Deposed Nepal king to leave palace!

June 11, 2008 at 7:44 am | In life, news, people | Leave a Comment
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KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Nepal’s deposed king planned to move Wednesday from what was once his palace to a summer home the government has loaned him just west of the capital, officials said.

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Nepalese national flags flutter in place of the royal flag in the Narayanhiti palace in Kathmandu, Nepal.

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Nepal’s Constituent Assembly, which abolished the monarchy last month and declared Nepal a republic, ordered former King Gyanendra to move out of the palace by this week.

Home Minister Krishna Prasad Sitaula said Gyanendra’s aides told the government he would leave the Narayanhiti royal palace in Kathmandu on Wednesday and move to the Nagarjung summer palace.

The main palace has been his home since he became king in 2001.

Nagarjung palace, situated on a forested hill on the northwestern edge of Kathmandu, was previously used for vacations by the king.

It, like many royal assets, was nationalized by the government when the monarchy was abolished.

Gyanendra had asked the government in Nepal to help find alternative accommodation after he was ordered to move out of the main palace.

He said he could not move back to the house where he had lived before becoming king because his son and his family were already living there.

Malnutrition getting worse in India

June 10, 2008 at 8:42 pm | In life, news, people | Leave a Comment
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She stares, wide-eyed, blankly at the ceiling. Roshni is six months old. She should weigh 4.5kg. But when she is placed on a set of scales they settle at just 2.9kg.

Roshni is suffering from severe acute malnutrition, defined by the World Health Organisation as weighing less than 60% of the ideal median weight for her height.

There are 40 beds in this centre. On every one is a similar child. All are acutely malnourished. Wailing, painful, plaintive cries fill the air. This is the Nutrition Rehabilitation Centre in the town of Shivpuri.

You might think we are somewhere in Africa. But this is the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh – modern India, a land of booming growth.

“The situation in our village is very bad,” says Roshni’s mother, Kapuri.

“Sometimes we get work, sometimes we don’t. Together with our children we are dying from hunger. What can we poor people do? Nothing.”

Typical symptoms

The lunchtime meal of boiled eggs, milk and porridge is handed out.

Another mother is cradling her daughter, trying to feed her. The girl’s name is Kajal. She is two-and-a-half years old and so weak she can hardly eat.

Her mother tries to spoon some milk into her mouth. It dribbles down her chin. Kajal barely even opens her eyes.

Kajal’s skin is pale. Her breath comes sharp, shallow and fast. She too is suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Her weight is 6.7kg.

Roshni

Roshni weighs 2.9kg – her weight should be more like 4.5kg

The nutrition centre here was set up by the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef).

Doctor Vandana Agarwal, Unicef’s nutrition specialist for Madhya Pradesh state, points to Kajal’s swollen little feet.

“There is oedema on both the feet, scaly skin on her legs, even her respiration rate is high,” Dr Agarwal says.

“The child is in a lethargic condition, her hair is thin, sparse, lustreless, easily-pluckable. These are the typical symptoms of protein energy malnutrition.”

India has some of the highest rates of child malnutrition and mortality in under-fives in the world and Madhya Pradesh state has the highest levels in India.

There are around 10 million children in the state. A decade ago 55% were malnourished. Two years ago the government’s own National Family Health Survey put the figure for Madhya Pradesh at around 60%.

So why is it going up?

Compounded

“It’s basically inadequate access to food, poor feeding practices, poor childcare practices,” says Dr Agarwal.

In Madhya Pradesh the situation is compounded by two significant factors. For four years in a row the rains have failed, so food crops have failed too. And now global food prices have risen, stretching many families beyond breaking point.

“In the past year food prices have increased significantly, but people’s incomes haven’t improved,” says Dr Agarwal. “Like wheat, earlier they used to buy it at eight rupees a kilogram, now it’s 12 rupees.”

An Anganwadi Centre in Madhya Pradesh

Children wait for a meal outside an Anganwadi centre in Chitori Khurda

“Because of the increase in food prices a mother cannot buy an adequate quantity of milk, fruits and vegetables. So their staple diet has become wheat chapattis,” she explains.

“A child cannot survive on wheat chapattis alone. About 80% of mothers and children are anaemic because they can’t get good quality food.”

To see why things are so bad, we headed out into the villages around Shivpuri. The drought zone stretches across this part of central India. The land is parched and barren. The air hot and heavy.

The village of Chitori Khurda is a ramshackle collection of 80 stone and mud huts on a rocky plain. The villagers here come from the bottom rung of India’s social scale.

Among the lowest of the low in India’s caste system are the Scheduled Tribes, just above them come the Other Backward Castes.

Together they make up 95% of the population of Chitori Khurda.

Worst hit

Even here, in this desolate spot, caste matters consign the lowest to the harshest existence.

Chitori Khurda village has no water supply. There are four wells in the fields around, but all belong to higher caste owners who often refuse to let the villagers use them.

So these are the people worst hit by rising food prices. They have little land of their own. What they do have is the least fertile, sometimes far away. Without water they cannot irrigate, so they cannot feed themselves.

