No evidence of UFO having extraterrestrial origins: NASA

Nasa

Washington: A NASA panel, formed to study unidentified anomalous phenomena more widely known as UFOs, said on Thursday that it has found no evidence that any of the reported objects were extra-terrestrial in origin, The Washington Post reported.

Notably, these remarks come days after 1000-year-old fossils of alien corpses were displayed in the Mexico Congress.

It is increasingly clear that the majority of UAP observations can be attributed to known phenomena or occurrences, NASA’s 16-member expert panel wrote in its report.
However, the panel also concluded that the ability to study UAPs is hampered by poor data collection and a lack of uniform standards, which must be remedied if research is to proceed on a credible basis.

The top takeaway of the study is that there’s a lot more to learn, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in public remarks at the agency’s headquarters in Washington.

While there was no evidence that the objects were not of this Earth, Nelson said that he is keeping an open mind and following science toward a potential conclusion and that he personally believes that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the vastness of the universe, The Washington Post reported.

While the panel’s report was short on findings, it represents NASA’s first steps into serious UAP research.

David Spergel, the chair of NASA’s UAP independent study team, said that the experts did not come up entirely empty-handed, and most events they studied could be identified as planes, balloons, drones, weather phenomena and instrument features, The Washington Post reported.

However, NASA’s efforts to bring scientific rigour to a historically undisciplined field are unlikely to quell speculation that the US government is hiding information about the existence of extraterrestrial life, The Washington Post reported.

Notably, a former US intelligence analyst, David Grusch recently alleged in congressional testimony that for decades the government has run a classified program that retrieves alien spacecraft and even bodies.

In another major development, in Mexico City this week, a self-described ufologist displayed for lawmakers what he claimed were two alien corpses discovered in Peru in 2017, alleged to be about 1,000 years old.

Referring to the alleged display of alien copses in Mexico’s Congress, Spergel said that anyone who claims to have discovered evidence of extraterrestrial life ought to provide samples to the scientific community for analysis.

There’s a lot of folklore out there, Nelson said. Thats why we entered the stage We, NASA, are trying to shift it from sensationalizing to science, The Post quoted him as saying.

Meanwhile, the US Defense Department is also spearheading a government-wide effort to analyse UAP sightings. After an examination of more than 800 sightings based on information collected over nearly three decades, the department has reported that only 2 to 5 per cent could be described as anomalous, or unexplained. Its work is separate from NASAs and includes additional classified information.

NASA announced on Thursday afternoon that Mark McInerney had been put in charge of UAP research for the agency. He had been NASAs liaison to the Defense Department covering UAP activities.

The NASA panel has recommended the body to play a prominent role in the broader government effort to understand UAPs, using existing and planned Earth-observing assets to probe the local environmental conditions associated with UAP that are initially detected by other means.

The panel also recommended that NASA explore enhanced collaboration with commercial satellite and imagery companies.

Also, in a move likely to fuel the already intense public interest in the search for extraterrestrial life, the panel encouraged NASA to look into a crowdsourcing system, such as open-source smartphone-based apps to gather data from citizen observers, The Washington Post reported.

The panel also called for new techniques, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, to be brought to bear on the subject.

We don’t know what these UAP are, said Nelson, the NASA chief, but we’re going to try to find out, the Post quoted him as saying.

British PM Rishi Sunak arrives for G20 Summit

Sunak, accompanied by his wife Akshata Murthy, was welcomed at the airport by Union Minister Ashwini Choubey, British High Commissioner to India Alex Ellis and senior diplomats.

Published Date – 02:53 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


British PM Rishi Sunak arrives for G20 Summit

United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murthy arrive in Delhi for the G20 Summit, on Friday. (ANI Photo)

New Delhi: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak arrived here on Friday for the G20 Leaders Summit beginning on Saturday.

Sunak, accompanied by his wife Akshata Murthy, was welcomed at the airport by Union Minister Ashwini Choubey, British High Commissioner to India Alex Ellis and senior diplomats.

The visiting dignitaries appreciated the traditional dance performances in their honour at the airport here.

Sunak is scheduled to hold a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his three-day visit.

