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Advisory for heavy rain, strong winds and rough seas issued to naval and fishing communities in the Bay of Bengal Sea area

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Advisory for heavy rain, strong winds and rough seas issued by the Natural Hazards Early Warning Centre at 8.30 p.m. 30 August 2024, valid until 8.30 p.m, on 31 August 2024

Multi day fishing vessels in the Northern Bay of Bengal Sea area have been warned that the low-pressure area located over the Central and adjoining North Bay of Bengal is very likely to move west-orthwestwards and intensify into a Depression over the West-central and adjoining northwest Bay of Bengal Sea area during subsequent 36 hours.

Thereafter, it is likely to move west-northwestwards and reach North Andhra Pradesh and adjoining south Odisha coasts.

Very strong winds (70-80) kmph accompanied with heavy rainfalls and very rough seas are likely over the above sea areas.

Naval and fishing communities are advised not to venture into the sea areas bounded by (10N – 20N) and (82E – 95E) during next 2 days (31 August and 01

Actions Required:
 Those who are out at aforementioned sea regions are advised to return to coasts or moved safer areas immediately.

 Fishing and naval community are requested to be attentive to future forecasts issued by the Department of Meteorology in this regard.



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England enter the unknown in maiden encounter with Nepal

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Sandeep Lamichhane could be Nepal's biggest threat [Cricinfo]

Ten years on from their improbable run to the World T20 final in Kolkata, England return to India with quiet expectation. While controversy swirls around their captain, Harry Brook, and what he did and did not get up to outside a nightclub on Halloween, the team that he oversees has found some stillness in the eye of the storm. With 10 wins in their last 11 completed T20Is, they are as ready as they can be for the challenge that lies ahead.

So too, for that matter, are their opening-night opponents. Eighteen months ago in St Vincent, Nepal came within a whisker of a stunning upset against the eventual World Cup finalists, South Africa. They return to the T20 World Cup stage with a battle-hardened unit, forewarned of the pressures but with proof of their worthiness, and with two successful seasons of the Nepal Premier League under their belts to rehearse those big-match moments.

Like England, they arrive on an impressive run of recent form, albeit six wins out of six against the likes of Kuwait, Japan and Qatar in September’s qualifying tournament isn’t exactly apples and pears. Nevertheless, they are here on merit, and very much on the rise, with a young, established captain in Rohit Paudel, and an attacking array of bowlers including the nippy Karan KC. A maiden international against England will be a proud moment in their development, but there’s no reason to believe they should be daunted.

England have endured enough Associate hiccups down the years to take nothing for granted. But their confidence for this campaign won’t simply be derived from their run of recent form. Their range of contributors has arguably been the most heartening aspect, with their spinners finding form and impact throughout the Sri Lanka series, including the back-up offerings of Will Jacks and Jacob Bethell, while their batting has shown depth, power and versatility ever since the summer, when – against South Africa at Old Trafford – they recorded the first 300-plus total in a Full Members’ T20I.

Brook would love to be able to parade England’s T20I form as proof of their progress since he took over as white-ball captain. Unfortunately, those issues of team culture will not go away in what he admits has been a ‘horrendous’ few weeks for him, which means this is perhaps not the ideal moment for his overdue return to India. Unusually for a modern-day superstar, Brook is a relative stranger in these parts. He missed England’s last tour on compassionate grounds, and is currently serving a two-year ban from the IPL for reneging on his deal with Delhi Capitals. His solitary season, for Sunrisers Hyderabad, consisted of 90 runs in ten innings … and a startling 55-ball hundred against KKR, after which he missed his chance to endear himself to the locals by hitting out instead at his critics. He’ll doubtless have similar urges in the coming weeks, if he gets half a chance. It promises to be eventful, one way or another.

Sandeep Lamichhane has endured his own off-field controversies, of a significantly more serious variety. In November 2023 he was convicted of rape and jailed for eight years, but his sentence was overturned on appeal the following May, just in time for his recall for Nepal’s 2024 T20 World Cup campaign (though he was unable to secure a visa for the US and so missed their opening two games). He was already their best-known player, thanks to a cunning repertoire of legbreaks and googlies that have earned him nearly 250 T20 career wickets at little more than a run a ball. For all England’s strengths, spin remains their glaring weakness, and he’s a seasoned campaigner who will know how to exploit it.

