One electrocuted in Palpa

A man died of electrocution in Palpa on Tuesday. The deceased has been identified as Mahesh Rai (34) of Jantedhunga Rural Municipality-3, Khotang. DSP Birendra Thapa of the District Police Office, Palpa said that the incident occurred while he was working at the house of Jhabindra Devkota in Tansen Municipality-4. Critically injured in the incident, Rai breathed his last during the course of treatment at the Mission Hospital in Palpa.  

Gold price increases by Rs 300 per tola on Tuesday

The price of gold has increased by Rs 300 per tola in the domestic market on Tuesday. According to the Federation of Nepal Gold and Silver Dealers’ Association, the precious yellow metal is being traded at Rs 94, 000 per tola today. The gold was traded at Rs 93, 700 per tola on Monday. Meanwhile, tejabi gold is being traded at Rs 93, 500 per tola. Similarly, the price of silver is being traded at Rs 1,125 per tola today.

Seat-sharing among coalition partners will be finalized by Wednesday

CPN (Maoist Center) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal has said that the seat-sharing among the coalition partners will be finalized by Wednesday. The Maoist Center has claimed 60 seats. Speaking to mediapersons at the Dhangadhi Airport on Tuesday, Dahal said that the task force is holding discussions to finalize the seat-sharing. It will be finalized by Wednesday, he added. Dahal said that the Nepali Congress has claimed 80 seats and CPN (Unified Socialist) and Janata Samajbadi Party have claimed 25 seats each. He expressed his hope that the consensus would be reached around it. Meanwhile, he said that the leaders of the ruling coalition parties have been holding discussions to not extend the tenure of the House of Representatives. Dahal was of the opinion that the current Parliament will not exist after the nomination filing day. Earlier on Monday, the Election Commission had objected to a government’s move to extend the tenure of the Parliament.

Liz Truss Defeats Rishi Sunak To Become New UK PM

Liz Truss was named as the UK’s next Prime Minister today, winning an internal leadership contest of the ruling Conservative party at a time when the country faces an industrial unrest and a recession, NDTV reported. She beat her rival, former finance minister Rishi Sunak, by 81,326 votes to 60,399, after a summer-long often bad-tempered and divisive party leadership contest sparked by Boris Johnson’s resignation in July. As she was confirmed successor to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Truss vowed “bold” action to confront the biting economic crisis. “We need to show that we will deliver over the next two years. I will deliver a bold plan to cut taxes and grow our economy,” Truss said after the result was announced. “I will deliver on the energy crisis, dealing with people’s energy bills, but also dealing with the long-term issues we have on energy supply.” Liz Truss, 47, will be only the UK’s third female Prime Minister following Theresa May and Margaret Thatcher The announcement triggers the start of a handover from Boris Johnson, who was forced to announce his resignation in July after months of scandal saw support for his administration drain away. He will travel to Scotland to meet Queen Elizabeth on Tuesday to officially tender his resignation. Truss will follow him and be asked to form a government by the monarch, according to NDTV.

Over that period the country has been buffeted from crisis to crisis, and now faces what is forecast to be a long recession triggered by sky-rocketing inflation which hit 10.1% in July. Truss campaigned on a platform of slashing taxes and bulldozing bureaucratic “orthodoxy”, particularly in the finance ministry where she once worked. Truss faces a long, costly and difficult to-do list, which opposition lawmakers say is the result of 12 years of poor Conservative government. Several have called for an early election – something Truss has said she will not allow, NDTV reported.

