that it had laid off staff members to ensure their safety and that half of its committee members had resigned. — Reuters

Mexico’s top court decriminalizes abortion in ‘watershed moment’

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s Supreme Court unanimously ruled on Tuesday that penalizing abortion is unconstitutional, a major victory for advocates of women’s health and human rights, just as parts of the United States enact tougher laws against the practice.  

The decision in the world’s second-biggest Roman Catholic country means that courts can no longer prosecute abortion cases, and follows the historic legalization of the right in Argentina, which took effect earlier this year.  

Arturo Zaldivar, president of the Mexican Supreme Court, hailed the decision as “a watershed moment” for all women, especially the most vulnerable.  

The vote by the 10 judges present stemmed from a 2018 case challenging a criminal law on abortion in Coahuila, a northern Mexican state which borders Texas, which has just tightened its laws.  

It also comes as a growing feminist movement has taken to the streets in Mexico to press for change, including calls to end anti-abortion laws on the books in much of the country.  

At a demonstration in Coahuila state capital Saltillo, women wearing green bandanas to symbolize the pro-choice movement embraced and shouted “abortion is no longer a crime!”  

“We’re very happy that abortion has been decriminalized, and now we want it to be legal,” said 26-year-old Karla Cihuatl, one of the demonstrators, who belongs to the feminist organization Frente Feminista in Saltillo.  

“This step has broken the stigma a little. But I believe that we still have to change the social aspect.”  

With some 100 million Catholics, Mexico is the largest predominantly Catholic country after Brazil. The Catholic Church opposes all forms of abortion procedures.  

Hundreds of mostly poor Mexican women have been prosecuted for abortion, while at least several dozen remain jailed.  

Tuesday’s vote establishes a mandatory criteria for all judges in the country, making it no longer possible to prosecute any woman who has an abortion without violating the criteria of the court and the constitution, Mr. Zaldivar said.  

Coahuila’s state government issued a statement saying the ruling would have retroactive effects and that any woman imprisoned for abortion should be released “immediately.”  

A number of US states have moved to restrict access to abortion, particularly Texas, which last week enacted a sweeping ban on the procedure after the first six weeks of pregnancy when the US Supreme Court declined to intervene.  

The Mexican ruling may lead to US women in states such as Texas deciding to travel south of the border to terminate their pregnancies.  

In July, the state of Veracruz became just the fourth of Mexico’s 32 regions to decriminalize abortion.  

Mexico’s leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has carefully avoided taking a stand on the matter, as he did again on Tuesday morning in the run-up to the ruling.  

When asked at a news conference for his opinion on abortion, he sidestepped the question, saying it was up to the court.  

“Due my presidential office, I can’t expose myself to wear and tear, so I have to look after myself, and this is quite a controversial issue,” he said.  

During his winning 2018 election campaign, he forged an alliance with a small political party founded by Christian conservatives known for their strong opposition to abortion.  

By contrast, Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, who was mayor of Mexico City when the capital legalized abortion in 2007, breaking new ground for the country, celebrated the court ruling on Twitter as a “great day for the rights of women.”  

“What advances there have been in progressive causes in our country!!!” wrote Mr. Ebrard, one of the leading contenders to succeed Mr. Lopez Obrador when his six-year term ends in 2024. “I’m really delighted!!” — Lizbeth Diaz and Laura Gottesdiener/Reuters

Taliban name new Afghan government, interior minister on US sanctions list

Mullah Hasan Akhund. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

The Taliban drew from its inner high echelons to fill top posts in Afghanistan’s new government on Tuesday, including an associate of the Islamist militant group’s founder as premier and a wanted man on a US terrorism list as interior minister.  

World powers have told the Taliban the key to peace and development is an inclusive government that would back up its pledges of a more conciliatory approach, upholding human rights, after a previous 19962001 period in power marked by bloody vendettas and oppression of women.  

Taliban supreme leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, in his first public statement since the Aug. 15 seizure of the capital Kabul by the insurgents, said the Taliban were committed to all international laws, treaties and commitments not in conflict with Islamic law.  

“In the future, all matters of governance and life in Afghanistan will be regulated by the laws of the Holy Sharia,” he said in a statement, in which he also congratulated Afghans on what he called the country’s liberation from foreign rule.  

The names announced for the new government, three weeks after the Taliban swept to military victory as US-led foreign forces withdrew and the weak Western-backed government collapsed, gave no sign of an olive branch to its opponents.  

The United States said it was concerned by the track records of some of the Cabinet members and noted that no women had been included. “The world is watching closely,” a US State Department spokesperson said.  

Afghans who enjoyed major progress in education and civil liberties over the 20 years of US-backed government remain fearful of Taliban intentions and daily protests have continued since the Taliban takeover, challenging the new rulers.  

On Tuesday, as the new government was being announced, a group of Afghan women in a Kabul street took cover after Taliban gunmen fired into the air to disperse hundreds of protesters.  