In an interview to PTI earlier this week, Sunak, the first Indian-origin prime minister of Britain, said the relationship between the UK and India will define the future of the two countries, even more than it is defining the present.

Japanese PM Kishida arrives in Delhi to attend G20 Leaders Summit

At the G20 summit in India, Kishida plans to show Japan’s stance of proactively contributing to various global issues, based on the results of the G7 summit in Hiroshima in May.

Published Date – 03:14 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


Japanese PM Kishida arrives in Delhi to attend G20 Leaders Summit



New Delhi: Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida landed in India on Friday to attend the G20 Leaders Summit scheduled to be held in the national capital. At the airport, Kishida was received by the Minister of State in the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Ashwini Kumar Choubey.

At the G20 summit in India, Kishida plans to show Japan’s stance of proactively contributing to various global issues, based on the results of the G7 summit in Hiroshima in May, Japanese media reported.

“The agenda in India will include global food security, which has been affected by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as well as development, digital transformation and other international issues,” according to NHK.

Earlier this year, PM Modi met his Japanese counterpart in Hiroshima, where he attended the G7 Summit.

During the G7 Summit, Prime Minister Modi spoke with partner countries on subjects such as peace, stability and prosperity of a sustainable planet; food, fertiliser and energy security; health; gender equality; climate change and environment; resilient infrastructure; and development cooperation.

The cooperation between India and Japan continues to deepen over time as the two nations share historical linkages with exchanges between the two countries being traced to the 6th century when Buddhism was introduced in Japan.

As both nations deal with the challenges provided by an aggressive China in the Asian region, India’s political ties to Japan have grown significantly over the past few decades.

The commitment of India and Japan to a free and open Indo-Pacific, boosting economic cooperation, and encouraging people-to-people interactions is highlighted by their most recent strategic discussion.

In the lead-up to both the G20 and G7 summits, the visit of Japanese PM Kishida to India in March bolstered further commitment between the two countries to work together for the realisation of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific.

India and Japan have already developed various frameworks of security partnership including a “2+2” Dialogue involving Foreign and Defence ministers. The two countries regularly participate in joint military exercises such as the Malabar Exercise and have various partnership agreements ranging from defence equipment trade to military logistics.

Japan is India’s 13th-largest trading partner, whereas India is Japan’s 18th-largest. With Japan’s private sector investment in India steadily increasing, it is among the top five foreign investors in India.

India and Japan’s joint efforts to foster a free, open, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region demonstrate the strength and potential of their ever-strengthening relationship.

US President Joe Biden arrives in New Delhi to attend G20 Summit

The United States (US) President Joe Biden arrived in New Delhi on Friday to attend G20 Summit. He was recieved by Union Minister Vijay Kumar Singh at Delhi Airport. 

Updated On – 07:23 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


US President Joe Biden arrives in New Delhi to attend G20 Summit

Joe Biden (Photo: PTI)

New Delhi: The United States (US) President Joe Biden arrived in New Delhi on Friday to attend G20 Summit. He was recieved by Union Minister Vijay Kumar Singh at Delhi Airport.

Biden is scheduled to have a bilateral meeting with Modi on Friday itself. During the meeting, the two leaders are likely to review the progress made on the decisions that they took during the prime minister’s official state visit to Washington in June.

The US president will follow COVID-19 guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) during his visit for the G20 Summit, the White House has said.

First Lady Jill Biden, 72, tested positive for COVID-19 on Monday. President Biden, 80, was tested for the virus both on Monday and Tuesday but his results were negative.

India is set to make a dash for the goal line at the two-day summit starting Saturday in addressing some of the complex global challenges such as concerns of the Global South, consequences of the Ukraine conflict, gloomy economic scenario, and fostering inclusive growth amid a fragmented geopolitical environment.

The G20 member countries represent around 85 per cent of the global GDP, over 75 per cent of the global trade and about two-thirds of the world population.

The grouping comprises Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the UK, the US and the European Union (EU).

