标签: Asia

亚洲

  • Indian scientists predict how bird flu could spread to humans

    Indian scientists predict how bird flu could spread to humans

    A groundbreaking simulation study from Indian researchers reveals the critical timing required to contain a potential H5N1 avian influenza pandemic before it spirals out of control. The peer-reviewed modeling, published in BMC Public Health Journal, utilizes real-world data and computer simulations to map how an outbreak might unfold in human populations.

    Professor Gautam Menon of Ashoka University, who co-authored the research with Philip Cherian, emphasizes that while ‘the threat of an H5N1 pandemic in humans is a genuine one, we can hope to forestall it through better surveillance and a more nimble public-health response.’

    The study employed BharatSim, an open-source simulation platform originally developed for COVID-19 modeling, to create a synthetic community replicating a typical village in India’s poultry-intensive Namakkal district. This computer-generated population of 9,667 residents included realistic household structures, workplaces, and market spaces where infected birds were introduced to simulate real-world exposure scenarios.

    The research demonstrates that pandemic containment depends overwhelmingly on timing. According to the model, isolating infected individuals and quarantining households can effectively stop transmission at the secondary stage. However, once tertiary infections emerge (contacts of contacts), the outbreak becomes virtually uncontrollable without implementing drastic measures such as lockdowns.

    The findings present public health authorities with a challenging trade-off: implementing quarantine too early may increase household transmission among confined family members, while acting too late renders containment measures largely ineffective.

    While targeted vaccination raises the threshold at which the virus can sustain itself, it provides limited protection against immediate household transmission. Bird culling remains effective only when implemented before the virus jumps to human populations.

    Virologist Dr. Seema Lakdawala of Emory University notes important caveats, pointing out that the model ‘assumes a very efficient transmission of influenza viruses,’ while actual transmission dynamics are more complex and strain-dependent. Emerging research indicates that only a subset of infected individuals typically shed infectious influenza virus into the air—a super-spreader phenomenon well-documented in COVID-19 but less characterized for influenza.

    Despite these complexities, health authorities have advantages compared to previous pandemics. Dr. Lakdawala suggests that established influenza defenses—including licensed antivirals effective against H5N1 strains and stockpiled candidate vaccines—could potentially make an H5N1 pandemic more comparable to the 2009 swine flu outbreak than COVID-19 in terms of disruption.

    The World Health Organization has documented 990 human H5N1 cases across 25 countries from 2003 to August 2025, with a concerning 48% fatality rate. In the United States alone, the virus has impacted over 180 million birds, spread to more than 1,000 dairy herds across 18 states, and infected at least 70 people, primarily farmworkers, resulting in several hospitalizations and one fatality.

  • Former Pak PM Imran Khan’s sons worry, describe ‘awful’ jail conditions

    Former Pak PM Imran Khan’s sons worry, describe ‘awful’ jail conditions

    The sons of former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan have issued a grave warning about their father’s deteriorating prison conditions, describing his confinement as tantamount to psychological torture. In an exclusive Sky News interview, Kasim Khan and Sulaiman Isa Khan revealed they haven’t spoken to their father in seven months and fear they “might never see him again.”

    The brothers detailed what they characterized as “awful” detention circumstances, including prolonged solitary confinement in a small, dimly lit cell with intermittent electricity and questionable water quality. Sulaiman specifically noted that such facilities have historically been used for inmates on death row, labeling it a “death cell” that falls dramatically below international standards for prisoner treatment.

    Their concerns echo those of United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Alice Jill Edwards, who recently warned that Khan’s conditions could constitute inhuman or degrading treatment under international law. Edwards emphasized that extended isolation beyond 15 days represents psychological torture and urged Pakistani authorities to immediately lift the solitary confinement measures.

    The sons plan to visit their father in January pending visa approvals, though they approach the journey with apprehension despite prior safety guarantees from Pakistan’s Defense Minister. Beyond personal visits, they intend to lobby international bodies in Brussels and Geneva, arguing that their father’s case differs significantly from typical political imprisonments due to its duration and severity.

