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Ukraine president says Trump shares vision on 'new level' of defense cooperation

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KIEV/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Ukraine’s Petro Poroshenko met U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday and said afterwards that they had a shared vision on a “new level” of defense cooperation, but not whether this included the U.S. provision of defensive weapons to Ukraine.
The United States is reviewing whether to send weapons to Ukraine to help it defend itself, an option that previous U.S. president Barack Obama vetoed and which is opposed by Russia.
After meeting Trump in New York, President Poroshenko told a televised briefing: “It’s very important that there is a shared vision on a new level of cooperation in the defense sphere.”
“We discussed all areas of this cooperation, including cooperation with the defense ministry and other institutions,” he added, without saying whether there had been any progress on the defensive weapons initiative.
The two leaders skirted around the topic of Russia when they spoke to reporters at the beginning of their private meeting.
Instead, they chose to emphasize economic cooperation when they appeared before reporters at their meeting on the fringes of the U.N. General Assembly.
Relations between Kiev and Moscow are at their lowest ebb since Russia annexed Crimea more than three years ago and Russian-backed separatist fighters took up arms against Ukrainian government forces in the east of the country.
Before holding private talks, Trump praised Poroshenko, telling him that “I wouldn’t say it’s (Ukraine) the easiest place to live” but “it’s getting better and better on a daily basis.”
Speaking in English, Poroshenko said he believed that the two countries had improved security and economic cooperation with many U.S. companies doing business in Ukraine.
“That’s a story that’s pretty untold,” said Trump. “Companies are going very strongly right now into the Ukraine, they see a tremendous potential there.”
It was not immediately clear if they spoke privately about relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who did not attend the U.N. General Assembly.
The war in eastern Ukraine between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian government forces has killed more than 10,000 people in three years. Kiev accuses Moscow of sending troops and heavy weapons to the region, which Russia denies.
Poroshenko said Trump had supported Ukraine’s proposal to deploy U.N peacekeepers “including on the uncontrolled part of the Ukraine-Russia border, which would prevent the possibility of penetration by Russian troops or Russian weapons”.
Putin this month also suggested U.N. peacekeepers be deployed to eastern Ukraine.
But Russia has balked at Ukraine’s proposal that would ban any Russian nationals from taking part in the peacekeeping mission which Kiev wants deployed along the part of its border with Russia it does not control.
Poroshenko said the meeting with Trump lasted an hour and was also attended by U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and other senior U.S. officials.

Mexico rescuers in race to find trapped survivors 48 hours after quake

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MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Rescuers labored against the odds on Thursday to extract survivors including school children and five Taiwanese factory workers trapped beneath collapsed buildings in central Mexico following the country’s deadliest earthquake in 32 years.
More than 50 survivors have been plucked from disaster sites in Mexico City since Tuesday afternoon’s 7.1-magnitude quake, and first responders, volunteers and spectators joined in chants of “Yes we can!”
The death toll was at least 233, revised down from 237 earlier on Thursday, according to Mexico’s head of civil protection Luis Felipe Puente. In Mexico City 1,900 were injured.
As the chance of survival diminished with each passing hour, officials vowed to press on, heartened by a few success stories.
Late on Wednesday night, an 8-year-old girl was rescued from a collapsed building in the Tlalpan neighborhood, nearly 36 hours after the quake, the Coyoacan neighborhood government said on Twitter.
But the fight to save a 12-year-old girl at a collapsed school in the south of the capital faced difficulty. Navy-led rescuers have communicated with her but were still unable to dig her free.
Just as it seemed workers were going to save the girl, they had to suspend their work early on Thursday morning due to a debris collapse, local media reported.
Eleven other children were rescued from the same Enrique Rebsamen School, where students are aged roughly 6 to 15. Twenty-one children and four adults there were killed.
“There’s a girl alive in there. We’re pretty sure of that, but we still don’t know how to get to her,” Admiral Jose Luis Vergara told Televisa, whose cameras had special access to the scene to provide non-stop live coverage.
“The hours that have passed complicate the chances of finding alive or in good health the person who might be trapped,” he said.
The Taiwanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed five nationals were trapped in a collapsed clothing factory in the Obrera neighborhood. The victims included Taiwanese businessman Chen Po-wen, according to Carlos Liao, Taiwan’s top envoy to Mexico.
Volunteers cutting through debris at the factory, which had been combed by rescue dogs, heard signs of life.

