AV 28th March 2020

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FIRST & FOREMOST ASIAN WEEKLY IN EUROPE Solicitors, Advocates Immigration Specialists Commissioners of Oaths Family & Divorce

Rashid A. Khan

Solicitor (Principal) ● Switching Visas Asylum & Immigration ● Over Stayers New Point Based System ● European Law ● Work Permits ● Nationality & Travel Documents ● Visa Extensions ● Human Rights Application ● Judicial Reviews ● High/Court of Appeals ● Tribunal Appeals ● ●

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Let noble thoughts come to us from every side

28 MARCH - 3 APRIL 2020 - VOL 48 ISSUE 46

OUR UNSUNG HEROES

inside: Tele-medicine Revolution: Easing the burden off the NHS SEE PAGE 7

Sunak announces historic wage protection package SEE PAGE 9

Rupanjana Dutta & Priyanka Mehta

Among Asians there is an old saying that medics are second to God on earth. Currently their selfless contributions to save people’s lives from coronavirus, without proper gears to protect themselves, indeed make them nothing but indispensable. Upto 65,000 ex-NHS staff will also go back soon to jobs to help Britain fight this pandemic and the government is asking 250,000 volunteers to step forward to help them.

Working long hours, many in intensive care units, these medics often don’t think about their own well-being. And it is not just the physical aspect of it. Mentally, to see people do not care about their repeated warnings or requests, then facing the ills without proper gears due to lack of equipments, as well as going home late to an empty fridge or empty supermarket has taken a toll on many of them. Still our national heroes, they stand strong, helping everyone in need, not caring about their own self first. A junior NHS doctor told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, that she was devastated to receive pictures of packed tube trains in London, as she deals with the consequences of the killer virus in intensive care units. She said that she had conversations with her dying patients and their families, she would have never imagined doing a week ago. On top of that, medics are being sent the wrong personal protective equipment to guard against

Covid-19, forcing many of them to take time away from the frontline to get refitted and learn how to use it, The Guardian reported. Speaking to Asian Voice, Dr Sutapa Biswas, who is a Consultant in Neurodiagnostics, London and a single mum said, “I was emotionally overwhelmed in the first week when after work I could not even find a bean in the supermarkets. I was standing in the midst of rows of empty shelves in tears. When the supermarkets opened up early morning slots for NHS, it was still difficult for me because I was doing the school run. “Schools have been very supportive to the best of their abilities. However since my children's school only had 4 key-worker children, they have been moved to a bigger school (under the same Trust) where they currently have 100+ such children. This was to save cost and staff safety.

Continued on page 4

PM Modi announces 21-day all-India lockdown SEE PAGE - 16-17

Shivraj Singh Chouhan takes oath as MP CM SEE PAGE - 26


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