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PBA trying to be proactive in push for Season 46

THE PBA is seeking ways to augment the immediate start of its delayed Season 46. — PBA IMAGES

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

WHEN Season 46 of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) will start remains up in the air, but the league is staying proactive and weighing all options to get the ball rolling at the soonest possible time.

Originally set to begin on April 18, the new PBA season was deferred to a still-to-be-determined date, now dependent on whether the number of coronavirus cases will go down, league officials had been told by the government.

The league, however, remains hopeful that the coronavirus situation here will swing for the better just as it is seeking ways to augment the immediate start of its delayed season.

One of the things it is currently looking at is finding an alternate venue for its member teams to at least begin training and scrimmages in preparation for the eventual start of the season, with Batangas City as a possible venue.

With Metro Manila and the nearby provinces of Bulacan, Rizal, Cavite, and Laguna still under stricter quarantine restrictions and are not allowed to host any sporting activities, the PBA is hoping to squeeze in preparatory work by going outside said areas.

“Batangas is near [Metro Manila] and has more relaxed restrictions. Maybe, it can accommodate us. It is important that the teams get to scrimmage and prepare before the season starts,” said PBA governor Alfrancis Chua of Barangay Ginebra in a media briefing last week.

Mr. Chua and PBA commissioner Willie Marcial met with Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea and Senator Bong Go in Malacañang last Wednesday where they presented the league’s recalibrated plans for its Season 46.

They said the officials were warm to the idea of staging the new season but underscored that it all hinges on whether the pandemic situation in the country, particularly the number of coronavirus cases, will improve in the coming weeks.

The PBA’s request, they said, was to be forwarded to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) for review and approval.

The league is hoping to at least begin Season 46 by June so it can still stage a two-conference season designed to give local basketball fans more action amid the pandemic.

At the weekend, the PBA’s Batangas push gained significant headway as Mr. Marcial reported that the local officials agreed to host the practices of the teams.

The PBA official said he spoke to both Batangas City Mayor Beverley Dimacuha and Congressman Marvey Marino, who expressed their willingness to have their city as a venue pending approval of other requirements.

“The LGU has agreed to host us. Now, we have to fulfil the requirements under the JAO (Joint Administrative Order) of the Department of Health, Games and Amusements Board, and Philippine Sports Commission. After that, and upon approval, maybe our teams can start practices in May,” said Mr. Marcial.

He went on to say that venues committed by the LGU are the Batangas City Coliseum and Batangas State University Gym.

The league is set to meet with authorities of Batangas City in the coming days to further thresh out details, including health and safety protocols, of the hosting.

Other matters the league is working on are the availability of vaccines for the entire PBA family, which it sees as providing stability and flexibility for the league in pushing for its plans moving forward; and crafting measures to cushion the impact of the pandemic on its financials.

The PBA only had one tournament played last year because of the pandemic under a “bubble” setup held at Clark City in Angeles, Pampanga.

Antetokounmpo stars with 49 points as Bucks edge Nets

GIANNIS Antetokounmpo scored a season-high 49 points to lead the Milwaukee Bucks past the Brooklyn Nets (117-114). — MILWAUKEE BUCKS FB PAGE

GIANNIS Antetokounmpo scored a season-high 49 points Sunday afternoon and outdueled Kevin Durant as the host Milwaukee Bucks edged the Brooklyn Nets (117-114).

Antetokounmpo, who missed Friday’s game against the Chicago Bulls with an ankle injury, delivered the dunk that put the Bucks ahead for good with 7:57 left. The 49 points were the third-most of his career and his most since he scored 50 points against the Utah Jazz on Nov. 25, 2019.

Khris Middleton had 26 points and 11 rebounds as the Bucks (40-24) maintained their hopes of finishing first in the Eastern Conference for the third straight season. Milwaukee closed within 2 1/2 games of the East-leading Nets (43-22) and Philadelphia 76ers (42-21), who were scheduled to play the San Antonio Spurs later on Sunday.

Jrue Holiday had 18 points and Bryn Forbes 12 points for the Bucks.

