Koreas agree to restore military hotline

Above, South Korean Lieutenant Choi Don-Rim, left, communicates with a North Korean officer during this December 10, 2005 phone call at a military office near the Demilitarized Zone which separates North and South Korea. (AFP)
Updated 09 January 2018
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Koreas agree to restore military hotline

SEOUL: North and South Korea agreed Tuesday to restore a military hotline, an official said, less than a week after an civilian cross-border phone link was reopened.
The North said during the rivals’ first formal talks in more than two years that a link in the western part of the border had been put back into action, the South’s vice unification minister Chun Hae-Sung told reporters in Seoul.
“Accordingly, our side decided to start using the military telephone line, starting 8am tomorrow.”


WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

Updated 07 February 2026
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WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

  • Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit

DHAKA: The World Health Organization said on Friday that a woman ​had died in northern Bangladesh in January after contracting the deadly Nipah virus infection.
The case in Bangladesh, where Nipah cases are reported almost every year, follows two Nipah virus cases identified in neighboring India, which has already prompted stepped-up airport screenings across Asia.
The patient in Bangladesh, ‌aged between 40-50 ‌years, developed symptoms consistent with ‌Nipah ⁠virus ​on ‌January 21, including fever and headache followed by hypersalivation, disorientation and convulsion, the WHO added.
She died a week later and was confirmed to be infected with the virus a day later.
The person had no travel history but had a history of consuming ⁠raw date palm sap. All 35 people who had contact ‌with the patient are being monitored ‍and have tested ‍negative for the virus, and no further cases ‍have been detected to date, the WHO said.
Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit. It can be fatal ​in up to 75 percent of cases, but it does not spread easily between people.
Countries including ⁠Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Pakistan implemented temperature screenings at airports after India said cases of the virus had been found in West Bengal.
The WHO said on Friday that the risk of international disease spread is considered low and that it does not recommend any travel or trade restrictions based on current information.
In 2025, four laboratory-confirmed fatal cases were reported in Bangladesh.
There are currently no licensed ‌medicines or vaccines specific for the infection.