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Suns scorch Thunder to end two-game skid

PHOENIX (AP) – Devin Booker joined some heady company yesterday.

The Phoenix guard scored 38 points, surpassing 10,000 for his career, and the Suns beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 115-97 to end a two-game losing streak and tie for the NBA lead.

Booker was 12 of 24 from the floor, going six of 12 from three-point range. He also had seven rebounds, five assists and two blocks.

Booker – at 25 years, 60 days – became the seventh-youngest NBA player to reach 10,000 points. The others are LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, Carmelo Anthony, Tracy McGrady and Giannis Antetokounmpo.

“It means a lot,” Booker said. “Truly grateful to be in this position. I have a lot of praise for my coaches for trusting a young kid and letting me play through mistakes because everybody doesn’t get that opportunity.”

The Suns rebounded from home losses to Golden State and Memphis to pull even with the Warriors atop the league standings at 27-7.

Both teams were without several key players and their head coaches. Suns starters Deandre Ayton and Jae Crowder and coach Monty Williams each missed their second straight game.

The Thunder played without guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (right ankle soreness) and fellow starters Jeremiah Robinson-Earl and Josh Giddey, who were already on the health and safety protocols list. Coach Mark Daigneault missed his second straight game.

Oklahoma City trailed by 10 points after the first quarter but came back to take the lead in the third quarter. The Suns outscored the Thunder 30-16 in the final period, with Booker leading the way with nine points.

“We kind of knew it was going to be like that against a hungry team with guys who were excited to have an opportunity,” said acting Suns coach Kevin Young, filling in for Williams.

“The thing you love about Book is he’s a fierce competitor and he’s fearless,” Young said. “He made some huge shots tonight and to get that milestone, that’s just what he does.”

Ty Jerome, filling Gilgeous-Alexander’s spot, scored a career-high 24 points for the Thunder, who lost at Sacramento on Tuesday. Aaron Wiggins had 22 points and a team-high eight rebounds.

“I was really proud of our guys,” acting Thunder coach Mike Wilks said. “Five, six minutes left, and it was a two-possession game. We made it a game which is hard to do against a high-level team on the road.”

“(Jerome) was huge,” Wiggins said. “His leadership was definitely a huge factor in us being able to compete.”

Oklahoma City was seven of 35 (20 per cent) from three-point range. Guards Jerome and Luguentz Dort were a combined one for 13 from long distance.

Destitute ‘heir’ of India’s emperors demands royal residence

KOLKATA (AFP) – A destitute Indian woman who claims she is heir to the dynasty that built the Taj Mahal has demanded ownership of an imposing palace once home to the Mughal emperors.

Sultana Begum lives in a cramped two-room hut nestled within a slum on the outskirts of Kolkata, surviving on a meagre pension.

Among her modest possessions are records of her marriage to Mirza Mohammad Bedar Bakht, purported to be the great-grandson of India’s last Mughal ruler.

His death in 1980 left her struggling to survive, and she has spent the past decade petitioning authorities to recognise her royal status and compensate her accordingly.

“Can you imagine that the descendant of the emperors who built Taj Mahal now lives in desperate poverty?” the 68-year-old asked AFP.

Begum has lodged a court case seeking recognition that she is rightful owner of the imposing 17th-Century Red Fort, a sprawling and pockmarked castle in New Delhi that was once the seat of Mughal power.

“I hope the government will definitely give me justice,” she said. “When something belongs to someone, it should be returned.”

Sultana Begum holding up a picture of last Mughal Emperor of India Bahadur Shah Zafar in her house in Kolkata. PHOTO: AFP

Her case, supported by sympathetic campaigners, rests on her claim that her late husband’s lineage can be traced to Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last emperor to reign.

By the time of Zafar’s coronation in 1837, the Mughal empire had shrunk to the capital’s boundaries, after the conquest of India by the commercial venture of British merchants known as the East India Company.