A Venezuelan national, Daniela Cardenas, sits on a mattress in her gym she turned into a shelter for people who have lost their homes after an earthquake in Mexico City, Mexico September 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ginnette Riquelme
“First we heard blows, and then we established visual contact. There was a person trapped in a car,” said rescue worker Amaury Perez. “We shouted: If you are inside the vehicle, please knock three times. He knocked three times.”
Rescue workers were joined by crews from Panama, El Salvador, the United States and Israel with others from Latin American countries on the way.
Throughout the capital, crews were joined by volunteers and bystanders who used dogs, cameras, motion detectors and heat-seeking equipment to detect victims who may still be alive. Mechanical diggers moved large slabs of concrete.

OUTPOURING OF AID



Slideshow (15 Images)
Armed soldiers guarded abandoned buildings feared to be at the point of collapse. Some 52 buildings collapsed in Mexico City alone and more in the surrounding states.
Thousands of people have donated food, water, medicine, blankets and other basic items to help relief efforts. Companies provided free services, and restaurants delivered food to shelters where thousands of people have sought refuge after their homes were damaged.
President Enrique Pena Nieto, who has declared three days of national mourning, said, “If anything distinguishes Mexicans, it is our generosity and fraternity.”
The extensive damage to many buildings, some of them relatively new, has raised questions over construction standards which were supposed to have improved after a devastating 1985 quake.
Tuesday’s quake killed 102 people in Mexico City and the remainder in five surrounding states, officials said. The state of Puebla was hit hard. Governor Jose Antonio Gali said on local television that 86 churches had been damaged and more than 1,600 homes would have to be demolished.
The temblor came on the anniversary of the 1985 earthquake that killed thousands and still resonates in Mexico. Annual Sept. 19 earthquake drills were being held a few hours before the nation got rocked once again.
Mexico was still recovering from another powerful quake less than two weeks ago that killed nearly 100 people in the south of the country.
Parts of Mexico City, home to some 20 million people, are built on an ancient lake bed that trembles easily in a quake.
Some residents and volunteers voiced anger that emergency services and military were slow to arrive to poorer southern neighborhoods of the city, and that wealthier districts appeared prioritized.

Russia says will target U.S.-backed fighters in Syria if provoked

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MOSCOW/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia warned the United States on Thursday it would target U.S.-backed militias in Syria if Russian troops again came under fire, as the United States disclosed an unusual face-to-face meeting between U.S. and Russian generals meant to avoid such clashes.
The Russian warning underscored growing tensions over Syria between Moscow and Washington. While both oppose Islamic State (IS), they are engaged, via proxies, in a race for strategic influence and potential resources in the form of oilfields in eastern Syria’s Deir al-Zor province.
The Russian Defence Ministry said the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) had taken up positions on the eastern banks of the Euphrates with U.S. special forces, and twice had opened fire with mortars and artillery on Syrian troops who were working alongside Russian special forces.
“A representative of the U.S. military command in Al Udeid (the U.S. operations center in Qatar) was told in no uncertain terms that any attempts to open fire from areas where SDF fighters are located would be quickly shut down,” Major-General Igor Konashenkov said in a statement.
“Fire points in those areas will be immediately suppressed with all military means.”
In a sign of the high stakes as both forces come in increasing proximity, U.S. and Russian generals held a face-to-face meeting this week in an effort to avoid accidental clashes, U.S. military officials said on Thursday.
“They had a face-to-face discussion, laid down maps and graphics,” said Army Colonel Ryan Dillon, a Baghdad-based spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition, adding it appeared to be the first meeting of its kind.
Dillon, addressing a Pentagon briefing, disclosed few details, including who participated in the meeting or its precise location.
A U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the participants included both U.S. and Russian generals.
Fighters from Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stand near destroyed Uwais al-Qarni shrine in Raqqa, Syria September 16, 2017. REUTERS/Rodi Said

U.S. SPIES?

