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  • Swiss medicines authority issues first approval for antimalarial drug for treatment of infants

    Swiss medicines authority issues first approval for antimalarial drug for treatment of infants

    GENEVA — Switzerland’s medical products authority has granted the first approval for a malaria medicine designed for small infants, touted as an advance against a disease that takes hundreds of thousands of lives — nearly all in Africa — each year.

    Swissmedic gave a green light Tuesday for the medicine from Basel-based pharmaceutical company Novartis for treatment of babies with body weights between 2 and 5 kilograms (nearly 4½ to 11 pounds), which could pave the way for hard-hit African nations to follow suit in coming months.

    The agency said that the decision is significant in part because it’s only the third time it has approved a treatment under a fast-track authorization process, in coordination with the World Health Organization, to help developing countries access needed treatment.

    The newly approved medication, Coartem Baby, is a combination of two antivirals. It is a lower dose version of a tablet previously approved for other age groups, including older children.

    Dr. Quique Bassat, a malaria expert not affiliated with the Swiss review, said the burden of malaria in very young children is “relatively low” compared to older kids.

    But access to such medicines is important to all, he said.

    “There is no doubt that any child of whichever age — and particularly very, very young ones or very light-weighted ones — require a treatment,” said Bassat, the director- general of the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, known as ISGlobal.

    Up to now, antimalarial drugs designed for older children have been administered to small infants in careful ways to avoid overdose or toxicity, in what Bassat called a “suboptimal solution” that the newly designed medicine could help rectify.

    “This is a drug which we know is safe, we know works well, and therefore it will just be available as a new version for a specific age group,” he said.

    Ruairidh Villar, a Novartis spokesperson, said that eight African countries took part in the assessment and are expected to approve the medicine within 90 days. The company said that it’s planning on a rollout on a “largely not-for-profit basis” in countries where malaria is endemic.

    Dr. Bhargavi Rao, co-director of the Malaria Centre at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, noted that malaria cases continue to rise — especially in crisis-hit countries — despite new vaccines and programs targeting the mosquitoes that spread the parasite.

    She said access strategies for the new medicine must include a look at where needs are greatest, and urged clarity on pricing.

    “We need transparency around what Novartis’ ‘largely not for profit’ statement means including publicly available pricing, which countries will benefit and how long for,” she wrote in an email.

    Still, she said it was “significant to finally have a suitable and safe treatment for very young children — more than 20 years since WHO first pre-qualified Coartem for older age groups.

    She noted the announcement comes as resistance to antimalarials has been growing and many traditional donor countries have been sharply cutting outlays for global health — including for malaria programming and research.

    The mosquito-borne illness is the deadliest disease in Africa, whose 1.5 billion people accounted for 95% of an estimated 597,000 malaria deaths worldwide in 2023, according to WHO. More than three-quarters of those deaths were among children.

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  • 3 dead in north Lebanon strike that Israel says hit Hamas militant – France 24

    1. 3 dead in north Lebanon strike that Israel says hit Hamas militant  France 24
    2. Israel says it launched ‘special, targeted operations’ in southern Lebanon  Al Jazeera
    3. 3 killed, 13 injured in Israeli drone strike in N. Lebanon  Xinhua
    4. IDF says troops raided, destroyed several Hezbollah sites in south Lebanon  The Times of Israel
    5. 08 July, 2025 Airstrike in Tripoli-Lebanon Targeting Hamas Construction Bureau  Alma Research and Education Center

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  • New experiment challenges Bohmian quantum mechanics – Physics World

    New experiment challenges Bohmian quantum mechanics – Physics World






    New experiment challenges Bohmian quantum mechanics – Physics World


















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  • NEOC of NDMA’s issues heavy monsoon rainfall across different regions of Pakistan till Thursday – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. NEOC of NDMA’s issues heavy monsoon rainfall across different regions of Pakistan till Thursday  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. NDMA issues flood advisory as monsoon intensifies across the country  Ptv.com.pk
    3. 19 killed as country braces for more rain  Dawn
    4. DG Khan authorities on the toes for floods  The Express Tribune
    5. 79 die in rain-related incidents: NDMA issues fresh flood warning  Business Recorder