The last time the Taliban ruled Afghanistan, girls could not attend school and women were banned from work and education. Religious police would flog anyone breaking the rules and public executions were carried out.  

The Taliban has urged Afghans to be patient and vowed to be more tolerant this time — a commitment many Afghans and foreign powers will be scrutinising as a condition for aid and investment desperately needed in Afghanistan.  

LATE FOUNDER’S LEGACY IN NEW GOVERNMENT 
Mullah Hasan Akhund, named as prime minister, like many in the Taliban leadership derives much of his prestige from his close link to the movement’s reclusive late founder Mullah Omar, who presided over its rule two decades ago.  

Akhund is longtime chief of the Taliban’s powerful decision-making body Rehbari Shura, or leadership council. He was foreign minister and then deputy prime minister when the Taliban were last in power and, like many of the incoming Cabinet, is under UN sanctions for his role in that government.  

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the new interior minister, is the son of the founder of the Haqqani network, classified as a terrorist group by Washington. He is one of the FBI’s most wanted men due to his involvement in suicide attacks and ties with Al Qaeda.  

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, head of the movement’s political office who was given his nom de guerre “brother,” or Baradar, by Mullah Omar, was appointed as Akhund’s deputy, main Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told a news conference in Kabul.  

The passing over of Baradar for the top government job came as a surprise to some as he had been responsible for negotiating the US withdrawal at talks in Qatar and presenting the face of the Taliban to the outside world.  

Baradar was previously a senior Taliban commander in the long insurgency against US forces. He was arrested and imprisoned in Pakistan in 2010, becoming head of the Taliban’s political office in Doha after his release in 2018.  

Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, a son of Mullah Omar, was named as defense minister. All the appointments were in an acting capacity, Mujahid said.  

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Air Force One, as President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., flew to New York, that there would be no recognition of the Taliban government soon.  

ECONOMIC MELTDOWN 
Taliban spokesman Mujahid, speaking against a backdrop of collapsing public services and economic meltdown amidst the chaos of the tumultuous foreign pullout, said an acting cabinet had been formed to respond to the Afghan people’s primary needs.  

He said some ministries remained to be filled pending a hunt for qualified people.  

The United Nations said earlier on Tuesday that basic services were unravelling in Afghanistan and food and other aid were about to run out. More than half a million people have been displaced internally in Afghanistan this year.  

An international donor conference is scheduled in Geneva on Sept. 13. Western powers say they are prepared to send humanitarian aid, but that broader economic engagement depends on the shape and actions of the Taliban government.  

‘RESISTANCE WILL CONTINUE’ 
On Monday, the Taliban claimed victory in the Panjshir valley, the last province holding out against it.  

Pictures on social media showed Taliban members standing in front of the Panjshir governor’s compound after days of fighting with the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRFA), commanded by Panjshiri leader Ahmad Massoud.  

Massoud denied that his force, consisting of remnants of the Afghan army as well as local militia fighters, was beaten, and tweeted that “our resistance will continue.” — Reuters 

COVID-19 disruption causing many deaths from TB, AIDS in poorest countries, fund says 

A COLORIZED scanning electron micrograph of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacteria that cause TB. — Image via National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health/Flickr

GENEVA — Hundreds of thousands of people will die of tuberculosis left untreated because of disruption to healthcare systems in poor countries caused by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, a global aid fund said.  

In a few of the world’s poorest countries, excess deaths from AIDS and tuberculosis (TB) could even exceed those from the coronavirus itself, said the head of the Geneva-based aid body, known as the Global Fund.  

The Fund’s annual report for 2020, released on Wednesday, showed that the number of people treated for drug-resistant tuberculosis in countries where it operates fell by 19%. A decline of 11% was reported in HIV prevention programs and services.  

“Essentially, about a million people less were treated for TB in 2020 than in 2019 and I’m afraid that will inevitably mean that hundreds of thousands of people will die,” Executive Director Peter Sands told Reuters.  

While precise death tolls are as yet unknown, Mr. Sands said that for some poor countries, such as parts of the Sahel region in Africa, excess deaths from the setback in the fight against diseases such as TB or AIDS might prove higher than from COVID-19 itself.  

The Geneva-based Global Fund is an alliance of governments, civil society and private sector partners investing more than $4 billion per year to fight tuberculosis, malaria, and AIDS. The United States is its top donor.  

Mr. Sands said services were affected by COVID-19 lockdowns while clinics, staff and diagnostics normally used for TB were instead deployed for COVID-19 in countries such as India and across Africa. He added that he expected further disruptions this year due to the Delta variant.  

He said the decline in treatment for other diseases “underscores the need to look at the total impact of COVID-19 and measure success in combating it not just by the reduction in deaths due to COVID-19 itself but to the knock on impact.”  

Malaria proved to be an exception to the trend in 2020, and prevention activities remained stable or increased compared to 2019, the Global Fund said. — Emma Farge/Reuters