Durant tied a season-high with 42 points but missed a pair of potential game-tying three-pointers in the final 30 seconds, including a shot that glanced off the rim just before the buzzer.

DeAndre Jordan finished with 10 points and 11 rebounds, and Kyrie Irving scored 20 points. Off the bench, Landry Shamet netted 17 points and Blake Griffin added 11.

The Nets led by as many as 14 in the first quarter before the Bucks chipped away in the second, when they went on a quarter-ending 18-9 run to take a 62-59 lead. Holiday’s three-pointer tied the score at 52-52 with 3:20 left, and Forbes’ three-pointer put Milwaukee ahead 57-54 — its first lead since 2-0.

The Bucks led by as many as seven in the third, which ended with three lead changes and one tie in the final 1:30. A jumper by Antetokounmpo tied the score at 90-90 before Holiday missed a three-pointer and Brook Lopez whiffed on a putback just before the buzzer.

Griffin and Shamet opened the fourth with three-pointers for the Nets, but Middleton scored six straight points to spark the Bucks’ 11-0 run that included Antetokounmpo’s go-ahead dunk.

Milwaukee twice led by seven before the Nets pulled within three points three times. Brooklyn was 0-for-3 on potential game-tying 3-pointers, with Irving missing a chance to knot the score with 1:28 remaining. — Reuters

Karateka Tsukii grabs gold in Lisbon meet, pads Olympic hopes

FILIPINO-JAPANESE karateka Junna Tsukii won a gold medal at the 2021 Karate 1 Premier League in Lisbon, Portugal, late Sunday, padding her push to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics later this year. — JUNNA TSUKII FB PAGE

FILIPINO-JAPANESE karateka Junna Tsukii won the gold in the female kumite -50 kg division at the 2021 Karate 1 Premier League in Lisbon, Portugal, late on Sunday.

Ms. Tsukii, 29, beat Moldir Zhangbyrbay of Kazakhstan (2-0) in the final to win the top prize in her division and pad her push to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics later this year.

The gold-winning feat was a culmination of an impressive run of the Philippine karate bet in the tournament which took place from April 30 to May 2.

She began with a first-round bye before dominating Colombia’s Daniela Gallego (10-2) in the second round.

In the next stage, Ms. Tsukii upset world no. 3 karateka Sara Bahmanyar of Iran (2-1) to book a place in the quarterfinals.

The quarters had her facing world number six Radwa Sayed of Egypt. The contest ended in a 1-1 draw. But having recorded more flags, 3-2, in the match, Ms. Tsukii was the one who advanced to the semifinals.

In the Final Four, the Filipino-Japanese karateka had a relatively easier time, sending world number eight Alexandra Recchia of France to a 2-0 defeat.

On her Facebook page, Ms. Tsukii celebrated the huge win after.

“Look at my first gold medal on the world caliber stage. I would like to thank everyone who has supported me to this point. This medal is for YOU,” she wrote with a photo of her wearing her gold medal.

Ms. Tsukii, currently eighth in her division (third in Asia) in the Tokyo Olympic qualifying standings, is seeking to break the top four in the world to book an automatic spot in the Games.

She, along with the other members of the national karate team, is also eyeing the world Olympic karate qualifiers in Paris, France, set for June as a springboard to the Olympics. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

United’s owners facing strongest opposition yet

Manchester United

Manchester United

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND — It has certainly been a year of sporting contrasts for American businessman Joel Glazer.

In February, he was in a celebratory mood, raising the Vince Lombardi trophy as his National Football League team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, won the Super Bowl, led by veteran quarterback Tom Brady.

Three months later, Glazer’s Premier League soccer team, Manchester United, had to call off its match against rival Liverpool following violent protests against the American’s ownership of the club.

The Florida-based Glazer family has owned United since 2005 and has faced fan opposition from the moment it completed its takeover, but the leading role it played in the failed attempt to launch the European Super League last month has reignited the protests.