    Khan, ousted from power in a 2022 no-confidence vote after previously enjoying military support, faces multiple corruption charges that he denies. His supporters maintain that the charges are politically motivated and part of a broader campaign against his Tehreek-e-Insaf party following his accusations that army leadership orchestrated his downfall.

  • World’s largest ice and snow theme park opens, igniting China’s winter tourism fever

    World’s largest ice and snow theme park opens, igniting China’s winter tourism fever

    HARBIN, China — Defying frigid temperatures, thousands of winter enthusiasts converged Wednesday at the newly opened Harbin Ice-Snow World, marking the spectacular launch of the world’s largest ice and snow theme park’s most ambitious season to date. Spanning an unprecedented 1.2 million square meters, this year’s edition presents a breathtaking fusion of artistic ice craftsmanship and immersive entertainment experiences.

    Among the first visitors was He Rui, who journeyed over 3,000 kilometers from Guizhou province to experience the park’s legendary Super Ice Slides. ‘After years of anticipation, the reality exceeded all expectations,’ He remarked, visibly exhilarated after descending the 521-meter ice track.

    The 2025-2026 season introduces groundbreaking attractions including a magnificent central tower sculpted in the form of a mountain embraced by snowflakes, symbolizing China’s burgeoning ice-snow economy. Artistic creations range from meticulous replicas of China’s Yellow Crane Tower and Baroque-style architectural marvels to international icons like Belgium’s Manneken-Pis statue. Modern technological achievements are represented through detailed models of aircraft carriers and submersibles.

    ‘We’ve created an unparalleled synthesis of Eastern and Western artistic traditions,’ stated Guo Hongwei, Chairman of Harbin Ice and Snow World Co Ltd. ‘Our expanded entertainment offerings now include singing competitions, dance performances, and fantastical indoor productions.’

    Visitor comfort receives significant enhancement with a 5,000-square-meter climate-controlled dome providing warm respite, complimentary hot beverages, and multilingual guided services. International accessibility improves with streamlined payment systems accepting overseas bank cards.

    The park’s opening festivities featured traditional dance and drum performances, with ceremonial distribution of ‘First-day Ice’—frozen artifacts collected during Harbin’s ice-cutting festival, believed to convey good fortune according to local customs.

    Harbin’s transformation into China’s premier winter destination continues generating substantial economic impact. Last season recorded 3.56 million visits to Ice-Snow World alone, contributing to Heilongjiang Province’s 266.17 billion yuan ice-snow economy. National ambitions target sector growth reaching 1.5 trillion yuan by 2030.

    Complementing the main attraction, Harbin simultaneously launches its Sun Island Snow Expo across 1.5 million square meters and an Ice-Snow Carnival along the frozen Songhua River, collectively featuring approximately 260 snow sculptures and 60 specialized winter activity zones.

    China’s cultural tourism authorities emphasize developing high-quality winter tourism products during the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026-2030), with nationwide initiatives including specialized student programs and substantial tourism vouchers attracting global visitors to China’s winter wonderlands.

  • Pakistan extends airspace ban for Indian aircraft until January 2026

    Pakistan extends airspace ban for Indian aircraft until January 2026

    Pakistan has formally extended its prohibition on Indian aircraft utilizing its airspace through January 23, 2026, according to an official Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) issued by the Pakistan Airports Authority on Wednesday, December 17, 2025. This decision prolongs a significant aviation restriction initially imposed in the aftermath of the Pahalgam attack in April, an incident that resulted in 26 fatalities and severely escalated bilateral tensions. The monthly renewal pattern continues, with the previous mandate scheduled to lapse on December 24. This ongoing closure compels airlines operating to and from India to navigate lengthier, more fuel-intensive flight paths, particularly affecting routes to and from Afghanistan, Central Asia, and parts of the Middle East, thereby increasing operational costs and flight durations. The persistent extension underscores the deep-rooted and unresolved diplomatic discord between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, with no immediate indications of a thaw in relations or aviation cooperation. The aviation sectors of both nations, along with international carriers servicing these routes, continue to adapt to this protracted geopolitical reality.