True to form, England named their XI on the eve of the match. Phil Salt is fit again after a back spasm in Pallekele, and will open once again alongside Jos Buttler. Tom Banton keeps his place at No.4, ahead of Ben Duckett, while left-arm seamer Luke Wood gets an early outing ahead of Jamie Overton.

England: Phil Salt,  Jos Buttler (wk),  Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton,  Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran,  Will Jacks,  Liam Dawson,  Jofra Archer,  Adil Rashid,  Luke Wood.

Nepal warmed up for this contest with two emphatic wins over UAE and Canada, with Aasif Sheikh impressing with a hard-hitting fifty from the top of the order in the latter contest.

Nepal (probable):  Aasif Sheikh (wk),  Kushal Bhurtel,  Rohit Paudel (capt),  Dipendra Airee,  Aarif Sheikh,  Gulsan Jha,  Karan KC,  Sompal Kami,  Sandeep Lamichhane,  Lalit Rajbanshi/Nandan Yadav,  Sher Malla

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Japan votes in snap election as PM Takaichi takes a gamble

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Despite her traditional views on gender and family, Takaichi has proven especially popular among young voters [BBC]

Millions in Japan are voting in a snap election called by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, whose coalition is predicted to clinch a decisive win.

Just months after she was elected by lawmakers, Takaichi decided to go to the polls to seek the public’s mandate.

Polls show her Liberal Democratic Party’s (LDP) coalition with the populist Japanese Innovation Party could bag up to 300 of the 465 seats in the Lower House, marking a turnaround for the LDP which lost control of both chambers of Japan’s parliament last year.

The conservative leader has won over some voters by offering tax cuts and subsidies, but critics say these will deal a heavy blow to Japan’s sluggish economy.

Nearly 4.6 million people had cast early ballots as of a week ago, down 2.5% from the previous election in 2024, with the decline attributed to heavy snow in the northern and western regions.

Observers say Takaichi’s personal popularity may help boost the LDP’s showing in this election.

An admirer of former UK leader Margaret Thatcher, Takaichi has long pursued the ambition of becoming Japan’s “Iron Lady”. A known ally of Japan’s late former PM Shinzo Abe, she advocates similar positions including strong defence and nationalist policies.

Despite her traditional views on gender and family, Takaichi has proven especially popular among young voters between the ages of 18 and 30, polls show. Approval ratings for her government have mostly hovered above 70% since she first took office in October.

She has garnered a strong following on social media, with 2.6m followers on X. The LDP’s campaign video which she fronted was streamed over 100 million times in less than 10 days.

The 64-year-old has also become an unlikely fashion icon as “sanakatsu” – which roughly translates to “Sanae-mania” – has spread. The black leather tote bag she is often seen carrying has sold out and the pink pen she used at her first press conference has gone viral.

Sociologist Yuiko Fujita from Tokyo University sets this enthusiasm against the backdrop of how Japanese politics has traditionally been dominated by older men.

“The fact that the prime minister is now a woman, someone with a different background from what people are accustomed to, creates a feeling that something is shifting,” she told Nikkei Asia.

However, some are not convinced her popularity will translate into votes.

“This is not a presidential election but a parliamentary election, in which the LDP’s candidates are mostly men tainted by past scandals,” political science professor Koichi Nakano, from Sophia University, told the BBC.

Since 2023, the LDP had been mired in a fundraising scandal, which led to the resignation of four cabinet ministers and a corruption investigation.

The snap election is a gamble for Takaichi as her party now faces a more unified opposition. The LDP’s former longtime coalition partner Komeito has joined forces with the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan to form the largest opposition bloc in the Lower House.

Another major hurdle the LDP faces is how to convince voters that its spending-heavy measures will not exacerbate Japan’s financial fragility.

The government’s policy package may offer households short-term relief, but “fails to address the underlying problems of weak productivity and stagnant real wages”, Masahiko Takeda, a senior fellow focusing on Asia at the Australian National University, wrote in an article this week.

Moreover, Takaichi has dug herself into “a deep hole in foreign and security policy by antagonising China”, said Nakano.

Takaichi angered Beijing, Tokyo’s largest trading partner, late last year with her suggestion that Japan could respond with its own self-defence force if China attacked Taiwan.

The rift has plunged the historically tense relationship to its lowest point in more than a decade.

Meanwhile she has pursued closer ties with US President Donald Trump as Tokyo seeks more stability in its relationship with Washington, its closest ally.

On Friday, Trump endorsed Takaichi in a rare move for a US leader.

