FIRST & FOREMOST ASIAN WEEKLY IN EUROPE
R
5 - 11 MARCH 2022
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
08
09
“It’s not a job, it’s a career”
Magistrates should represent the communities they serve
‘Monetary compensation can never truly compensate those affected’
HUMANITY Diaspora rushes to help the community stranded in Ukraine as Russia invades the country
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VOL 50 - ISSUE 43
26
05
A TEST FOR
IPL to begin on March 26, final on May 29
Indian student killed in Ukraine shelling
‘BELIEVING’ LONG COVID The world may be going back to the new normal, but how will those cope and start over who suffer from Long Covid? How will long hauliers retain livelihood and what kind of future would children with Long Covid dream of?
Shefali Saxena
Arrangements were done for students in Poland by the Embassy of India (Poland) in cooperation with the Indo-Polish Chamber of Commerce & Industry. Here students take a group photo with Amit Lath, President - Indo-Polish Chamber of Commerce & Industry.
Rupanjana Dutta
With an unfolding humanitarian crisis following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, many people in the UK are looking how to offer assistance. The South Asian diaspora in the UK, organisations and businesses have immediately come forward, as always, sending relief, donations, and mobilising their networks across Europe to assist in the evacuation of the community, stranded in Ukraine. The British Parliament was lit up in the colours of the Ukrainian flag, in solidarity with the people of Ukraine. Continued on page 11
The Office of National Statistics estimates that there are 1.3 million people in the UK who are suffering from Long Covid. Long Covid symptoms have temporarily or permanently altered the lives of thousands of individuals across the globe. With the reopening of offices and schools in the UK and things getting back to normal without any social distancing rules or compulsion to wear masks, it is difficult to imagine how the lives of those with Long Covid will be affected and how they will cope with the pace and demands of their workspaces, families and friends. Continued on page 6