  • DMCC partners with Crypto.com to drive global push for commodities tokenisation

    DMCC partners with Crypto.com to drive global push for commodities tokenisation

    In a landmark move that signals Dubai’s accelerating embrace of digital asset innovation, the Dubai Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC) has entered into a strategic partnership with cryptocurrency exchange giant Crypto.com. This collaboration, formalized through a Memorandum of Understanding, aims to revolutionize global commodities trading through blockchain-enabled tokenization of physical assets.

    The partnership brings together the world’s largest free zone and commodities trading hub with one of the most prominent digital asset platforms to explore transformative solutions for tokenizing real-world commodities. The initiative specifically targets precious metals, diamonds, energy products, and agricultural goods—seeking to modernize how these assets are financed, traded, and settled across international markets.

    Key objectives include reducing settlement friction, enhancing price transparency, and expanding access to broader pools of market participants. The alliance will assess the potential listing of tokenized commodities on the Crypto.com Exchange, contingent upon regulatory approvals and existing listing requirements. Additionally, both organizations will jointly investigate digital asset custody models, liquidity-facilitation mechanisms, and digital-asset payment solutions across DMCC’s digital platforms.

    Ahmed Bin Sulayem, Executive Chairman and CEO of DMCC, characterized tokenization as a structural opportunity to modernize commodities markets that still rely heavily on legacy systems. “The ability to move real assets on-chain could significantly enhance transparency and efficiency,” he stated, emphasizing Dubai’s positioning at the forefront of blockchain-enabled trade transformation.

    The collaboration extends beyond market infrastructure to include educational initiatives through the DMCC Crypto Centre. These will feature workshops, hackathons, and capability-building programs designed to strengthen institutional understanding of tokenized asset models and foster responsible innovation within Dubai’s rapidly expanding Web3 ecosystem.

    Crypto.com President Eric Anziani highlighted the significance of tokenized real-world assets as “one of the most significant advancements in the digital economy,” noting that the partnership provides an exceptional platform to explore these opportunities responsibly and at scale.

    This agreement builds upon DMCC’s earlier partnership with Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA), forming part of a comprehensive strategy to develop secure, compliant frameworks for integrating physical assets into the digital economy. With over 26,000 member companies across various sectors, DMCC provides a diversified commercial environment for testing and implementing blockchain applications within global supply chains.

  • China planning to raise age limit for blood donors, shorten the minimum interval

    China planning to raise age limit for blood donors, shorten the minimum interval

    China is poised to implement significant revisions to its national blood donation policy, marking the first major update to the Law on Blood Donation since its inception in 1997. The National Health Commission announced on Wednesday, December 17, 2025, proposed changes that would raise the maximum donor age from 55 to 65 years and reduce the minimum donation interval from six months to just 90 days.

    This regulatory modernization follows extensive review of international practices and contemporary medical research. The World Health Organization’s guidelines recommend donor ages between 18 and 65, with numerous developed nations including the United States, Canada, Australia, and Japan either permitting older donors or establishing no strict upper age limitations. Similarly, the proposed 90-day interval aligns with the 8-12 week standards commonly implemented worldwide.

    The Commission emphasized that all potential donors will undergo comprehensive health screenings to ensure safety. Medical evidence confirms that donating 400 milliliters of blood represents less than 10% of total blood volume, with the human body continuously regenerating blood cells without adverse health effects.

    Several regions including Hainan Province, Jiangxi Province, and Shenzhen City have already successfully implemented similar relaxed standards through local regulations, providing practical demonstration of the policy’s feasibility and safety.

    The draft revision prioritizes donor health protection and blood safety as fundamental principles, proposing enhanced health assessments, scientific donation criteria, improved monitoring systems, and superior donor services. Additional measures include financial subsidies, extended paid leave, and improved medical service access for donors.

    The National Health Commission is currently soliciting public feedback on the proposed revisions until January 17, 2026, before submitting the final draft to the legislative body for approval.

  • Breakthrough in BMI tech aids patients

    Breakthrough in BMI tech aids patients

    In a landmark advancement for neurotechnology, Chinese researchers have demonstrated unprecedented brain-machine interface (BMI) capabilities enabling two paralyzed patients to perform complex physical tasks through thought alone. The breakthrough achievements—announced December 17, 2025, by the Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences—include the world’s first mental control of a power wheelchair and robotic dog for delivery retrieval, plus precise manipulation of a robotic arm for drinking activities.