China-Nepal railway is a way to prosperity; talk of ‘debt trap’ just noise : Nepali Ambassador to China

The China-Nepal railway project is a way to our prosperity and it can be a project of the century for Nepal, Nepali Ambassador to China Bishnu Pukar Shrestha told the Global Times in an exclusive interview, Global Times reported. The ambassador noted that the rail project has great prospects and opportunity for South Asia to benefit from it. And if India studies it, they will find that this railway project has huge connectivity potential between China and South Asia. He also slammed the accusation by some media outlets that this project will drag Nepal into a "debt trap." He said that he did not see any matter of "debt trap," since no discussions of loans or debts have been part of the China-Nepal Railway project. "Those who have written such things might have been misinformed," he said. Nepal and China negotiate for financial modality for any project based on mutual benefit while paying attention to the socio-economic viability of such projects. Those who talk about a "debt trap" are just going on misinformation and making noise in the media, said the diplomat. On August 10, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi held talks with the visiting Nepali Foreign Minister Narayan Khadka in Qingdao, Shandong Province. In the meeting, Wang announced that China will use aid funds for Nepal to support the feasibility study of the China-Nepal cross-border railway, and will send experts to Nepal to conduct the survey work within this year. "The feasibility study means the railway project has started. If it shows the project is feasible, I think the final implementation is visible. We believe that if China is committed, nothing is impossible. Nepalese people think this way as most of the Nepalese people are in favor of China and China's development," the ambassador told the Global Times. The proposal for the China-Nepal railway was made in 2016 and the railway will link Xigaze in Southwest China's Xizang Autonomous Region and Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal. However, some media reports threw cold water on this highly anticipated project, citing so-called debt or security concerns for India. During the interview, the Ambassador said that "Nepal's relations with both India and China are strong and historical. However, they have their own dynamism and dimensions. But I want to make clear that Nepal and China do not work for any projects which will be detrimental to India. I don't think this railway project has any sort of security implications for anyone." He told the Global Times that the railway project is "our necessity, this is our dream, this is the way to our prosperity." According to the Ambassador, the railway is not being planned or built to carry military personnel, as some people assume. "There are always some people against the right things. There are also many people who want to implement the right things. Railway connectivity carries huge potential in trade and tourism, employment generation and uplifting socio-economic conditions." He noted that they have already seen the positive impact brought by the China-Laos Railway which opened just a few months ago. "It has excited us too. That is why people of Nepal are very happy after hearing this announcement. We believe that this could be materialized soon." When asked if Nepal faces pressure from other countries including India to maintain good relations with China, Ambassador Shrestha told the Global Times that "Nepal has its independent foreign policy. The government of Nepal is well aware of what it is doing and what it has to do." "We are like yam in between two giant ancient countries with much larger populations. We have our strategic location, don't we? Some people might have seen it like that, but as I said, Nepal has its own policy, and will conduct affairs according to its policy," he said, according to Global Times. "People used to say that sometimes the government of Nepal is tilted to the south, sometimes it is tilted to the west, sometimes to the north. But the major principle is non-alignment and not sitting under any kind of military umbrella," he added. The diplomat stressed that China and India are both Nepal's neighbors, close friends as well as Nepal's development partners. "Our relations with both have their own history and tradition. Cultural links and people-to-people exchanges are hallmarks of our relations with both neighbors. In our relations with both China and India, we also follow the principle of non-alignment and Charter of the United Nations," he said. People's Review reported on August 11 that Kathmandu-based EU ambassadors wanted to meet Nepali Foreign Minister Khadka to express their displeasure with his trip to China, especially after the visit of US Speaker Nancy Pelosi to China's Taiwan. Nepal also reportedly faced pressure from India in its relations with China. Talking about the external pressure on Nepal's foreign policy, the diplomat told the Global Times, "I must state that Nepal and China are neighbors, connected with the mountains and rivers and peoples since ancient times. The history, culture and tradition do not grow out of pressure, but they grow naturally like water flows in the rivers, and air blows over the mountains across the two countries." "Besides being neighbors, Nepal and China are close friends. It is in no way by force or fiction or pressure, rather it is by choice of the Nepali people and government. Nepal's foreign policy is amity with all, enmity with none."

Instagram fined €405m over children's data privacy

Irish regulators have fined Instagram €405m for violating children's privacy, BBC reported.

The long-running complaint concerned children's data - particularly their phone numbers and email addresses.

Some reportedly upgraded to business accounts to access analytics tools such as profile visits, without realising this made more of their data public.