And out here there is not much in the way of work either.

Four-year-old Guddu who is severely malnourished

India has some of the highest rates of child malnutrition in the world

The men of Chitori Khurda get odd jobs labouring for higher castes or just play cards all day. The women sit outside their houses sorting green leaves they have gathered into small bundles. The leaves are sold to make local cigarettes. But it does not earn much.

So in almost every home people are going hungry. Unicef says 79% of the children in this village are malnourished.

Siya showed me her house, crouching to get in through the low door, we entered a stifling-hot, single room where the family of six live.

Siya picked up the can where she keeps her flour. It should hold enough for a week’s supply. There were just a few cupfuls left.

Her two youngest children, seven-month-old Anjali and two-year-old Aseel, are both severely acutely malnourished. The family can afford to eat only twice a day. The children chewed slowly on a few chapattis flavoured with a tiny bit of onion and ground chillies. It is all they have to eat.

Getting worse

Siya’s husband works as a bonded labourer. He is still trying to pay off a loan he took out 15 years ago.

In theory the government provides 30kg of subsidised flour a month to every poor family. But corruption and inefficiency mean the system often does not work.

Even with the full allocation a family like Siya’s would have to buy an additional 90kg of flour a month at a cost of more than 1,000 rupees.

A doctor at a malnutrition centre in Madhya Pradesh

Doctors say inadequate access to food is one of the causes of malnutrition

Siya says several days a month the family has to go to bed hungry.

“The children cry and create a commotion,” she tells me. “I go door-to-door until somebody gives me a little.”

Every lunchtime the children of Chitori Khurda gather at the Anganwadi centre in the village. It is where nutrition and health services are provided at village level.

On the day we visited, each child was given two puris (small bread puffs fried in oil) along with some sweet porridge. The allocation is 80g of food a day per child.

The children ate it, then sat hoping for more, but there was none.

Madhya Pradesh is trying hard to tackle the problem of malnutrition, but it is getting worse, not better.

Corruption and inefficiency hamper the system. Some Anganwadi workers skim off food to sell. Others refuse to give food to lower-caste children. Many simply do not turn up as they are not paid much for the job.

Add to that high food prices and the poorest are sliding into hunger.

Back in Shivpuri, two-and-a-half-year-old Kajal had to be transferred to hospital. Her condition was so serious, she was so anaemic and her haemoglobin levels so low that she had to have an emergency blood transfusion.

Lying in her hospital bed Kajal was reviving, slowly. Her mother, anxious, looked on, a pressing question weighing on her mind.

Kajal should survive, but how will she feed her child?

Smoking link to hearing loss risk

June 10, 2008 at 8:40 pm | In health, life, news, people | Leave a Comment
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Smoking and obesity could both cause permanent hearing damage, say scientists.

Either could threaten blood flow to the ear, they say, with damage levels clearly linked to the level of obesity or the length of a smoking habit.

However, the Antwerp University-led study found that high levels of work noise remained the biggest risk.

In a separate study, smoking in middle age was linked to worse memory, which could hasten the arrival of dementia.

Once the damage is done, it’s done. It does not repair
Dr Erik Fransen
Antwerp University

A link between smoking and hearing problems has been suggested by others, but the conclusions of the latest research, involving more than 4,000 men and women aged between 53 and 67, offer the most convincing evidence to date.

All the study participants were given a hearing test, then asked about their lifestyle and where they worked.

Dr Erik Fransen, of the University of Antwerp in Belgium, one of the lead researchers, said that the ability to pick out high frequency sounds was damaged in smokers and the obese, although to not as great an extent as those exposed to very loud noise in the workplace.

He said: “The hearing loss is proportional to how much you smoke and your body mass index (BMI).

“It starts getting worse once you have smoked regularly for more than one year.”

He said that, unlike some parts of the body, once damage had occurred, there was no prospect of recovery.

“Once the damage is done, it’s done. It does not repair.”

Blood flow

The theory behind the hearing damage is similar to the reason smoking and obesity can harm other organs.

Both can disrupt the flow of blood around the body, and Dr Fransen suggested that the resulting lack of oxygen, coupled with the failure to remove toxic waste from the ear, can be damaging.

Amanda Sandford, from the pressure group Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), said that the results, published in the Journal of the Association for Research into Otolaryngology, should serve as a warning particularly to younger smokers.

She said: “There are so many young people who think that they can give up in middle age and escape some of the other diseases associated with smoking.

“In this case, some of the damage may already have been done.”

The study was part-funded by the Royal National Institute for the Deaf (RNID), and Dr Mark Downs, from the charity, said that, with an ageing population, age-related hearing loss could be a major problem.

“Losing your hearing in later life can make it harder to maintain contact with friends and families and lead to isolation and depression, so making small concessions now could have an enormous effect in the long term.”

A separate research project involved more than 5,000 civil servants, who completed memory and reasoning tests and then repeated them five years later.

It found that smoking in middle age was linked to a decline in memory and verbal reasoning ability.

Memory problems at this age have been linked to a swifter onset of the symptoms of dementia.

This study was conducted jointly between the University of Paris and University College London.

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