    The two patients, both males in their thirties suffering from high-level paralysis, received minimally invasive BMI implants developed through collaboration between the CAS center, Shanghai Huashan Hospital, and corporate partners. The implant procedures—conducted in June and October 2025 through a mere 5-millimeter cranial puncture—represent the smallest such implementation globally, with the implant device itself being approximately half the size of Neuralink’s comparable technology.

    This research signifies a quantum leap beyond the team’s previous March 2025 achievement where a patient mentally controlled a computer cursor. The new cases enable three-dimensional interaction with the physical environment, dramatically expanding possibilities for self-care, employment, and social participation. One patient has already secured employment as an intern product sorter, utilizing brain control to perform online data annotation for AI verification systems in vending machines.

    Technical innovations were crucial to these advancements. Researchers developed high-compression, high-fidelity neural data compression techniques and created hybrid decoding models capable of extracting usable signals in noisy environments. By addressing ‘cross-day stability’ challenges through neural manifold alignment, the team maintained reliable decoder performance despite environmental interference and physiological variations.

    Perhaps most impressively, the system achieves end-to-end delay of under 100 milliseconds from neural signal acquisition to device execution—faster than the body’s natural neural transmission speed. Patients describe the experience as intuitive and seamless, comparable to controlling video game characters without conscious effort.

    According to lead scientist Zhao Zhengtuo, the research represents significant progress toward practical clinical applications. The team anticipates scalable applications for restoring motor and language functions within three years, breakthroughs in sensory restoration and neuropsychiatric disorder treatment within five years, and highly minimally invasive systems enabling both medical and consumer uses within a decade. Future goals include achieving sufficiently fine control for activities such as playing the piano with mind-controlled robotic fingers.

  • Rights groups denounce ‘impunity’ in Tunisia after man dies following police brutality

    Rights groups denounce ‘impunity’ in Tunisia after man dies following police brutality

    Human rights organizations in Tunisia are demanding justice and systemic reform following the death of a young man who sustained fatal injuries during a police encounter in Kairouan. The incident has ignited public outrage and drawn attention to longstanding issues of police impunity in the North African nation.

    Naim Briki, a thirty-year-old motorcycle rider, died on December 12th from severe head trauma and intracranial hemorrhage days after allegedly attempting to evade a police checkpoint on November 22nd. According to family accounts, Briki was violently beaten by multiple officers following a collision with a police vehicle during the pursuit. Photographic evidence released by the family reveals extensive facial injuries and significant swelling.

    In a powerful joint statement, the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES), the Tunisian League for Human Rights (LTDH), and several other NGOs condemned what they described as “recurring tragedies linked to systematic police violence.” The organizations highlighted the persistent culture of impunity within law enforcement agencies that has allowed such incidents to continue unchecked.

    Independent media outlet Inkyfada reports that at least 31 individuals have died at the hands of police since 2011, when mass protests toppled former President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali and ignited the Arab Spring movement. Their investigation documents eight demonstration-related deaths, seven fatalities following police chases, and four deaths resulting from excessive force within police stations.

    The problem extends beyond fatal encounters. According to Amnesty International, hundreds of complaints have been filed against Tunisian police for human rights violations and torture, with virtually none of the victims receiving fair trials. The organization notes that most investigations into security forces never progress beyond preliminary inquiries.

    This climate of impunity has reportedly worsened since President Kais Saied’s July 2021 power grab, which dismantled checks and balances and intensified repression of dissenting voices. Rights defenders now fear a return to the police state tactics that characterized the Ben Ali era.

    The announcement of Briki’s death sparked immediate protests in downtown Kairouan, where demonstrators clashed with security forces, threw projectiles, blockaded roads, and burned tires. Local media reported over 21 arrests related to the unrest, though 17 individuals were subsequently released while four remain detained under arrest warrants.