Instagram's owner, Meta, said it planned to appeal against the decision. It is the third fine handed to the company by the regulator, according to BBC.

"We adopted our final decision last Friday and it does contain a fine of €405m [£349m]," Ireland's Data Protection Commissioner (DPC) said.

US Open: Rafael Nadal stunned by Frances Tiafoe in fourth round

Rafael Nadal has been beaten in a Grand Slam for the first time in 2022, losing to Frances Tiafoe in the US Open fourth round, BBC reported.

American Tiafoe thrilled the home crowd with a 6-4 4-6 6-4 6-3 win over four-time champion Nadal in New York.

The defeat ended the Spaniard's bid for a record-extending 23rd major singles title.

Nadal led the fourth set 3-1 before Tiafoe hit back, winning five games in a row to secure his quarter-final spot.

He will face Russian ninth seed Andrey Rublevfor a place in the semi-finals at Flushing Meadows.

Tiafoe, seeded 22nd, threw his racquet to the floor and covered his face in disbelief as his victory was confirmed by a netted Nadal backhand.

After thanking the crowd he covered his face with his towel, taking in the atmosphere on a raucous Arthur Ashe Stadium.

"Something special happened today," the 24-year-old said on court.

"I don't know what to say, I'm so happy. He's one of the greatest of all time and I played unbelievable."

Nadal has never looked settled in New York this year but that is not to take anything away from Tiafoe, who played a clever match, according to BBC.

The result means that Marin Cilic, who won the 2014 US Open, is the only Grand Slam singles winner left in the men's draw.

Cilic plays Carlos Alcaraz in Monday's night session on Arthur Ashe Stadium with Italian 11th seed Jannik Sinner taking on unseeded Belarusian Ilya Ivashka.

Ukraine war: Russia postpones 'referendum' in occupied region

The Russian occupation authorities in Ukraine's southern city of Kherson have postponed a so-called referendum on joining Russia, on security grounds, BBC reported.

"This is being paused because of the security situation," said Kirill Stremousov, deputy head of the Russian-appointed administration there.

He said heavy Ukrainian shelling had made a key Kherson bridge impassable.

Ukraine and its Western allies have denounced the referendum plans in Kherson and other areas as illegal.

Meanwhile, Ukraine says its forces have recaptured Vysokopillya, a small town some 167km (104 miles) north of central Kherson.

That gain - not verified independently - is part of a counter-offensive in the south launched by the Ukrainian army last week.

A photo shows soldiers apparently raising the Ukrainian flag over the town, which had nearly 4,000 residents before the war. It was posted on Facebook by Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of President Volodymyr Zelensky's office.

His photo caption says: "Vysokopillya, Kherson Region. Ukraine. Today."

President Zelensky said Ukrainian forces had recaptured two "population centres" in the south, but did not name them.

Russia has been planning referendums in Kherson and the southern Zaporizhzhia region, most of which it controls.

Speaking on Russian state TV, Mr Stremousov said Ukrainian shelling had damaged Kherson's Antonovskiy Bridge to such an extent that vehicles could no longer cross it.

He said barges transporting civilians across the Dnieper (Dnipro) river were also coming under Ukrainian fire, as was the city's infrastructure, according to BBC.

The Russians have relied on the bridge to bring troops and hardware in and out of Kherson.

Ukraine has deployed US-made Himars multiple rocket launchers in its drive to push the Russians out of the city - the first to fall to them after their 24 February invasion.

As well as Kherson, Russia has announced plans for referendums in other captured territory, similar to that held in Crimea after its troops seized the peninsula in 2014.

Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk urged civilians to leave Kherson as fighting intensifies in the area. She has also warned that any who participate in the planned Russian referendum are liable to face Ukrainian prosecution.

Russia's invasion has destabilised life in Ukraine to such an extent that it is not clear who could vote in such referendums anyway. The Crimea vote in 2014, held under military occupation, was not recognised internationally, BBC reported.