Not hopeful of Ukraine-Russia peace solution in immediate future: UN chief

Addressing a press conference here ahead of the G20 summit, Guterres said that Russia and Ukraine still do not appear to be ending the conflict

Published Date – 08:03 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


Not hopeful of Ukraine-Russia peace solution in immediate future: UN chief

Antonio Guterres (File Photo)

New Delhi: United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Friday said he is not very hopeful that there will be a peace solution in the immediate future for the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Addressing a press conference here ahead of the G20 summit, Guterres said the two countries still do not appear to be ending the conflict.

Asked whether India could mediate to end the war, he said, “When you have a conflict, all efforts of mediation are welcome…. (But) I am not very hopeful that we will have a peace solution in the immediate future.” On the need for reforms to multilateral institutions, Guterres said when these multilateral institutions were created, many of the countries of today did not even exist.

“This is true for the UNSC and many others,” he said.

Asked whether it was time for India to become a member of the UNSC, Guterres said, “It is not for me to decide who would be in the UNSC, it is for the members (to decide).”

“But it is obvious that India is today the country of the world with the largest population and it is a very important partner in the multilateral system.

“All I can say is that I believe that we need reforms in the multilateral system to reflect today’s world,” he added.

Asked whether there should be a timeline for reforms to the multilateral institutions, Guterres said, “There is a need to do it, but I am not sure if we get it. But I think it is urgent.”

China pledged USD 21 billion new investment to strengthen ties, says Indonesia

Indonesian President Joko Widodo hosted Chinese Premier Li Qiang at the colonial-style Merdeka palace in Jakarta on Friday and discussed ways to expand trade and investment

Published Date – 08:08 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


China pledged USD 21 billion new investment to strengthen ties, says Indonesia

Indonesian President Joko Widodo hosted Chinese Premier Li Qiang at the colonial-style Merdeka palace in Jakarta on Friday and discussed ways to expand trade and investment

Jakarta: Visiting Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Friday pledged USD 21.7 billion in new Chinese investment in Indonesia to strengthen the countries’ economic and political ties, an official said.

Li arrived in Jakarta on Tuesday to attend the three-day summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and meet with Indonesian leaders.

President Joko Widodo hosted Li at the colonial-style Merdeka palace in Jakarta on Friday and discussed ways to expand trade and investment.

He sought China’s help in plans to move Indonesia’s capital from congested and polluted Jakarta on the main island of Java to Nusantara on Borneo island.

After the meeting, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi announced the new Chinese investment pledge, which follows a previous USD 44.89 billion investment commitment made when Widodo met Chinese President Xi Jinping in July. Details of the new investment weren’t announced.

Marsudi said Widodo asked China, Indonesia’s largest trade and investment partner, to “realise these commitments immediately” and urged it to explore investment in other sectors, such as maritime and fisheries.

The two leaders also oversaw the signing of six agreements on e-commerce, support for enterprises, industrial cooperation, agriculture, fisheries and science and technology, Marsudi said.

On Wednesday, Li took a test ride on Indonesia’s new USD 7.3 billion high-speed rail line, which was funded largely with Chinese loans.

It connects Jakarta and Bandung, the heavily populated capital of West Java province, and is part of China’s Belt and Road infrastructure initiative.

Commercial service on Southeast Asia’s first high-speed railway is to begin on Oct. 1 and will cut travel time between the cities from the current three hours to about 40 minutes.

Indonesia wants a larger role in supplying nickel and other raw materials for China’s fast-growing electric car makers. Nickel smelting plants in Indonesia are part of China’s Belt and Road transnational development program.

Indonesia and China are both members of the Group of 20 major developed and emerging economies. The two leaders were to leave Jakarta on Friday afternoon for New Delhi to attend the G20 summit.

I am a proud Hindu: Rishi Sunak on his Indian roots

Rishi Sunak

New Delhi: Expressing pride for his ‘Hindu’ roots, United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak expressed his hope that he will find time to visit a temple, here in India, during his stay for the G20 Summit.

Sunak said that he has “enormous respect” for PM Modi and said that he is keen to support him in making G20 an enormous success. He also spoke about celebrating Raksha Bandhan.