United was due to play traditional rival Liverpool on Sunday, but the game was called off by authorities due to safety concerns after protesters clashed with police and some invaded the field.

One group of supporters broke through security and into the stadium, which was closed to fans due to coronavirus restrictions, protesting on the field and damaging some property inside the ground.

The late Malcolm Glazer, the family patriarch who made his fortune in real estate and stocks, bought United in May 2005 for 790-million pounds ($1.09 billion), after entering the sports business in 1995 with a takeover of the Buccaneers.

Since his death in 2014, his two sons Joel and Avram have been co-chairmen of United with the former playing a prominent part in the recent Super League controversy — he was named the short-lived breakaway’s founding vice-chairman.

That affair has relit the always smoldering protest movement among United fans and has now thrown the club into crisis.

Glazer has apologized for the club’s involvement in the project, which would have seen 12 of the top clubs in Europe breakaway from the established structures to create a privately owned championship.

But United fans have not accepted the apology.

“Actions speak louder than words and he and his family have shown time and again that their sole motivation is personal profit at the expense of our football club,” the Manchester United Supporters Trust said in a statement on Friday.

Former United captain Gary Neville, now a prominent television analyst, said on Sunday that Glazer’s hope of “rebuilding trust” was a forlorn one.

“The Glazers say they want to rebuild the trust, but they never had the trust of the supporters. I think [the protests are] a warning to the owners of the football club that, ultimately, they’re not going to accept what they’ve done in the last couple of weeks,” he said.

“This is a consequence of the Manchester United owners’ actions two weeks ago. There is a general distrust and dislike of the owners, but they weren’t protesting two or three weeks ago.” — Reuters

Hamilton eight points clear with win in Portugal

SEVEN-TIME world champion Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes is now eight points clear in the Formula One standings after winning the Portuguese Grand Prix on Sunday. — FACEBOOK.COM/MERCEDESAMGF1

LONDON — Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton overtook main rival Max Verstappen and Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas to win the Portuguese Grand Prix on Sunday and go eight points clear in the Formula One standings.

Red Bull’s Verstappen finished second at the Algarve circuit with Bottas third after starting on pole position. The disappointed Finn’s only consolation was a bonus point for fastest lap.

The victory was a record-extending 97th of Hamilton’s career, with the sport’s most successful driver repeating last year’s win at the circuit to go 2-1 up on Verstappen after three races.

“That was such a tough race, physically and mentally, just keeping everything together. It was very windy out there so it was very easy to put a foot wrong,” said the Briton, who started on the front row.

“I just didn’t quite get as good a start as Valtteri and then lost out on the restart, which was not good. I was not happy about that.”

The safety car was deployed on lap two after the Alfa Romeos of Kimi Räikkönen and Antonio Giovinazzi made contact, with debris left on the track and the field streaming through the pitlane.

When racing resumed, Verstappen was quick to pounce and pass Hamilton for second place, but the Briton seized it back five laps later after the Red Bull driver made a small mistake.

“I tried to put the pressure on Valtteri. But in the end, I think we just lacked a little pace overall so Lewis got by again,” said the Dutch driver.

Hamilton swept past Bottas on lap 20 of 66 and took the checkered flag 29.148 seconds clear of Verstappen after the Dutch driver had pitted in a late bid for fastest lap on fresh, soft tires.

“I had to make the move early on before the tires were destroyed and managed to just get him in Turn One,” said Hamilton of the key overtake before his only pitstop. “Right on the limit, but great race.”

Hamilton now has 69 points to Verstappen’s 61, with Mercedes 18 points clear of Red Bull in the constructors’ standings. — Reuters

POC official Carrasco to discuss elite athlete support system at PSC summit

ASIAN Regional Representative and Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) Technical Commission Chairman Tom Carrasco is the resource speaker in the 12th session of the National Sports Summit 2021 on May 5 on the topic “Main Support System of a Filipino Elite Athlete.”

Mr. Carrasco, a POC official since 2001, will discuss the local Olympic body’s role in supporting the elite national athletes, as they work hand in hand with the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC).