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  • National teams make a push for the Finals in Arlington

    With the seven best-ranked national teams from the Preliminary Phase and hosts Poland, which are currently in second place, making it to the Finals, three of the six teams that will play in Arlington are inside the qualification zone – China, which are sixth with five victories (15 points), Germany, which rank seventh, with four victories (14), and hosts the United States, which appear in eighth place, also with four victories (11).

    The Dominican Republic, another national team that will compete in Texas, are not far behind, ranking tenth, with four victories and nine points. Canada, which rank 15th, with two victories (six points), and Thailand, which come next at 16th with one victory (five points), still have chances of qualifying, but should also worry about avoiding the bottom of the standings, which would get them relegated in the VNL.

    China had their ups and downs in the first week of the VNL, in Beijing, getting two victories. The Asians showed improvement in the second week, in Hong Kong, triumphing in three of their four matches, and got one step closer to qualifying. Young phenom Zhang Zixuan has been one of the standouts in the Chinese campaign as the 16-year-old setter ranks first among the players in her position in the VNL with 236 successful actions. Outside hitter Wu Mengjie is China’s leading scorer with 147 points, while experienced middle blocker Wang Yuanyuan ranks third in the VNL in blocks, with 22.

    “Our team has been bringing a lot of energy to every match,” opposite and team captain Gong Xiangyu said. “We’ve been behind on some occasions in the VNL and even when the gap seemed too big, we just kept pushing.”

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  • Afghanistan: ICC Issues Arrest Warrants for Senior Taliban Leaders

    Afghanistan: ICC Issues Arrest Warrants for Senior Taliban Leaders

    (New York) – The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued warrants under seal on July 8, 2025, for two senior Taliban leaders as part of the court’s Afghanistan investigation.

    The following quote can be attributed to Liz Evenson, international justice director at Human Rights Watch:

    “Senior Taliban leaders are now wanted men for their alleged persecution of women, girls, and gender nonconforming people. The international community should fully back the ICC in its critical work in Afghanistan and globally, including through concerted efforts to enforce the court’s warrants. Arrests take time, but the handover of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to the ICC to face a charge based on alleged extrajudicial killings shows that when justice is supported, victims can have their day in court. The ICC Office of the Prosecutor should continue its investigations and extend the reach of justice to victims of other Taliban abuses, as well as victims of the Islamic State of Khorasan Province forces, former Afghan security forces, and United States personnel. Addressing cycles of violence and impunity in Afghanistan requires providing equal access to justice for victims of all rights abusers.”

    For further background, please see: https://www.hrw.org/news/2025/01/23/afghanistan-icc-prosecutor-seeks-gender-persecution-charges

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  • I have been thinking about upgrading my GPS computer, and with this $200 Amazon Prime Day discount, this Garmin Edge 1040 deal is extremely tempting

    If you have followed any of our Amazon Prime Day deal coverage, you will have likely noticed that Garmin often features heavily in our deal round-ups. The online shopping event often features great discounts across a wide range of Garmin devices, whether it’s the best bike computers, smartwatches or smart trainers from its sub-brand Tacx. If you are looking for big savings, then the deals are particularly good on devices that have been superseded by new models.

    With the launch of the Garmin Edge 1050 at the end of last year, it wasn’t a surprise to see the older Garmin Edge 1040 discounted for Amazon Prime Day; however, we weren’t expecting it to receive such a big price drop.

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  • Women’s T20 Blast: Somerset beat Essex for first victiory

    Women’s T20 Blast: Somerset beat Essex for first victiory

    Deputising for the injured Sophie Luff, stand-in Somerset captain Niamh Holland won the toss, inserted the opposition and watched her bowlers reduce the visitors to 30-2 in 4.1 overs.