The Russian Defence Ministry this week accused U.S. spies of initiating a jihadi offensive against government-held parts of northwest Syria on Tuesday.
The ministry, in a Wednesday evening statement, said 29 Russian military policemen had been surrounded by jihadis as a result and that Russia had been forced to break them out in a special operation backed by air power.
“According to our information, U.S. intelligence services initiated the offensive to halt the successful advance of government troops to the east of Deir al-Zor,” said Colonel-General Sergei Rudskoi.
The Syrian army, backed by Russian war planes, has captured about 100 km (160 miles) of the west bank of the Euphrates this month, reaching the Raqqa provincial border on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.
Syrian troops also crossed to the eastern side of the river on Monday where the SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias fighting with the U.S.-led coalition, has been advancing.
The convergence of the rival offensives has increased tensions in Deir al-Zor.
The U.S.-backed militias said on Saturday they had come under attack from Russian jets and Syrian government forces, something Moscow denied.
On Monday, the SDF warned against any further Syrian army advances on the eastern riverbank, and Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that the waters of the Euphrates had risen as soon as the Syrian army began crossing it, suggesting this could only have happened if upstream dams held by the U.S.-backed opposition had been opened.

Turkey, Iran, Iraq consider counter-measures over Kurdish referendum

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ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey, Iran and Iraq have agreed to consider counter-measures against Kurdish northern Iraq over a planned independence referendum, Turkey’s foreign ministry said on Thursday.
In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of the three countries voiced concerns that the referendum would endanger the gains Iraq has made against Islamic State, and reiterated their fears over the potential for new conflicts in the region.
“In the meeting, the three ministers emphasized that the referendum will not be beneficial for the Kurds and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), and agreed, in this regard, to consider taking counter-measures in coordination,” the statement said.
The statement gave no details on the possible measures but said the ministers, who were in New York attending the United Nations General Assembly, called on the international community to intervene.
Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to impose sanctions against Kurdish northern Iraq. Turkish troops are also carrying out military exercises near the border.
Iraqi people visit Bekhal Waterfall in Erbil, Iraq September 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah
The central government in Baghdad, Iraq’s neighbors and Western powers fear the vote could divide the country and spark a wider regional conflict, after Arabs and Kurds cooperated to dislodge Islamic State from its stronghold in Mosul.
The statement said Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif and their Iraqi counterpart Ibrahim al-Jaafari expressed concerns that conflicts surfacing as a result of the referendum would “prove difficult to contain”.
But the Kurds say they are determined to go ahead with the vote, which, though non-binding, could trigger the process of separation in a country already divided along sectarian and ethnic lines.
The three ministers also voiced their “strong commitment” to maintain Iraq’s territorial and political unity, the foreign ministry’s statement said.
Turkey, which has pulled forward a cabinet meeting and national security council session to Friday over the referendum, will also convene parliament for an extraordinary meeting on Saturday, the chairman of the ruling AK Party’s parliamentary group said on Thursday