Begum’s court case hinges on the argument that India’s government are the illegal occupants of the property, which she said should have been passed down to her.

The Delhi High Court rejected her petition last week as a “gross waste of time” – but did not rule on whether her claim to imperial ancestry was legitimate.

Instead the court said her legal team had failed to justify why a similar case had not been brought by Zafar’s descendants in the 150 years since his exile.

Her lawyer Vivek More said the case would continue.

“She has decided to file a plea before a higher bench of the court challenging the order,” he told AFP by phone.

Begum has endured a precarious life, even before she was widowed and forced to move into the slum she now calls home.

Her husband – who she married in 1965 when she was just 14 – was 32 years her senior and earned some money as a soothsayer, but was unable to provide for their family.

Begum lives with one of her grandchildren in a small shack, sharing a kitchen with neighbours and washing at a communal tap down the street.

For some years she ran a small tea shop near her home but it was demolished to allow the widening of a road, and she now survives on a pension of INR6,000 (USD80) per month.

But she has not given up hope that authorities will recognise her as the rightful beneficiary of India’s imperial legacy, and of the Red Fort.

Russia, Belarus to hold joint war games early next year

MOSCOW (AP) – Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that Russia and Belarus will hold joint war games early next year.

Putin welcomed Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s proposal to hold another round of military drills, saying that they could be held in February or March. Speaking during a meeting with Lukashenko in St Petersburg, he added that military officials will coordinate details.

Putin’s announcement comes amid a Russian troop buildup near Ukraine that raised Western fears of an invasion.

Some officials in Ukraine have voiced concern that Russia may attack the country from
Belarusian territory.

Russia has denied having plans to attack its neighbour, but urged the United States (US) and its allies to provide guarantees that NATO doesn’t expand to Ukraine or deploy its weapons there – demands the West has rejected.

Russia and Belarus have a union agreement envisaging close political, economic and military ties, and Moscow has staunchly backed Lukashenko amid Western pressure.

That pressure intensified after a brutal crackdown on domestic protests fueled by Lukashenko’s re-election to a sixth term in an August 2020 vote that the opposition and the West say was rigged.

Tensions have escalated further since the summer over the arrival of thousands of migrants and refugees on Belarus’ border.

The European Union has accused Lukashenko of retaliating for its sanctions by using asylum-seekers as pawns and tricking them into trying to enter Poland.

In a show of support for Lukashenko, Russia conducted massive war games with Belarus in September that involved 200,000 troops. In recent week, Moscow has repeatedly sent its nuclear capable bombers on patrol over Belarus in recent weeks.

Ministry gearing up for new school term

Azlan Othman

The Ministry of Education (MoE) is gearing up for the opening of the new school term, such as the provision of antigen rapid test (ART) kits and ensuring that all schools have rooms for ART testing and isolation as well as a sick bay.

This was said by Acting Minister of Education Datin Seri Paduka Dr Hajah Romaizah binti Haji Mohd Salleh at the daily press conference yesterday.

“The school is also preparing online lessons and home learning packs for students who are unable to attend physical classes,” she said.

Physical classes will begin on January 3, 2022 for Years 10-13 students while students between Years 7 and 9 are expected to resume in-person lessons on January 17.

However, she said, face-to-face education is limited to students who have been fully vaccinated, adding that those who have not reached the age of 12 will continue to take lessons online or via home learning packs.

“For Year 6 students still waiting for their School Assessed Marks (SAM),” she said, “they can begin their Year 7 education on January 4 by registering at a new secondary school in their catchment area by January 3.”

The acting minister continued, “The orientation will run from January 4-6, while home-based learning will run from January 7 until January 15, and face-to-face learning on January 17.”

Meanwhile, the acting minister said the MoH wants to ensure the safety and well-being of students abroad are being taken care of and urged students travelling abroad for studies beginning January 1, 2022 to register with the Scholarship Management Department beforehand.