“Tom (Carrasco) is one of the fittest to converse on the topic being with the POC for a long time now. This is also a chance for our participants to understand the dynamics behind an elite athlete,” said PSC Chairman William Ramirez of the upcoming session.

Mr. Carrasco is currently the President of the Southeast Asian Triathlon and Triathlon Association of the Philippines. He is also a board member of the Asian Triathlon Association.

He has been lauded for his efforts with the national triathlon team, which has been undefeated for three consecutive editions of the Southeast Asian Games — Singapore in 2015, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in 2017, and the Philippines two years ago.

The PSC summit is aimed at taking insights of different sports stakeholders and using those as foundations in crafting a sustainable and workable short to long-term plan for Philippine sports.

All data gathered from the web series will be processed and studied to create a new set of resolutions to be presented to sports leaders for action. — MASM

Up to 1,000 fans allowed per court at French Open — minister

UP TO 1,000 fans will be admitted into each of the three main Roland Garros showcourts during the first 10 days of the French Open, sports minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said on Sunday. — ROLAND GARROS FB PAGE

PARIS — Up to 1,000 fans will be admitted into each of the three main Roland Garros showcourts while the smaller venues will be able to admit 35% of their capacity during the first 10 days of the French Open due to coronavirus restrictions, sports minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said on Sunday.

The limit will be raised to 65% but capped at 5,000 for matches on the 15,000-capacity Philippe Chatrier and 10,000-seater Suzanne Lenglen courts from June 9 when the quarterfinals get under way, Blanquer told France 3 TV channel.

“The gauge is set at 35% at that moment [when the tournament starts], with a maximum of 1,000 spectators… per court, of course,” said Blanquer.

It marks an improvement on last year’s delayed tournament which took place in September when a maximum of 1,000 spectators were allowed in the grounds of Roland Garros.

This year’s French Open, which was delayed by a week, is set to start on May 30.

Spectators will be allowed back into arenas in France from May 19, President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday, providing that the health situation does not deteriorate. — Reuters

Meralco powers-up new COVID-19 vaccination center in Tondo

In its continuing support to the Government and Private Sector’s fight against COVID-19, Meralco recently energized the Tondo Health Center, a new COVID-19 vaccination center located along Juan Luna Street, Gagalangin, Tondo, Manila. The project involves the installation of a new 13-meter steel pole, one (1) 75-kVA distribution transformer, one (1) span of covered conductor, service drop, and a metering facility. This new vaccination center is one of the many vital COVID-19 facilities in the Meralco franchise area that are given the highest priority in terms of providing safe, adequate, and reliable energy service in line with the company’s thrust to assist the government during the pandemic.  To date, Meralco has energized more than 110 vital COVID-19 facilities that include government agencies, public and private hospitals, testing laboratories, quarantine facilities, vaccine storage facilities, and vaccination centers.

Newsrooms should be transparent, share their standards with public — journalism prof

PIXABAY

Verified information can be a matter of life and death — especially in the face of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) disinfodemic, which has contributed to confusion and division about the virus and any possible recourse against it. Journalists are not so much gatekeepers as navigators in this regard.

“Journalism is engaged in verified information. As such, the  information journalists put out works for the public interest,” said Yvonne T. Chua, a journalist and associate professor at the University of the Philippines College of Mass Communication, in a May 3 forum organized by Ateneo de Manila University’s Asian Center for Journalism in time for World Press Freedom Day. “This is what makes journalism a public good. It requires public support and protection.”

At the same forum, Horacio “Howie” G. Severino, a journalist and documentarist at I-Witness, a television documentary show, added that the goal of journalism is to make what is significant interesting and relevant. 

“The operational word is ‘significant.’ Every day, journalists ask themselves one question: ‘What is important?’ That’s what leads to the top of the news,” he said. “In terms of the universe of information we’re now swimming in, we need to provide a life vest, so people won’t sink and have a better chance of navigating in it. … If you go to the places we publish, you can trust that it’s gone through a process.” 