    In response to mounting pressure, the public prosecutor’s office announced Monday the opening of a judicial inquiry into Briki’s death. Meanwhile, rights organizations continue to demand transparent investigations, an end to impunity for police violence, and genuine reform within security forces.

  • British police forces to make arrests over ‘globalise the intifada’ chants

    British police forces to make arrests over ‘globalise the intifada’ chants

    In a significant policy shift, the Metropolitan Police and Greater Manchester Police have declared that chanting the phrase ‘globalise the intifada’ or displaying it on placards at protests will now result in arrests. The announcement, made on Wednesday, follows the recent antisemitic massacre at Bondi Beach in Australia that killed 15 people and wounded 40 during Hanukkah celebrations.

    Police authorities stated: ‘Violent acts have taken place, the context has changed – words have meaning and consequence. We will act decisively and make arrests.’ The forces indicated that frontline officers will receive specific briefing on this enhanced approach, which will include utilizing Public Order Act powers to implement protective conditions around London synagogues during services.

    The move has received support from the Board of Deputies of British Jews, which welcomed it as a ‘necessary intervention’ following their repeated urging. Health Secretary Wes Streeting previously claimed the chant was linked to terrorism, while British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis stated such chants ‘incite hatred and inspire people to engage in hate action,’ connecting them directly to the Bondi Beach attack.

    However, pro-Palestine activists and civil society organizations have strongly contested these characterizations. Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, criticized what he called ‘the widespread attempt across the political establishment to use a grotesque and indefensible violent antisemitic massacre as a weapon to further repress those protesting for the rights of Palestinian people.’

    Ismail Patel, chair of Friends of Al-Aqsa, explained that ‘intifada’ means ‘to shake off the Israeli occupation’ and argued that ‘globalising the intifada is simply a way of expressing global solidarity with efforts to end an illegal Israeli occupation.’ The term originates from the Arabic root ‘nafada,’ meaning ‘to shake off’ or ‘to rise up,’ and has been applied to both peaceful uprisings and armed resistance movements throughout Arab history.

  • With freebies, OpenAI, Google vie for Indian users and training data

    With freebies, OpenAI, Google vie for Indian users and training data

    In an unprecedented strategic maneuver, global AI giants OpenAI, Google, and Perplexity have launched an aggressive campaign to capture India’s massive user base through complimentary premium subscriptions. This calculated initiative represents more than mere user acquisition—it constitutes a crucial effort to gather diverse multilingual training data from the world’s most populous nation.

    Market intelligence from Sensor Tower reveals staggering adoption metrics: ChatGPT now commands 73 million daily users in India, more than double its U.S. user base, following a remarkable 607% year-on-year surge. Similarly, Google’s Gemini has experienced a 15% growth spike since November, reaching 17 million Indian daily users compared to just 3 million in the United States.

    The strategic free offerings are substantial: Google provides its $400 Gemini AI Pro subscription at no cost for 18 months to 500 million Reliance Jio subscribers. OpenAI has made its ChatGPT Go plan completely free for one year across India, previously priced at $54 locally. Perplexity has similarly waived its $200 annual Pro subscription fee for Airtel telecommunications users.

    Behind these generous offers lies a critical data acquisition strategy. Five AI analysts confirm that India’s linguistic diversity presents a unique training opportunity for AI models. The complex communication patterns, multiple languages, and distinctive dialects characteristic of Indian users provide invaluable data that current training sets lack.

    Sagar Vishnoi, co-founder of Future Shift Labs, explains: ‘These complimentary initiatives effectively address gaps in AI training datasets that currently lack comprehensive information on regional user behavior patterns.’

    The approach leverages India’s exceptional digital landscape: 730 million smartphone users consuming 21 gigabytes of data monthly at just 9.2 cents per gigabyte—among the world’s most affordable mobile data rates. This price sensitivity has historically responded well to free access models, as demonstrated by Reliance’s successful customer acquisition strategies.

    While users like Hyderabad PhD student Anees Hassan enthusiastically utilize these tools for research and presentation tasks, concerns regarding data harvesting practices persist. Hassan acknowledges implementing opt-out features to prevent his data from contributing to AI training, highlighting the privacy considerations accompanying these free access programs.