Pakistan army pushed political role for militant-linked groups

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LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) - The backing of a candidate in a by-election last weekend in Pakistan by a political party controlled by an Islamist with a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head was in line with a plan put forward by the military last year to mainstream militant groups, according to sources familiar with the proposal.
The Milli Muslim League party loyal to Hafiz Saeed - who the United States and India accuse of masterminding the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people – won 5 percent of the votes in the contest for the seat vacated when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was removed from office by the Supreme Court in July.
But the foray into politics by Saeed’s Islamist charity appears to be following a blueprint that Sharif himself rejected when the military proposed it in 2016, according to three government officials and a retired former general briefed on the discussions.
None of the sources interviewed for this article could say for sure if the MML’s founding was the direct result of the military’s plan, which was not discussed in meetings after Sharif put it on ice last year.
The MML denies its political ambitions were engineered by the military. The official army spokesman did not comment after queries were sent to his office about the mainstreaming plan and what happened to it.
Pakistan’s powerful military has long been accused of fostering militant groups as proxy fighters opposing neighboring arch-enemy India, a charge the army denies.
Three government officials and close Sharif confidants with knowledge of the discussions said the military’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) presented proposals for “mainstreaming” some militant groups in a meeting last year. They said that Sharif had opposed the “mainstreaming” plan, which senior military figures and some analysts see as a way of steering ultra-religious groups away from violent jihad.
“We have to separate those elements who are peaceful from the elements who are picking up weapons,” said retired Lieutenant General Amjad Shuaib, adding that such groups should be “helped out to create a political structure” to come into the mainstream.
The plan – which Shuaib told Reuters was shared with him by the then-head of the ISI - said those who were willing “should be encouraged to come into the mainstream politics of the country”.
He added that in his capacity as a retired senior military officer he unofficially spoke to Hafiz Saaed and another alleged militant about the plan, and they were receptive.
Shuaib later said his comments in the interview were taken out of context and were part of a broader discussion about deradicalization strategies. Writing in a local newspaper on Wednesday he said the report “maliciously attributed some statements to me totally out of context, just to suit its own narrative”.
A spokesperson for Reuters said: “We stand by our reporting.”
“PATRIOTIC PEOPLE”
Saeed’s religious charity launched the Milli Muslim League party within two weeks of the court ousting Sharif over corruption allegations.
Yaqoob Sheikh, the Lahore candidate for Milli Muslim League, stood as an independent after the Electoral Commission said the party was not yet legally registered.
But Saeed’s lieutenants, JUD workers and MML officials ran his campaign and portraits of Saeed adorn every poster promoting Sheikh, who came in fourth place on Sunday with Sharif’s wife taking the seat as expected.
Another Islamist designated a terrorist by the United States, Fazlur Rehman Khalil, has told Reuters he too plans to soon form his own party to advocate strict Islamic law.
“God willing, we will come into the mainstream - our country right now needs patriotic people,” Khalil said, vowing to turn Pakistan into a state government by strict Islamic law.
Saeed’s charity and Khalil’s Ansar ul-Umma organization are both seen by the United States as fronts for militant groups the army has been accused of sponsoring. The military denies any policy of encouraging radical groups.
Still, hundreds of MML supporters, waving posters of Saeed and demanding his release from house arrest, chanted “Long live Hafiz Saeed! Long live the Pakistan army!” at political rallies during the run-up to the by-election.
“Anyone who is India’s friend is a traitor, a traitor,” went another campaign slogan, a reference to Sharif’s attempts to improve relations with long-time foe India that was a source of tension with the military.
‘DERADICALIZATION’ PLAN
Both Saeed and Khalil are proponents of a strict interpretation of Islam and have a history of supporting violence - each man was reportedly a signatory to al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s 1998 fatwa declaring war on the United States.
They have since established religious groups that they say are unconnected to violence, though the United States maintains those groups are fronts for funneling money and fighters to militants targeting India.
Analyst Khaled Ahmed, who has researched Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawa charity and its connections to the military, says the new political party is clearly an attempt by the generals to pursue an alternative to dismantling its militant proxies.
“One thing is the army wants these guys to survive,” Ahmed said. “The other thing is that they want to also balance the politicians who are more and more inclined to normalize relations with India.”
The ISI began pushing the political mainstreaming plan in 2016, according to retired general Shuaib, a former director of the army’s military intelligence wing that is separate from the ISI.
He said the proposal was shared with him in writing by the then-ISI chief, adding that he himself had spoken with Khalil as well as Saeed in an unofficial capacity about the plan.
“Fazlur Rehman Khalil was very positive. Hafiz Saeed was very positive,” Shuaib said. “My conversation with them was just to confirm those things which I had been told by the ISI and other people.”
The ISI’s main press liaison did not respond to written requests for comment.
Saeed has been under house arrest since January at his house in the eastern city of Lahore. The United States has offered a $10 million reward for information leading to his conviction over the Mumbai attacks.
Then-Prime Minister Sharif, however, was strongly against the military’s mainstreaming plan, according to Shuaib and the three members of Sharif’s inner circle, including one who was in some of the tense meetings over the issue.
Sharif wanted to completely dismantle groups like JuD.
Disagreement on what to do about anti-India proxy fighters was a major source of rancor with the military, according to one of the close Sharif confidants.
In recent weeks several senior figures from the ruling PML-N party have publicly implied that elements of the military - which has run Pakistan for almost half its modern history and previously ousted Sharif in a 1999 coup - had a hand in the court ouster of Sharif, a charge both the army and the court reject.
A representative of the PML-N, which last month replaced him as prime minister with close ally Shahid Khaqi Abbasi, said the party was “not aware” of any mainstreaming plan being brought to the table.