Ms. Chua said that journalists are partly responsible for the lack of public appreciation of journalism’s role in society. Being so used to the thinking of letting stories speak for themselves, “journalists don’t take the time out to engage the public,” she said. “Journalists also need to find a way to share what they do, and why they do what they do.”

A way for journalism not to become a public bad is to have external mechanisms for actionable feedback, as well as for newsrooms to make their standards publicly available, Ms. Chua said. “If newsrooms don’t make their standards publicly available, then how can the media be held to account? This is how the public can say, ‘Okay, are you hitting your standards?’”

May 3 is World Press Freedom Day. This year’s theme is “Information as a Public Good.” The United Nations, in its 2021 World Press Freedom concept note, underscored the importance of accessing reliable information, particularly through journalism, especially in times of crisis such as the pandemic. — Patricia B. Mirasol

Protecting innovation from patent trolls

PIXABAY

Orbital Exploration Technologies (OrbitX), a space technology startup based in Quezon City, recently joined the LOT Network, an international community of tech companies that shelters members from patent assertion entities (PAEs). 

“It was important to our entire team of researchers, scientists, developers, and everyone at OrbitX to join a protective organization like the LOT Network,” said Dexter P. Baño Jr., founder and president of OrbitX, in a press statement. “As a new space tech player — and a pioneering one from the Philippines — we want to set an example for all future deep tech and space tech players that protecting innovation is paramount to the success of any tech startup.”

A PAE, sometimes called a patent troll, is considered by the network to be a patent holder, in combination with its affiliates, that generates more than 50% of its gross revenue from patent assertion. 

Members of the LOT Network agree that if — and only if — a patent owned by a member company falls into the hands of a patent troll, then that company grants the other members a license to that patent, which means the patent can no longer be used by trolls to sue the members of the community. 

In a 2016 interview with Intellectual Property Watch, Ken S. Seddon, chief executive officer of the LOT Network, noted that smaller companies have a higher likelihood of being sued by PAEs. “Over 50% of companies sued by patent trolls make less than $10 million in revenue,” he said, “because the PAEs know that smaller companies will often settle, not having the financial and IP (intellectual property)-specific resources in-house to defend themselves.”

FREE FOR STARTUPS
According to the LOT Network, its members still retain the traditional use of their patents: “For example, members are still free to sell or transfer their patents, participate in patent pools, license patents for revenue, or assert them. LOT Network is purely defensive immunization against costly PAE litigation.” 

OrtbitX, which was endorsed to the LOT Network by the International Trade Council, is filing patents for its new engine designs, together with its injectors and plumbing. “These parts have new measurements and specifications intended to work just for our Haribon rocket,” said Mr. Baño. “Even the fuselage, fuel, and oxidizer tanks will be subject to intellectual property.”

“Our team is now more at ease working on bringing sustainable space exploration to the market with our protections afforded by the LOT agreement,” he added.

It is important to recognize the contributions that innovative companies make — as well as the importance of patent systems in protecting these innovators — said Mr. Seddon. Membership at the network is free for startups with less than $25 million in annual revenue. 

 “We’re thrilled that OrbitX saw the value in joining our community,” he added. “Their membership affords them, their stakeholders, and their clients proof that their innovations, R&D (research and development), and future patents are part of [the protection] offered by our community.”

Lenovo, The Walt Disney Company, Netflix, Inc., Pinterest Inc., and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW), are among the 1,400 members of the LOT Network. The one other Philippine-based member company is business solutions provider Mustard Seed Systems Corporation, which joined in October 2018. — Patricia B. Mirasol

Sex bots, virtual friends, VR lovers: tech is changing the way we interact, and not always for the better

PIXABAY

Twenty-first century technologies such as robots, virtual reality (VR) and artificial intelligence (AI) are creeping into every corner of our social and emotional lives — hacking how we form friendships, build intimacy, fall in love, and get off.

In a book published today, I consider the possibilities, both terrifying and inspiring, offered by these “artificially intimate” technologies.

On one hand, these tools can help deliver much-needed support. On the other, they risk increasing sexual inequality, and replacing precious in-person interaction with less-than-ideal substitutes.