She added, “The ministry, through its education attaches, are monitoring Bruneian students overseas. To date, there are about 1,970 registered students, 1,000 of whom are currently studying overseas, as requested by their respective universities.”

LA film critics pick ‘Drive My Car’ as year’s best

LOS ANGELES (AP) – It was a showdown between Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car and Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog for members of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, but the group managed to give top honours to both recently.

The Japanese film Drive My Car was named best picture and The Power of the Dog, a Western drama set in 1925, got runner up. Campion, meanwhile, received best director with Hamaguchi as her runner up.

Simon Rex took best actor for his turn in Sean Baker’s Red Rocket, and Penelope Cruz was named best actress for playing a photographer and new mother in Pedro Almodóvar’s Parallel Mothers.

Supporting actress went to Ariana DeBose, who plays Anita in West Side Story, while supporting actor was a tie between Vincent London for Titane and Kodi Smit-McPhee for The Power of the Dog.

The non-fiction film Flee, about an Afghan refugee, got best animated film, while the documentary award went to Questlove’s Summer of Soul, which chronicles a largely forgotten music festival in the summer of 1969.

“Our awards cover a lot of ground and genres and they also span the globe,” said Claudia Puig, the president of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. “We are thrilled to spread our love and appreciation for this breadth of outstanding films.”

The LA group isn’t the first to single out Drive My Car, about a widowed actor and director and the relationship he develops with his chauffeur, which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year. The New York Film Critics Circle and the Boston Society of Film Critics awarded Drive My Car best picture honours as well. It also took best international feature at the Gotham Independent Film Awards.

This image released by Janus Films and Sideshow shows Hidetoshi Nishijima (L) and Toko Miura in a scene from ‘Drive My Car’. PHOTO: AP

Paid leave changed these dads. Here’s why it’s crucial

Anna Nordberg

THE WASHINGTON POST – After our son was born seven weeks early, a senior colleague from my husband’s firm showed up in the hospital waiting room. “I just wanted to make sure you’re okay,” he said, and handed a Brant a tiny, quilted onesie I still have saved in a box in my son’s closet.

For the next eight weeks, my husband heard from his office exactly once – to remind him to sign up for medical benefits. Allowing him to have that time with family, without worrying about work, is a kindness neither of us has ever forgotten.

The time Brant was able to spend at home was a gift – to me, to our son, but most of all, to him. While our baby was still in the NICU, he would drive from our apartment to the hospital at 3am with tiny bottles of breast milk. When our son came home, Brant swaddled him, changed his diaper, unloaded the dishwasher 700 times. An important part of who he is as a father today is because he was able to be present during those early weeks.

As anyone who has followed the bumpy progress of paid leave in United States (US) President Biden’s now shaky Build Back Better bill knows, the US is the only developed nation without federally mandated paid parental leave. Only 23 per cent of US workers have access to paid leave (89 per cent can access unpaid leave), and a 2018 study found that fewer than five per cent of dads take even two weeks.

But amid these depressing statistics are glimmers of hope. Many US companies now offer generous paternity leave and, more significantly, they actually encourage men to take it.

This matters, because the more we can make it the norm for fathers to take leave, the better off America’s dads (and mums, and frankly everyone) will be.

Shahrouz Tavakoli, who leads a team at Pinterest in San Francisco, was able to take 16 weeks of paid leave when his third child was born in October 2020. Without that time, “I don’t think we would have survived as a family,” he said. Because of the coronavirus, they couldn’t turn to grandparents for help, and his other children, ages six and three, were also home. “We were incredibly lucky to have this support,” said Tavakoli. (On December 8, Pinterest announced new policies that allow all parents to take up to 20 weeks paid leave, including 12 additional weeks if a child is in the NICU, starting in January).

“Paternity leave lays the groundwork for your future relationship with your child. The more you’re involved in the beginning, the more it becomes the norm,” Tavakoli said. As a team leader, “I definitely wanted to model that it’s okay to take time for your family,” he said. He acknowledged how hard it is for parents who don’t have access to the kind of benefits he does.