50 Nations Sign U.N. Nuke Ban Treaty; Japan, Others Absent

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   New York, Sept. 20 (Jiji Press)--Fifty countries signed the first-ever treaty to legally ban the development, production, possession, storage and use of nuclear arms at the U.N. headquarters in New York on Wednesday, according to the U.N. Secretariat. 
   Nuclear weapons states and nuclear umbrella states, including Japan, the only country attacked with nuclear arms, were absent from the day's signing ceremony. They also failed to take part in negotiations for setting the treaty.
   Three of the 50 signatories--Guyana, Thailand and Vatican--ratified the landmark pact, which was adopted at the United Nations in July with the support from 122 nonnuclear nations.
   Signing for the treaty, which needs ratification by at least 50 countries for entering into force, started the same day. More countries are expected to sign the treaty.
   "The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons is the product of increasing concerns over the risk posed by the continued existence of nuclear weapons, including the catastrophic humanitarian and environmental consequences of their use," U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at the ceremony.

Junko Morimoto, Author of Picture Book on Hiroshima A-Bombing, Dies

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 Sydney, Sept. 21 (Jiji Press)--Junko Morimoto, known for her picture book "My Hiroshima," based on her experiences of the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945, died on Thursday, Australian media reported. She was 85. 
   After graduating from an art university and teaching art at a junior high school, Morimoto, a native of the western Japan city, immigrated to Australia in 1982.
   Morimoto then began her career as an author of children's books and in 1987 published "My Hiroshima," which depicts the devastation and horror caused by the bombing on Aug. 6, 1945, when she was 13. The book is read in many countries.
   Morimoto also visited schools in Australia to promote peace to children.
   According to ABC News, she sent a letter to Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last month urging the country to sign a U.N. treaty to ban nuclear weapons.

11 TPP Countries Start 2-Day Intensive Talks in Tokyo

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 Tokyo, Sept. 21 (Jiji Press)--Chief negotiators from the remaining 11 signatory countries of the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade pact started two-day intensive talks in Tokyo on Thursday to advance work to decide which specific rules in the pact would be suspended or revised if it is put into force despite the United States' withdrawal early this year. 
   "We hope to promptly advance the talks while maintaining high-standard liberalization measures in the TPP," Japanese chief negotiator Kazuyoshi Umemoto, who chairs the Tokyo meeting, said at the beginning of the first-day session.
   Umemoto underscored the importance of mutual understanding among the member countries for reaching a broad accord on a new "TPP 11" pact by the time an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum summit is held in Vietnam in early November.
   Initially the 11 countries sought freeze or revision of a total of 70 agreed rules. But the number was reduced to around 50 by Thursday night through talks at working groups.
   At the first day, the members spent most of their time for working group talks to review TPP terms worked out by the original 12 economies, including the United States, informed sources said.

