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Asia Connection: Producers Camp to Bring Together Producers From Eight Asian Countries
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Dubai: An eight-month-old Pomeranian puppy has become the first patient to undergo the Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) heart surgery in Dubai, to address a congenital heart defect.
Holly, the lovable and lively pup, will be able to live a long and healthy life, thanks to the timely intervention by a team of veterinary surgeons. The diagnosis and treatment of Holly took place at Modern Vet, which is the first and only multi-speciality veterinary hospital in Dubai with the ability to treat PDA in dogs, as well as a plethora of other conditions. If left untreated, PDA is a death sentence to your loyal companion. It can develop into congestive heart failure, which, in simple terms, means that fluid will begin to fill the lungs.
Pandemic protocols: restaurants continue to flout safety rules
Lapses in compliance with Covid-19 guidelines linked to increase in cases
Customers dine at outdoor restaurants at Kohsar Market in Islamabad, Pakistan, June 18, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS
ISLAMABAD:
With the pandemic dragging on interminably, many in Islamabad’s food service industry appear to be increasingly lax in adhering to Covid-19 health and safety guidelines.
While restaurants across the country have been racing to adapt to what is widely known as the new normal of conducting business under stringent safety protocols, many in upscale Islamabad appear to be violating the rules that have been designed to control the super spreader.
Last modified on Wed 24 Feb 2021 06.06 EST
Brexit or Covid? Hardly a cheerful choice, but when I ask Colette Hansford, executive producer at Hofesh Shechter Company, which will be most decisive for UK theatre and dance companies, she doesn’t hesitate. “Brexit will have the bigger impact because it’s a long-term restriction. We’re a flexible, dynamic sector and can work our way out of Covid – but if we can’t produce and export our work, that’s going to have a devastating effect.”
Musicians have denounced the Brexit deal’s neglect of performers who depend on European work. They feel “shamefully failed” by the British government’s failure to secure free movement for touring artists. But for many of the UK’s stage companies the situation is equally fraught. Unresolved questions remain around touring, co-producing with European venues and attracting international collaborators to the UK. Which to unpick first? “Oh gosh,” sighs Farooq Chaudhry, executive pro
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