At first mention of artificial intimacy, many people’s minds may jump straight to sex robots: lifelike robotic sex dolls that could one day walk among us, hard to distinguish from living, breathing, orgasming humans.

But despite the many important questions sex robots raise, they mostly distract from the main game. They are “digital lovers” which — alongside VR porn, AI-enhanced sex toys, and cybersex enhanced with haptic and teledildonic devices — constitute just one of three types of artificial intimacy.

The second category, the “algorithmic matchmakers,” match us with dates and hookups through applications such as Tinder and Grindr, or with friends through social media platforms.

Finally, we have “virtual friends” including therapist apps, AI-enhanced game characters and boyfriend/girlfriend chatbots. But by far the most ubiquitous are AI assistants such as Amazon’s Alexa, Google’s Assistant and Baidu’s DuerOS.

Virtual friends apply several kinds of AI, including machine learning, by which computers learn new ways to identify patterns in data.

Machine-learning algorithms are becoming increasingly advanced at sifting through huge amounts of users’ data, and tapping into the unique traits that make us the cooperative, cultural and romantic beings we are. I call these “human algorithms.”

Primates, from monkeys to great apes, groom one another to build important alliances. Humans mostly do this through gossip, the old-school news radio which informs us about the people and events around us. Gossip is an algorithmic process by which we come to know our social worlds.

Social platforms such as Facebook tap into our friend-grooming impulses. They aggregate our friends, past and present, and make it easy to share gossip. Their algorithmic matchmaking excels at identifying other users we may know. This lets us accumulate far more than the 150 or so friends we’d normally have offline.

Social media companies know we’ll use their platforms more if they funnel us content from the people we’re closest to. Thus, they spend a lot of time and money trying to find ways to distinguish our close friends from the somebodies that we used to know.

When social media (and other virtual friends) hack into our friend-grooming algorithms, they displace our offline friendships. After all, time spent online is time not spent in person with friends or family.

Before smartphones, humans spent about 192 minutes a day gossiping and “grooming” one another. But the average social media user today spends 153 minutes each day on social media, cutting into offline relationships and the time they’d otherwise spend doing non-social work such as play and especially sleep.

The effects of this on mental health may be profound, especially for teens and young adults.

And social media will only continue to evolve, as machine-learning algorithms find ever more compelling ways to engage us. Eventually, they may transition from digital matchmakers into virtual friends that type, post, and speak to us like human friends.

While this could provide some connection for the chronically lonely, it would also further occupy users’ limited time and precious cognitive capacity.

Intimacy involves incorporating our sense of another person into our sense of self. Psychologists Arthur and Elaine Aron showed intimacy can be rapidly cultivated through a process of escalating self-disclosure.

They tasked randomly assigned pairs of people with asking and answering a series of 36 questions. The questions began innocuously (Who is your ideal dinner guest?) and escalated to very private disclosures (If you were to die this evening, with no opportunity to communicate with anyone, what would you most regret not having told someone? Why haven’t you told them yet?).

The pairs assigned to disclose more personal information grew much closer than those given only small-talk questions, and remained so for many weeks. One couple famously married and invited the Arons to their wedding.

We now have apps that help humans build intimacy via the Arons’ 36-question algorithm. But what about human-machine intimacy? People disclose all sorts of details to computers. Research shows the more they disclose, the more they trust the information returned by the computer.

Moreover, they rate computers as more likeable and trustworthy when they’re programmed to disclose vulnerabilities, such as “I’m running a bit slow today as a few of my scripts need debugging.”

Virtual friends wouldn’t have to study the Arons’ questions to learn secrets about human intimacy. With machine-learning capabilities, they would only need to comb through online conversations to find the best questions to ask.

As such, humans may become increasingly “intimate” with machines by incorporating their virtual friends into their sense of self.

Matchmaker algorithms are already transforming how people screen and meet potential dates.