    Lauren Winfield-Hill plundered three boundaries in moving effortlessly to 19 from 14 balls, only to be lbw to an Olivia Barnes delivery that pinned her in the crease.

    Three balls later, fellow opener Grace Scrivens followed the former England batter back to the pavilion after pulling a shortish ball from Erin Vukusic to mid-wicket for six.

    Charged with the task of repairing the damage, Griffith and Grewcock advanced the score to 40-2 at the end of the powerplay and 66-2 at the halfway stage, despite finding boundaries hard to come by.

    The 50 partnership occupied 45 balls and Griffith, having raised 31 from 29 balls, was beginning to accelerate when she attempted to pull Mollie Robbins to the deep mid-wicket boundary and succeeded only in finding Alex Griffiths.

    That was the cue for Grewcock to take centre stage, the England A batter opening her shoulders to harvest three successive fours in an over from Barnes as the fielding side came under real pressure for the first time.

    Grewcock was eyeing a half-century when she gave the charge to Wellington’s leg spin and holed out to Vukusic at long-on.

    Essex were 115-4 in the 16th over with work still to do as Jo Gardner joined Maddie Penna in the middle. They staged a useful stand of 40 from 27 balls, Australian Penna scoring 21 at a run a ball and the forthright Gardner 22 from 12 deliveries, to hoist Essex to a competitive total.

    Somerset required the reassurance of a good start and Bex Odgers and Holland provided exactly that, adding 41 in five overs before the former blotted her copybook and top-edged to short third man for 20 off the bowling of Eva Gray.

    Holland had also scored 20 when she surrendered her wicket in similar fashion next over, skying a catch behind off Esmae MacGregor as the home side slipped to 41-2.

    Buoyed by her half century against Hampshire last time out, Fran Wilson hit the ground running as Somerset passed 50 in the seventh, while debutant Ruby Davis calmed any nerves by straight-hitting Gray for four as the third wicket partnership began to profit.

    They added 46 in 36 balls and were threatening to take the contest by the scruff of the neck when Davis, on 19, attempted to reverse sweep MacGregor and was adjudged lbw with the score 87-3 in the 12th.

    Wellington drove Grewcock down the ground and pulled Smale for four to serve notice of her intentions, but Abtaha Maqsood and MacGregor kept things tight to push the asking rate above eight.

    But Somerset’s fourth wicket pair took 15 off the 15th, bowled by Smale, at which point they required 35 from five.

    Victory looked to be a formality, only for Wilson to dance down the wicket and lose off stump to MacGregor with 24 needed off 22 balls.

    Wellington then hit Scrivens to long-on in the final over, but Griffiths and Chloe Skelton saw the job through.

    Report by ECB Reporters’ Network, supported by Rothesay

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  • Field Breakdown: 2025 Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    Field Breakdown: 2025 Amundi Evian Championship – LPGA

    1. Field Breakdown: 2025 Amundi Evian Championship  LPGA
    2. Golf betting tips: Evian Championship preview and best bets  Sporting Life
    3. S. Korean players looking to end LPGA major drought in France  MSN
    4. Porsche experience on The Amundi Evian Championship’s world class stage  Porsche Newsroom
    5. 2025 Evian Championship: TV schedule, streaming, how to watch, tee times  GOLF.com

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  • Gold ETFs drew largest inflow in five years during first half of 2025, WGC says – Reuters

    1. Gold ETFs drew largest inflow in five years during first half of 2025, WGC says  Reuters
    2. Gold ETFs turned Rs 10,000 monthly SIP into nearly Rs 10 lakh in 5 years. Have you missed the gold rush?  The Economic Times
    3. Gold ETF Inflows Turn Positive Again In June, Says World Gold Council  Forbes
    4. GLD: Gold ETF Gains Outpace Bitcoin Funds in 2025  ETF.com
    5. Gold a darling investment not just for Indian households! Why corporates are investing big in gold ETFs –  Times of India

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