When Oz Lang’s third daughter was born during the pandemic (he has a three-year-old, and a 13-year-old from a previous marriage), he was able to take 12 weeks of paid leave. “That was such a deep and engaging period to be with my daughter because I saw everything – the first smiles, first laugh; she’d fall asleep on me all the time,” said Lang, who has worked as an executive at multiple tech companies. The time was also positive for his relationship with his three-year-old daughter, who was at home because of the pandemic.

This was in sharp contrast with Lang’s first paternity leave in 2008, when he worked at a start-up and had two weeks of leave. “The transition to new fatherhood isn’t easy – you’re responsible for this living, breathing thing that’s yelling at you – and any serious attempts at parenthood (are hard) if you’re pulled back into work. It all comes at a cost.”

Taking unpaid leave wasn’t a financial option, and when Lang returned to the office, “I found myself unable to be the partner I wanted to be, and as a father, I missed so much.”

Other fathers acknowledged this loss as well. “There was a huge contrast emotionally for me having taken leave with my older son and not with my younger son, in terms of bonding deeply in the first year of life,” said Chris Ray, who took 10 weeks of leave with his first son and then switched to an in-house counsel position at Amazon in Seattle, which did not offer paternity leave when his second son was born in 2015 (the company does now). “Years later, I realised I didn’t fully know what my younger son was like as a baby.”

Paternity leave also makes an enormous difference for mothers. When Matt McNutt, who works as a mental health clinician at Reliant Medical Group in Worcester, Massachusetts, and his partner welcomed a son in November, McNutt began his planned 10-week leave – four weeks of paid leave through his company; one week of paid time off; and an additional five weeks paid through Massachusetts’s child bonding leave. When his partner had post-pregnancy complications and had to return to the hospital, he became the primary caregiver to their newborn son and 22-month-old daughter. “I don’t know what we would have done if I wasn’t able to be home,” he said. “It takes a lot of the stress off because my leave is planned, and my job knows and supports it.”

His ability to be present as a dad also allows his partner to focus on recovery. “I want to do whatever I can to allow her to heal, because she is recovering from a C-section and that’s an eight-week process,” he said.

Every father I spoke to said that paternity leave helped strengthen their relationship with their partner and allowed mothers to recover from childbirth. Marco Keiluweit, a professor at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst who moved to the US from Germany in 2007, took his full 12 weeks of paid leave with each of his children, even if it raised an eyebrow or two among older colleagues.

“A lot of parenting routines establish themselves early, and it’s hard to break out of that because kids get so used to them,” he said. By being present and engaged from the beginning, Keiluweit and his wife were able to develop routines that felt more equal. “You avoid falling into those gender traps,” he said.

Keiluweit said he is grateful that his university has a generous paid leave policy and that for the most part he felt very supported, despite the occasional “Why can’t your wife take care of the baby?” teasing comment from male colleagues.

“I’ve made it clear that being (an engaged father) is something I want to do and want to be,” he said. “We have grad students here that will have children. I want it to be normal to be a professional and a father who is involved.”

Paternity leave policies are also becoming more important to employees. Andrew Galli, who lives outside Sacramento and works at Oracle, was encouraged by his manager to take his full 10 weeks of paid leave when his son was born in 2020, which he split into two parts.

Having that time at home was such a positive experience for his family that he now considers parental benefits as important as salary. “I would think twice about going somewhere that didn’t have leave,” he said.

Joe Byker, who took paternity leave three times at Intuit in the Bay Area, including a 12-week paid leave with his third child, said that support for parents “is a big part of what keeps me engaged and loyal and excited to work here. I get a little choked up thinking about how (my company) threw a baby shower for my wife and me. They celebrated with us”.