Apps such as Tinder aren’t really effective at matching compatible couples. Instead, they present photographs and minimalist profiles, inviting users to swipe left or right. Their algorithms allow people of more-or-less comparable attractiveness to match and strike up a conversation.

One problem with this model is attractive people have no shortage of matches, but this is at the expense of ordinary-lookers. This type of attraction-based inequality feeds serious problems — from heightened self-sexualization among women, to a surplus of young, unpartnered men prone to violence.

Then again, artificial intimacy also offers solutions. Although people deserve the company of other people, and the best care other (real) humans can offer, many demonstrably can’t access or afford this.

Virtual friends provide connection for the lonely; digital lovers are damming the raging torrent of sexual frustration. A gradual union of the two could eventually provide targeted intimacy and sexual stimulation for people of all genders and sexualities.

People already talk to Siri and Alexa to feel less lonely. Meanwhile, in a climate of unmet demand for mental health support, therapy bots are listening to patients, advising them and even walking them through psychological treatments such as cognitive behaviour therapy.

The quality of such connection and stimulation might not be a complete substitute for the “real thing.” But for those of us who find the real thing elusive or insufficient, it could prove far better than nothing.

 

Rob Brooks is Scientia Professor of Evolutionary Ecology and Academic Lead of the Grand Challenges Program at the University of New South Wales, Australia. This article concerns a book he has written, for which he receives royalty payments.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Indian industry body urges curbs to economic activity to save lives

A MAN runs past the burning funeral pyres of those who died from the coronavirus disease, during a mass cremation in New Delhi, India April 26. — REUTERS
REUTERS

NEW DELHI — A leading Indian industry body urged authorities to take the “strongest national steps” and to curtail economic activity to save lives on Sunday as the country battles surging coronavirus cases that have overwhelmed the healthcare system.

The rate of new infections dipped marginally but deaths kept climbing. Authorities reported 392,488 new cases in the previous 24 hours, pushing total cases to 19.56 million. Deaths jumped by a record 3,689, taking the overall toll to 215,542.

Billionaire Uday Kotak, managing director of Kotak Mahindra Bank, said a “maximal response measure at the highest level is called for to cut the transmission links,” as building healthcare infrastructure will take time.

He was speaking on behalf of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), where he is the president.

“At this critical juncture when toll of lives is rising, CII urges the strongest national steps including curtailing economic activity to reduce suffering,” Mr. Kotak said in a statement.

Hospitals have filled to capacity, medical oxygen supplies have run short and morgues and crematoriums have been swamped as the country deals with the surge in cases: more than 300,000 daily cases for more than 10 days straight.

Concerned about the economic impact of shutting down the economy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is reluctant to impose a national lockdown. At least 11 states and union territories have imposed some form of restrictions.

The Indian Express newspaper reported on Sunday that the country’s coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) taskforce has advised the federal government to impose a national lockdown.

The eastern state of Odisha and northern industrial state Haryana became the latest to announce new lockdowns on Sunday, joining Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and West Bengal.

Other states, including Uttar Pradesh, Telangana, Assam, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan have either imposed night curfews or weekend lockdowns.

LOCKDOWN FEARS
Mr. Modi said last month all efforts should be made to avoid a lockdown. He imposed strict curbs on movement and social and economic activity last year in the early months of the pandemic and economic output fell a record 24% in AprilJune 2020 compared with the same period a year earlier.

The current devastating second wave has also led to a shortfall in medical staff. Mr. Kotak also said healthcare workers may not be able to tackle the influx of patients, given the escalating caseloads, and they need reinforcing.

International aid has been pouring in.

Countries including the United States have shipped in critical oxygen equipment, therapeutics and raw materials for vaccine production. On Sunday, British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said his country would send more ventilators “very shortly.”

Mr. Modi’s government has been criticized for not taking steps earlier to curb the spread and for letting millions of largely unmasked people attend religious festivals and crowded political rallies in five states during March and April.

Reuters reported on Saturday that a forum of scientific advisers set up by the government warned Indian officials in early March of a new and more contagious variant of the coronavirus taking hold in the country. — Aftab Ahmed/Reuters

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