World leaders pledge to boost investment in education

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UNITED NATIONS, Sept 21 (APP): World leaders have pledged to tackle the education crisis that is holding back millions of children and threatening economic development, at a high-level event at United Nations Headquarters in New York aimed at securing finance for this critical goal.
“Financing education is indeed the best investment we can make for a better world and a better future,” stressed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in his remarks to the event, titled “Financing the Future: Education 2030,” held on the margins of the General Assembly’s annual debate.
UN Messenger of Peace Malala Yousafzai, a Nobel Laureate and an education activist, flew in from London to participate in the event.
“I started as a teacher. I saw for myself decades ago in the schools and slums of Lisbon why education is a basic human right, a transformational force for poverty eradication, an engine for sustainability, and a force for peace,” he said.
More than 260 million children, adolescents and youth are out of school. Despite some progress in achieving gender equality in the world’s poorest countries, far more girls than boys still do not have access to a quality education.
Malala Yousafzai said girls in many parts of the world are pushing back against poverty, war and child marriage to go to school.
“We have big goals, but we will not reach any of them unless we educate girls,” Malala said, referring to the Sustainable Development Goals, adopted by UN Member States in 2015.
The event, co-organized by governments, the private sector, civil society and UN agencies, was held to boost political commitment and investment in quality early-childhood, primary and secondary education.
“Delivering an education to all”  and not just some children,is the civil rights struggle of our time,” former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who is the UN Special Envoy for Global Education, told the meeting.
“Confronted by the largest refugee crisis since the close of the Second World War, and with education receiving less than 2 per cent of humanitarian aid, it is vital we marshal the funds to provide an education for all children,  especially those left out and left behind: refugee children,” he added.
Top Bollywood star Priyanka Chopra, who is also UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, also underscored the need for expanding education.

रोहिंग्या शरणार्थियों को अपनी आबादी काबू में रखने का किट मुहैया कराएगी बांग्लादेश

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ढाका, 21 सितंबर (भाषा) बांग्लादेश सरकार के एक मंत्री ने आज कहा कि रोहिंग्या मुसलमानों के बीच परिवार नियोजन अभियान चलाया जाएगा । म्यांमा के जातीय अल्पंसख्यक नागरिकों के बड़े पैमाने पर बांग्लादेश में दाखिल होने के बाद इन शरणार्थियों की जनसंख्या में तेजी से बढ़ोतरी की आशंका के बीच मंत्री ने यह बयान दिया है ।

अधिकारियों ने बताया कि रोहिंग्या समुदाय को अपने परिवार का आकार छोटा रखने के लिए प्रेरित करने की योजना तैयार की जा रही है । उन्हें जन्म नियंत्रण गोलियां और अन्य गर्भ निरोधक दिए जा रहे हैं ताकि वे परिवार नियोजन के साथ ही यौन संचारी रोगों की चपेट में आने से बच सकें ।

बांग्लादेश के स्वास्थ्य एवं परिवार कल्याण मंत्री मोहम्मद नसीम ने पीटीआई को बताया, ‘‘यौन संचारी रोगों एवं जन्म नियंत्रण के तौर-तरीकों के बारे में रोहिंग्या समुदाय के बीच जागरूकता पैदा करने के लिए हमने अब तक छह मेडिकल टीमें बनाई हैं ।’’ अधिकारियों और विशेषज्ञों ने बताया कि यह पहल अहम है, क्योंकि पिछड़ेपन के शिकार रोहिंग्या समुदाय में प्रजनन दर अधिक है जबकि जन्म नियंत्रण उपायों के बारे में उन्हें कुछ खास पता नहीं है ।