Which raises the question – as more of corporate America, plus a handful of states, recognise the importance of paid parental leave for fathers, what happens to dads who are employed elsewhere? The Build Back Better bill offers four weeks of paid family leave, but it’s unlikely to get through the Senate intact. Without even four weeks, most dads face a shoddy patchwork of options at a time when the pandemic has laid bare how important paid leave is for all parents.

It’s well documented how devastating it is for mothers not to have access to paid leave. But as more dads recognise the importance of being engaged fathers – both on a cultural level, in terms of shifting workplace norms, and on a personal level – it’s clear that paternity leave needs to be a part of the conversation. As McNutt puts it: “As a dad, I want to be seen as a caretaker. These are my children.”

Publix grocery chain starts offering paid parental leave

LAKELAND, FLORIDA (AP) – The Publix grocery store chain will start offering paid parental leave to employees who are new parents, company officials announced on Wednesday.

Eligible full-time and part-time workers will be able to take off the time during the first year of the birth or adoption of a child, starting with the new year, the Florida-based company said.

The new benefits come as retailers across the United States (US) are facing a worker shortage, and some are offering new benefits to attract or retain workers. St Louis-based Schnucks recently gave its grocery store workers a one-time retention bonus of USD600.

“Publix is committed to being a great place to work, and we frequently review our benefits to continually offer a comprehensive package to our associates,” Publix communications director Maria Brous said in an e-mail.

The e-mail didn’t offer details on how much paid time off new parents would get.

The privately held, employee-owned company has 225,000 workers at almost 1,300 stores in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.

India wrap up impressive first Test victory over South Africa

CENTURION, SOUTH AFRICA (AFP) – India completed a convincing 113-run win on the fifth day of the first Test against South Africa at SuperSport Park in Centurion yesterday.

Resuming on 94 for four in a chase of 305 to win, South Africa were bowled out for 191, losing their last three wickets in the first two overs after lunch.

Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami took three wickets each. Fellow fast bowler Mohammed Siraj took two wickets and off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin dismissed the last two batsmen off successive deliveries.

There was early resistance from South African captain Dean Elgar and Temba Bavuma, with Elgar surviving a caught and bowled chance to Shami when he was on 63.

Bumrah switched to bowling around the wicket and trapped Elgar leg before wicket for 77 when the batsman played around a delivery angled into his stumps.

Siraj ended an aggressive innings of 21 by Quinton de Kock when the batsman edged an attempted drive into his stumps and Shami had Wiaan Mulder caught behind with a ball which moved just enough off the seam to take the outside edge of the bat.

Marco Jansen was caught behind off Shami in the first over after lunch before Ashwin wrapped up the innings, leaving Temba Bavuma, South Africa’s top-scorer in the first innings with 52, stranded on 35.

Battling scarcity

MOSUL, IRAQ (AFP) – Months after a minor motorbike accident, Amer Shaker is still suffering from poor treatment at a hospital in Iraq’s Mosul, forcing him like many others to seek help elsewhere.

“At public hospitals, we have to pay for everything,” said Shaker. “As soon as we arrived, we paid for the medicine, bandages, the anaesthesia.”

But for the past seven months, he has been treated free of charge at Al-Wahda hospital, opened by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Mosul in 2018.

Having spent a small fortune in current Iraqi terms – about USD8,000 – on medical care after an initial surgery by a Mosul doctor who failed to heal his leg, which had been fractured in three places, Al-Wahda was a godsend for the construction worker.

“The doctor had inserted a platinum plate, but it was not done right. I tried to find another doctor, but none of them were any good,” said the 21-year-old.

People occupying a ward at the Nablus hospital run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Iraq’s northern city of Mosul. PHOTOS: AFP
ABOVE & BELOW: A women sits by a child receiving treatment; medics transporting a patient at the Al-Wahda hospital; and a patient walk in an alley near the hospital

ABOVE & BELOW: A medic disinfecting his hands; a relative checks through a window on a patient in isolation; and a staff working at a laboratory

On his left leg, MSF doctors have attached an external fixator, an impressive frame of pins and screws – nearly impossible to find elsewhere in Mosul, he said.

