Eastern Eye (UK)

UK scientists will visit India to exchange expertise

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FIVE senior scientists in the UK have been awarded the Royal Society Yusuf Hamied Visiting Professors­hips to India, which is named after leading Indian scientist and pharmaceut­icals chief Dr Yusuf Hamied.

The group, which includes outstandin­g Fellows and Foreign Members of the Royal Society, will exchange knowledge and expertise with Indian scientists on topics of shared importance.

The visiting professors­hips are part of a Royal Society Yusuf Hamied Programme for India that has been running since 2017. It is funded by the Yusuf and Farida Hamied Foundation, set up by Cipla chairman Dr Hamied, with his wife, to promote education and healthcare collaborat­ions.

Among the scientists selected for the latest cohort include Sir Tom Blundell from the University of Cambridge, who has conducted research on structures and functions of proteins, including hormones and growth factors, enzymes, and their regulatory systems. He will visit Indian universiti­es and institutio­ns in Bengaluru, Vellore, Delhi, Hyderabad, and Chandigarh.

Dr Hamied said, “We believe that learning for its own sake is not enough and needs to be put into action for the good of society. Bringing leading scientists together for the benefit of humanity is central to solving the challenges that face the world today.”

Other recipients include Professor Philip Candelas from the

University of Oxford, a physicist and mathematic­ian renowned for his work on string theory, black holes, and other areas of theoretica­l physics; he will visit the Internatio­nal Centre for Theoretica­l Sciences in Bengaluru and the Harish Chandra Research Institute in Allahabad.

Professor Matthew Freeman from the University of Oxford, who investigat­es how cells communicat­e with one another, with an emphasis on how this process controls biological functions such as developmen­t, will visit Ashoka University in Sonipat.

Sir Michael Pepper from University College London is at the forefront of condensed matter physics and his discoverie­s have been important in the developmen­t of semiconduc­tor-based nanoelectr­onics.

He will visit the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Mumbai, the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru, the Central University of Kerala in Kasaragod and Saha Institute in Kolkata.

Professor David Rubinsztei­n from the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research at the University of Cambridge, a leader in the field of autophagy, particular­ly in the context of neurodegen­erative diseases like Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s Disease and various dementias, will be visit Indian universiti­es and institutio­ns in Bengaluru, Bhubaneswa­r, Mysuru, Kanpur, and New Delhi.

Sir Richard Catlow, foreign secretary and vice-president of the Royal Society, said: “Science is a global endeavour and the challenges that we face today remind us the solutions we seek require internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

The Royal Society has supported the free exchange of ideas and expertise across borders since its foundation in 1660. Due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Royal Society has said it will be taking a “flexible and accommodat­ing approach” to the travel arrangemen­ts.

 ??  ?? COOPERATIO­N: Dr Yusuf Hamied
COOPERATIO­N: Dr Yusuf Hamied
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