मंत्री ने यह बयान ऐसे समय में दिया है जब संयुक्त राष्ट्र जनसंख्या कोष (यूएनएफपीए) ने कहा कि 25 अगस्त को शरणार्थियों के आने का सिलसिला हाल में शुरू होने के बाद से दक्षिण-पश्चिमी बांग्लादेश के कॉक्स बाजार में अस्थायी रोहिंग्या शिविरों में तैनात दाइयों ने कम से कम 200 बच्चे पैदा होते देखा है ।

डार्क मैटर पर अनुसंधान के लिए भारत बना रहा भूमिगत प्रयोगशाला

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नयी दिल्ली, 21 सितंबर (भाषा) परमाणु ऊर्जा आयोग के अध्यक्ष शेखर बसु ने कहा है कि परमाणु ऊर्जा के शांतिपूर्ण इस्तेमाल को बढ़ावा देने के लिए भारत ने हमेशा अंतरराष्ट्रीय परमाणु ऊर्जा एजेंसी (आईएईए) की भूमिका को प्राथिमकता दी है। इसके साथ ही उन्होंने परमाणु ऊर्जा के क्षेत्र में भारत की हाल की उपलब्धियों का ब्योरा देते कहा कि देश डार्क मैटर पर अनुसंधान के लिए अपनी एक यूरेनियम खदान में छोटी भूमिगत प्रयोगशाला स्थापित कर रहा है।

परमाणु ऊर्जा विभाग के जनसंपर्क प्रमुख रविशंकर ने यहां जारी एक विज्ञप्ति में बताया कि बसु ने यह बात कल विएना में 18 से 22 सितंबर तक चल रहे आईएईए के 61वें आम सम्मेलन में अपने बयान में कही।

विज्ञप्ति के अनुसार बसु ने परमाणु सुरक्षा मानकों में आईएईए की भूमिका का उल्लेख करते हुए कहा कि कहा कि भारत ने परमाणु ऊर्जा और परमाणु अनुप्रयोग दोनों क्षेत्रों में इसके शांतिपूर्ण इस्तेमाल को बढ़ावा देने के लिए आईएईए की भूमिका को हमेशा प्राथमिकता दी है।

बसु ने परमाणु क्षेत्र में देश की हाल की उपलब्धियों का ब्योरा देते हुए कहा कि भारत विज्ञान के अग्रणी मोर्चे पर डार्क मैटर पर अनुसंधान के लिए अपनी यूरेनियम खदानों में से एक में छोटी भूमिगत प्रयोगशाला स्थापित कर रहा है जो सभी पीढ़ियों के वैज्ञानिकों को प्रोत्साहित करेगी।

उन्होंने फिलीपीन की राजदूत मारिया जेनीदा अंगरा कोलिन्सन को आईएईए के 61वें आम सम्मेलन की अध्यक्ष चुने जाने पर बधाई दी और कहा, ‘‘मुझे आपको यह सूचित करने में प्रसन्नता का अनुभव हो रहा है कि भारत ने इस साल अप्रैल में बांग्लादेश के साथ असैन्य परमाणु करार पर हस्ताक्षर किए हैं। इसके साथ ही दो और अनुपूरक समझौतों पर भी हस्ताक्षर किए गए हैं।’’ उन्होंने कहा, ‘‘हम बांग्लादेश में रूपपुर परमाणु बिजली संयंत्र स्थापित करने के काम में अपने रूसी और बांग्लादेशी साझेदारों के साथ काम कर रहे हैं।’’ बसु परमाणु ऊर्जा विभाग के सचिव भी हैं और वह आईएईए के आम सम्मेलन में भारतीय प्रतिनिधिमंडल का नेतृत्व कर रहे हैं।

Mitra-mandal Privacy Policy

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their  'Personally Identifiable Inform...