His case is symptomatic of the wider affliction that ails Iraq’s health sector, which like other public services has suffered from dilapidated infrastructure and the effects of successive conflicts.

The former stronghold of the Islamic State (IS) group, Mosul was devastated by the battle to oust the extremists that ended in summer 2017.

More than four years on, the northern metropolis remains a patchwork of gutted concrete carcasses interspersed between buildings under construction.

Five hospitals are being refurbished or reconstructed in the city, according to a public official, and nine health institutions are functioning – leaving a total of 1,800 beds for a population of 1.5 million.

In the coming weeks, Shaker will need to undergo a sixth operation to remove 13 centimetres of dead bone.

At Al-Wahda hospital, patients vary in profile, from Khawla Younes, the 60-year-old housewife who broke her leg in a fall, to Mahmud al-Meemari, undergoing his “16th or 17th surgery” for an injury from a 2017 bomb blast.

Official Majid Ahmed in the public health authority of Nineveh province – of which Mosul is the capital – acknowledges “a lack of hospital beds and care units”.

The destruction “has affected 70 per cent of our health facilities”, he said.

Before the rise of IS in 2014, Nineveh had 3,900 hospital beds, compared to 600 in 2017 after the government wrested back control of Mosul, Ahmed explained.

Today, the province has about 2,650 beds.

“The destruction that has struck health institutions in the province requires a significant budget,” Ahmed added.

After the conflict, the medical sector was at ground zero, according to orthopaedic surgeon Hisham Abdel Rahman, who works with MSF alongside his job in the public health sector.

“With time, we see improvement, but it’s very slow,” he said.

At Al-Wahda hospital, “we offer services that will not be available in other facilities in Mosul for many years”, he continued.

He said Mosul needs new hospitals, medical equipment and medicine, especially for cancer treatment.

MSF also runs the Nablus hospital and maternity ward in Mosul, where nearly 900 infants are delivered on average every month.

“This hospital has been filling a gap,” said MSF’s Medical Activity Manager at the hospital Kyi Par Soe, adding that the two other maternity hospitals in Mosul are “overloaded”.

On a positive note, the public health authority’s Ahmed said the number of Covid-19 cases officially recorded in Mosul was “very low”, with 30 per cent of capacity in public hospitals reserved for patients with serious infections.

Apart from the hospitals, the rest of Mosul is also struggling to regain a sense of normalcy.

Residents crowd into cafes and restaurants, many of which have opened under buildings left in a suspended state of construction, their top floors scarred by gaping holes.

Less than 15 per cent of residents of eastern Mosul, where fighting for the city ended, have “enough water to meet their daily needs”, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

In western Mosul, that figure is 35 per cent.

And despite the restoration of certain historic sites, entire swathes of the Old City in central Mosul remain a pile of debris.

Reconstruction efforts have rumbled on at such a slow pace that it is not unusual to uncover bodies under the rubble to this day.

In December, civil defence teams found more than a dozen corpses from the battle for Mosul.

Indonesia tows boat with Rohingya refugees to port

LHOKSEUMAWE, INDONESIA (AP) – An Indonesian navy ship yesterday was towing a boat carrying 120 Rohingyas into port after it had drifted for days off the country’s northernmost province of Aceh, a navy official said.

The refugees’ wooden boat was reportedly leaking and had a damaged engine. Efforts to rescue its passengers, who are overwhelmingly women and children, began after Indonesia’s government on Wednesday said it would allow them to dock because conditions on the boat were so severe.

The broken-down boat was towed by a navy ship early yesterday from its location about 85 kilometres off the coast of Bireuen, a district in Aceh, toward Krueng Geukueh, a port in the neighbouring Lhokseumawe district, said navy western fleet command spokesman Colonel La Ode M Holib.

High waves and bad weather hampered the rescue operation and the navy ship was moving five knots per hour but was expected to dock later, Holib said.