Speaking exclusively to ANI, Rishi Sunak said, “I am a proud Hindu. That’s how I was raised, that’s how I am. Hopefully, I can visit the Mandir while I am here for the next couple of days. We just had Rakshabandhan, so from my sister and my cousin, I have all my Rakhis. I didn’t have time to celebrate Janmashtami. But hopefully, as I said I can make up for that if we visit a Mandir this time,”he added.

He further said that faith is something very important as it gives strength and resilience during stress.

“It is something that is important to me. I think faith is something that helps everybody who has faith in their lives, particularly when you have these stressful jobs like I do. Having faith gives you resilience, gives you strength that is important and it provides an outlook on life which I find particularly valuable,” Sunak added.

On being asked about his equation with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Sunak said, “Yes, and I have enormous respect for Modiji and he’s been personally very warm and kind to me and we’re working very hard as I said on our shared ambition of concluding an ambitious and comprehensive trade deal between India and the UK, because both of us think that would be a good thing and both of us need to make sure it works for our two countries.”

“And at forums like this. I’m very keen to support Prime Minister Modi and making sure that this G20 is an enormous success for India which I know it will be and this has been a great year for India more generally,” he added.

The UK PM also called his visit to India as “fantastic” and said that he has enjoyed his first few hours here. “It is fantastic for me to be back in India. Obviously, it’s personally very special for me to be here, particularly with Akshata, and we thoroughly enjoyed the first few hours of our trip so far,” he said.

He also recalled the days he used to spend time with his wife Akshata Murthy in Bangalore and expressed his desire to visit one of his favourite restaurants.

“Well you know obviously you know my wife is from Bangalore, we got married in Bangalore. We used to spend lots of time together before we had children in Delhi and were trying to figure out if we can go to one of our old favourite restaurants this evening,” Sunak said.

Expressing happiness on coming to India in his present role, Sunak said he is very proud to see India doing so well on the world stage.

He added, “But look, it’s personally incredibly special for me to be back in India. It is a country I love dearly, a country where my family are from. But to come here in this role to represent the UK, to find ways to forge closer links with India and play a part in making sure that India has an incredibly successful G20 and I’m very proud to see India doing so well on the world stage.”

South Asia heatwave of 2022 most intense in last 70 years: Study

South Asia faced five continuous heatwave spells that lasted about 35 days during late February and April 2022, affecting a large part of the region.

Published Date – 08:48 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


South Asia heatwave of 2022 most intense in last 70 years: Study



New Delhi: The 2022 heatwave was unprecedented and the most intense in the last 70 years, severely affecting millions of people in South Asia, according to new research from India.

Such heatwaves are expected to increase in the near future, enhancing heat accumulation in the region and threatening food, water and energy security in the region, the study from institutes including IIT-Gandhinagar and IIT-Jodhpur, said.

South Asia faced five continuous heatwave spells that lasted about 35 days during late February and April 2022, affecting a large part of the region.

The heatwave lasted for a longer duration and had more spells than the historical heatwave events, compared to the historical heatwave events during 1950-2021, the study published in Environmental Research Letters said.

Exceptional heating with more than 3.9 degrees Celsius rise in maximum temperature was experienced by majority region of South Asia, which includes countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bhutan, Nepal and Sri Lanka, along with India, the study found after analysing observational datasets from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, US, and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis version 5 (ERA5).

The study projected an increase in frequency of mega heatwave, more severe than that of 2022, in a warming planet under all types of emissions scenario.

Deficits in soil moisture was observed over Pakistan due to an intense prolonged temperature anomaly during March and April 2022, causing several wildfires in the region, the study found after analysing satellite-based soil moisture and normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) for the period 1982-2022.

The heatwave spells also negatively impacted the vegetation and crop yield in Punjab and Haryana, primary food-producing states in the region, the study said.

The study projects 2030 to be the year when mega heatwaves start to emerge under all types of emissions scenarios.

The study findings could be used to develop a more resilient system for energy, water, and food availability in the region for addressing the severe challenges posed by such intense and heatwaves in the future warming climate, it said.

