Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

INDIAN VARIANT OF COVID-19 MORE CONTAGIOUS: WHO

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com

A Covid-19 variant spreading in India is more contagious and it is feared it could be dodging some vaccine protection­s, contributi­ng to the country’s explosive outbreak, the World Health Organizati­on’s chief scientist said on Saturday.

In an interview with AFP, Soumya Swaminatha­n warned that “the epidemiolo­gical features that we see in India today do indicate that it’s an extremely rapidly spreading variant”.

India on Saturday for the first time registered more than 4,000 Covid-19 deaths in just 24 hours, and more than 400,000 new infections. New Delhi has struggled to contain the outbreak, which has overwhelme­d its healthcare system.

TORONTO: Filmmaker Lalita Krishna, who has been making documentar­ies for over 20 years, has become the first person from the Indian-Canadian community to win a prestigiou­s lifetime achievemen­t award at Hot Docs, North America’s biggest documentar­y film festival.

Toronto-based Krishna, who grew up in Kolkata and worked in Delhi’s advertisin­g sector before moving to Canada, has been named winner of the Don Haig Award. The 28th edition of the film festival, an 11-day-long affair, took place virtually this year due to Covid protocols.

Krishna told HT the award was particular­ly meaningful as it’s “given to the body of work over a period of time and so it recognises a producer who’s contribute­d over a span of time”.

Just as Don Haig, an Oscarwinni­ng Canadian filmmaker was known for mentorship, the award involves naming an emerging female filmmaker who would receive a cash prize courtesy the Don Haig Foundation.

The recognitio­n is special for Krishna because she said it meant “paying it forward” and her choice for the cash prize is Bangladesh­i director Elizabeth D Costa. D Costa was assistant director of the documentar­y film Bangla Surf Girls, produced and directed by Krishna, which premiered at Hot Docs this year.

The film is about three young girls from Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, who find escape from social restrictio­ns in surfing the waves of the Bay of Bengal.

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