Hindustan Times (Noida)

ON 15 ICONIC INDIAN SPECIES

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

Is there any animal we love and hate as much as the royal Bengal Tiger? Tigers are feared and poached, but they also endure, becoming pin-ups for candleligh­t marches. Indian elephants are trapped by railway lines and fences, but are colonizing new areas in central India. And in our dirty cities, the sparkling Plain Tiger Butterfly flourishes as one of our last links to wildlife. Wild animals exist beyond our control. They are harmless only occasional­ly dangerous. They live with us, or in spite of us. Those who know them understand that wild animals require acceptance for what they are, not enslavemen­t for what we want them to be. In this book, we meet 15 iconic Indian species that require conservati­on and heart. The author explores what these creatures need, and how they exert agency and decision-making. With an equal emphasis on human and animal, science and skilled prose, Wild and Wilful reveals the magic of the wild in our daily lives. It will take you from fear to wonder.

MELBOURNE/PARIS: Australia’s second largest city, Melbourne, will begin its third lockdown due to a rapidly spreading Covid-19 cluster centred on a quarantine hotel, while the Covid-19 pandemic’s economic cost was laid bare in badly-hit Britain.

The five-day lockdown will be enforced across Victoria state to prevent the virus from spreading from the state capital Melbourne,

Victoria premier Daniel Andrews said. A population of 6.5 million people will be locked down from 11.59pm until the same time on Wednesday because a contagious British variant of the virus, first detected at a Melbourne airport hotel, has infected 13 people.

In the UK - which has Europe’s highest coronaviru­s death toll - has reported a record contractio­n in its economy. Official data released on Friday showed the economy shrank by a record 9.9% last year on the fallout from the coronaviru­s crisis, despite a 1% gain in the fourth quarter.

Single dose suggested for previously infected

France on Friday recommende­d that people who have already recovered from Covid-19 should receive a single dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine, becoming the first country to issue such advice.

All three Covid-19 vaccines approved for use in the European Union are administer­ed in the form of two doses, delivered several weeks apart.

France’s public health authority said on Friday that people who had already been infected with Covid-19 develop an immune response similar to that bestowed by a vaccine dose, and that a single dose after infection would likely suffice.

Meanwhile, the number of Covid-19 cases in eastern Europe surpassed 10 million on Friday.

 ??  ?? Wild and Wilful
Neha Sinha
232pp, ~599, Harpercoll­ins
Wild and Wilful Neha Sinha 232pp, ~599, Harpercoll­ins

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