FIRST & FOREMOST ASIAN WEEKLY IN EUROPE
Mother's Day Special
R
SEE PAGE - 16-17
19 - 25 MARCH 2022
07 Heart attack symptoms? It's never too early to call 999
Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
13 20th anniversary of the Memorial Gates
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SEE PAGE - 31
VOL 50 - ISSUE 45
22
SBI’s centenary celebration explores benefits of the UK-India FTA
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British-Pakistani filmmaker Aleem Khan and his mom beam at the BAFTA
PM Modi motivates party workers into election mode in Gujarat
BJP retains its hold in 4 states, AAP ousts Cong in Punjab
The effect of the booster shots is waning and the pandemic is not over. 6.1 million people were waiting for hospital treatment at end of December 2021. Doctors react to the NHS backlog amid the government’s ongoing Spring Inquiry.
Editorial credit: Ilyas Tayfun Salci / Shutterstock.com
Shefali Saxena
The number of people in England waiting for planned hospital care could hit 10.7 million by March 2024, leaked projections prepared for ministers and NHS bosses show. NHS figures for England that cover the period until January 2022 show that there is now a record 6.1m people on the waiting list – a rise of 36,730 on the previous month. Of these, 311,528 have waited over a year for treatment, with 23,788 people waiting for more than two years. Covid hospital admissions are rising across the UK. Reported cases are now also on the rise, with 61,900 reported last Tuesday, the highest daily figure for a month. While the booster dose has been shown to provide the strongest protection against Covid, including the Omicron variant, some waning of immunity is expected after six months which immediately also envelopes others around them into increased chances of infection. Continued on page 10
Five years of double incumbency; memories of a devastating pandemic that killed and displaced thousands, dented growth, worsened the already-serious challenge of unemployment and triggered inflation; and an awkward retreat after a bruising confrontation with farmers. The odds could not have been loaded more adversely. Yet, PM Narendra Modi's BJP managed to defy them to lead BJP to a resounding 4:1 victory, in a performance that again attested to his appeal as the saffron talisman and underlined BJP's domination of Indian politics. On a day when Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal's AAP steamrollered its opponents to score a landslide win in Punjab, smashing the stubborn historical barrier that has hitherto restricted regional parties to their home ground, it was the BJP-led Modi that dwarfed the field elsewhere, its preeminence stamped starker than ever before. Continued on page 25