[BBC]

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Injury-hit New Zealand eye revenge as Afghanistan look to run it back

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Rashid Khan is Afghanistan's talisman [Cricinfo]

Afghanistan vs New Zealand in the early stages of a T20 World Cup. Sounds familiar? The memories of their clash in 2024 will be very pleasant or downright horrific depending on who you support. It proved a pivotal result with the teams going in vastly opposite directions after Afghanistan’s stunning 84-run hammering in Guyana.

It kick-started Afghanistan’s fairytale semi-final run, fuelling an outpouring of revelry in the streets back home. For New Zealand, it was effectively the beginning of the end as they flamed out in a rare early exit at a global tournament.

The teams have not played in any format since, creating even more anticipation for a rematch with big stakes. Group D is considered the ‘group of death’ with South Africa also in its ranks, amplifying the importance of this match for teams considered dark horses in the tournament.

New Zealand will be keen to banish the demons, but enter with plenty of question marks following a 4-1 series pummelling to India ahead of the World Cup. Of most concern, injury and illness have swept the squad and a strong start to the tournament could prove difficult.

But New Zealand should be at least familiar with the conditions, with some players having been in India for about a month. They should be match-hardened, and there will be confidence that the team can build through the tournament if they can weather this early storm.

They will need to muster one of their famed backs against the wall efforts, although there is no shortage of talent with New Zealand boasting a powerful batting order and several speedsters threatening to do damage if conditions are conducive.

Given the uncertainties over New Zealand, Afghanistan might just enter the match as favourites as they eye a strong start to a campaign they hope will go even further than their 2024 breakout.

Afghanistan will arrive confident having won six straight matches in the format before a 15-run defeat to West Indies in their series finale in Dubai last month.

They will unleash a formidable spin-heavy attack that should relish favourable conditions. While other Asian countries are hogging the spotlight, for various reasons, Afghanistan will go in under the radar but internally there should be optimism that they can inflict damage on high-profile opponents.

New Zealand Cricket has taken a pragmatic approach to the proliferation of T20 leagues by allowing players to take up casual agreements to have flexibility with their international commitments. Finn Allen has been one to take up the offer and it meant he missed most of the white-ball tour against India due to the BBL. But he has stated a strong desire to keep playing international cricket, music to the ears of New Zealand’s hierarchy. He clubbed 80 off 38 balls in his return in the fifth T20I in his first international match in 10 months. After a long layoff last year due to a foot injury, Allen ignited title-winners Perth Scorchers and he rewrote the six-hitting records during his destructive rampage. Such is the brutality, he even sometimes made opening partner Mitchell Marsh look relatively sedate by comparison. If he continues his heater – there is some doubt over his fitness for the opener – then New Zealand will get off to flyers.

Rashid Khan, obviously, is Afghanistan’s talisman and looms large over their campaign. There isn’t much more that can be said about the leggie who has taken the most wickets in T20I history with an economy of just six. The burden on his shoulders is even greater these days with the captaincy responsibilities but he should absolutely relish the likely drier surfaces. Rashid, of course, was at the heart of Afghanistan’s famous victory over New Zealand at the last T20 World Cup with a mesmerising 4 for17 from four overs and he’ll fancy something similar here.

New Zealand enter the tournament in disarray as they battle injury and illness. Batters Rachin Ravindra and Devon Conway have been struck down with illness, while Allen is nursing a shoulder injury he sustained against India. Allrounder Michael Bracewell and fast bowler Lockie Ferguson have been dealing with calf issues. There is optimism from the New Zealand camp that they will have a near full-strength squad to choose from although Ravindra appears unlikely to recover in time.

New Zealand XI (Probable): Finn Allen,  Tim Seifert (wk),  Rachin Ravindra/Devon Conway, Glenn Phillips,  Daryl Mitchell,  Mark Chapman,  Michael Bracewell, Mitchell Santner (capt), Lockie Ferguson,  Matt Henry  Ish Sodhi

 

Unlike New Zealand, Afghanistan have few concerns and should field a full-strength line-up which includes their favoured spin-heavy attack.

Afghanistan XI (Probable): Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk),  Ibrahim Zadran,  Sediqullah Atal,  Darwish Rasooli,  Mohammad Nabi,  Gulbadin Naib,  Azmatullah Omarzai,  Rashid Khan (capt), Mujeeb Ur Rahman,  Fazalhaq Farooqi,  Noor Ahmad

[Cricinfo]

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