Global emissions are not in line to achieve Paris Agreement goals, says UN report

The Global Stocktake report of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), however, said there is a rapidly narrowing window to raise ambitions and implement existing commitments in order to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

Published Date – 08:52 PM, Fri – 8 September 23


Global emissions are not in line to achieve Paris Agreement goals, says UN report

The Global Stocktake report of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), however, said there is a rapidly narrowing window to raise ambitions and implement existing commitments in order to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

Thiruvananthapuram: A UN report on Friday said that global emissions are not in line with the modelled global mitigation pathways consistent with the temperature goal of the Paris Agreement — a legally binding international treaty on climate change.

The Global Stocktake report of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), however, said there is a rapidly narrowing window to raise ambitions and implement existing commitments in order to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

It said much more ambition in action and support is needed in implementing domestic mitigation measures and setting larger targets in Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC).

Global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions need to be reduced by 43 per cent by 2030 and further by 60 per cent by 2035 compared to 2019 levels and reach net zero CO2 emissions by 2050 globally, the report said, adding that creativity and innovation in policymaking across all sectors and systems, and international cooperation are essential to fulfilling these requirements.

Achieving net zero CO2 and GHG emissions requires scaling up renewable energy while phasing out all unabated fossil fuels, ending deforestation, reducing non-CO2 emissions, and so on.

This report, which is the first global stocktake of the UNFCCC, was created based on inputs received during each of the three meetings of the technical dialogue.

Halting and reversing deforestation and degradation and improving agricultural practices are critical to reducing emissions and conserving and enhancing carbon sinks, the report said, calling for more effective international cooperation and credible initiatives.

To fight the effects of climate change, adaptation planning is crucial, the report said, adding that the initiatives so far have been fragmented, incremental, sector-specific, and unequally distributed across regions. Dissemination of climate information to meet local needs and priorities is the first step in adaptation planning, it said.

Pressing the need to enhance access to climate finance in developing countries, the report said that the developmental policies of countries should focus on averting, minimising, and addressing loss and damage incurred due to climate change, and providing support to impacted communities. This was one of the most crucial decisions taken during the last Conference of Parties on climate change.

The report also stressed on the need to rapidly scale up mobilisation of support for climate action in developing countries.

Iran on sanctions: West has no right to shed crocodile tears for Iranians

Iran has strongly condemned the US and its allies for imposing a slew of fresh sanctions against the Islamic Republic over the country’s defense of its security and nation in the face of Western-backed riots that spread throughout the country last year.

On Friday, the United States, the UK, and the European Union sanctioned dozens of Iranian individuals and entities, which they accused of either suppression or misrepresentation of last year’s unrest.

Later in the day, Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kan’ani denounced the sanctions as “unconstructive behavior,” which was not in line with the Western countries’ own interests.

The West, he added, rather had to adopt “a new policy [that was] based on respect for the great and civilized Iranian nation, the Islamic Republic’s sovereignty, and the two sides’ common security and interests.”

The unrest erupted throughout the country last September following the unfortunate death earlier that month of a young girl named Mahsa Amini. Amini fainted at a police station and was pronounced dead days later at a Tehran hospital. Relevant investigations attributed her death to a medical condition, dismissing allegations that she had been beaten by police forces.

Iran says the 2022 riots were the result of foreign-backed elements exploiting the incident.

Referring to the Western sanctions and accusations faulting Iran’s riot response, Kan’ani asserted that, when it comes to the provision of public security for the country, the Iranian people and authorities “would not be influenced by the Western parties’ malicious propaganda and measures.”

He, meanwhile, reminded the Western states of their own dismal rights records, identifying them as “countries, which continually perpetrate the most severe instances of violence against their own citizens, especially women, and also minorities, people of color, aboriginals, and migrants.”

These countries also never muster the courage to truly protest and condemn the “child-killing Zionist regime’s daily crimes,” the spokesman noted.

Such states, therefore, “have no right to shed crocodile tears for the Iranian nation,” he added.

Kan’ani concluded his remarks by pointing out that the Western states’ provision of support and safe haven for anti-Iran terrorist groups, such as the Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO), which is guilty of killing thousands of Iranians, “belies their claim of supporting the Iranian people’s rights.”