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లతా మంగేష్కర్ బాగానే ఉన్నారు.. ఆందోళన వద్దు - lata mangeshkars health is now better says relatives
ప్రముఖ గాయని లతా మంగేష్కర్ ఆరోగ్యం బాగానే ఉందంటున్నారు ఆమె కుటుంబసభ్యులు. ప్రస్తుతం ఆస్పత్రిలో కోలుకుంటోందని తెలిపారు.
లత
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Published : Nov 29, 2019, 2:30 PM IST
ప్రముఖ గాయనీమణి లతా మంగేష్కర్ అనారోగ్యంతో చేరారు. ప్రస్తుతం ఆమె ఆరోగ్యం బాగానే ఉందని, కుటుంబ సభ్యులతో మాట్లాడతున్నారని సమాచారం. అయితే సామాజిక మాధ్యమాల్లో కొంతమంది పనిగట్టుకుని లత ఆరోగ్యంపై లేనిపోని ప్రచారాలు చేస్తున్నారు. లతా మంగేష్కర్ని అభిమానించే చాలామంది ఇలాంటి వార్తలు విని తీవ్ర ఆందోళనలకు గురౌతున్నారు.
"అలాంటి వార్తలను ఎట్టి పరిస్థితుల్లో నమ్మకండి. ఆమె బాగానే ఉన్నారు. వైద్యుల సలహా మేరకు మాత్రమే లత హాస్పిటల్లో ఉంటున్నారు. బయటకు వెళ్తే చాలామంది వస్తూపోతూ ఉంటారు. వారందరిని కలవడం వల్ల ఆమె మరింత ఒత్తిడికి గురౌతుందనే ఉద్దేశంతోనే వైద్యశాలలో ఉంచాం."
-కుటుంబసభ్యులు
మొత్తం మీద లత ఆరోగ్యంగానే ఉందట. కానీ అందరికంటే ఆందోళన చెందేది వారి ఇంట్లో ఉంటున్న సభా అనే కుక్క. చాలా కంగారు ఉందట. కొన్నాళ్ల నుంచి లతా మంగేష్కర్ కనపడకపోయే సరికి సభా (పెంపుడు కుక్క) దిగాలుగా ఉందట.
ఇవీ చూడండి.. 'అర్జున్ సురవరం' ప్రేక్షకులను ఆకట్టుకోగలిగాడా..?
ప్రముఖ గాయనీమణి లతా మంగేష్కర్ అనారోగ్యంతో చేరారు. ప్రస్తుతం ఆమె ఆరోగ్యం బాగానే ఉందని, కుటుంబ సభ్యులతో మాట్లాడతున్నారని సమాచారం. అయితే సామాజిక మాధ్యమాల్లో కొంతమంది పనిగట్టుకుని లత ఆరోగ్యంపై లేనిపోని ప్రచారాలు చేస్తున్నారు. లతా మంగేష్కర్ని అభిమానించే చాలామంది ఇలాంటి వార్తలు విని తీవ్ర ఆందోళనలకు గురౌతున్నారు.
"అలాంటి వార్తలను ఎట్టి పరిస్థితుల్లో నమ్మకండి. ఆమె బాగానే ఉన్నారు. వైద్యుల సలహా మేరకు మాత్రమే లత హాస్పిటల్లో ఉంటున్నారు. బయటకు వెళ్తే చాలామంది వస్తూపోతూ ఉంటారు. వారందరిని కలవడం వల్ల ఆమె మరింత ఒత్తిడికి గురౌతుందనే ఉద్దేశంతోనే వైద్యశాలలో ఉంచాం."
-కుటుంబసభ్యులు
మొత్తం మీద లత ఆరోగ్యంగానే ఉందట. కానీ అందరికంటే ఆందోళన చెందేది వారి ఇంట్లో ఉంటున్న సభా అనే కుక్క. చాలా కంగారు ఉందట. కొన్నాళ్ల నుంచి లతా మంగేష్కర్ కనపడకపోయే సరికి సభా (పెంపుడు కుక్క) దిగాలుగా ఉందట.
ఇవీ చూడండి.. 'అర్జున్ సురవరం' ప్రేక్షకులను ఆకట్టుకోగలిగాడా..?
WORLD COP PREVIEW
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS/ POOL
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 8:50
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Putaendo (107km north west of Santiago), Chile – 23 September 2019
1. Various of dying calf
2. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Alfredo Estay, breeder:
"I do not count them because every day one dies, (or) two, three."
3. Pan of Putaendo river dried up
4. Mid of dead goat
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 25 November 2019
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer
"We're seeing more extreme weather because we have more heat trapping gases in the air. So what that does is climate change affects the extremes. You see more droughts, you see more downpours and less of the middle."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Venice, Italy - 17 November 2019
6. Various of high water in Saint Mark's Square
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 25 November 2019
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer
" In California, we have seen a five-fold increase in wildfires since the 80s, and that has been connected to climate change."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Somis, California, United States – 2 November 2019
8. Charred avocado trees, fire fighter walks past the grove
9. Various charred avocados
10. Various damaged trees
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Novo Progresso, Para state, Brazil - 3 September 2019
11. Mid of forest fire
12. Walking shot through burnt forest
13. Various of firefighters and soldiers putting out fire
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 25 October 2019
14. Various of Carlos Nobre, a climate expert and member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences, giving a lecture
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Nobre, member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences:
"We are closer to an irreversible disaster, a collapse, with between 60 up to 70% over the whole Amazon forest, than we thought a few years ago. "
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Novo Progresso, Para state, Brazil - 3 September 2019
16. Various of forest fire
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 25 October 2019
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Nobre, member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences:
"Many studies have indicated that deforestation plus global warming acting together might drive the forest to disappear "
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Near Vila Nova Samuel, Rondonia State,Brazil - 25 August 2019
18. Various of burnt trees
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 25 October 2019
19. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Nobre, member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences:
"The length of the dry season (in the south of the Amazon) is becoming longer. In the forest areas this dry season is even longer. The forest in those areas is removing less carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And during the dry season the temperature in that area is 3 degrees warmer than 50 years ago. Part of that warming is global warming, but part is not, it is because the forest is losing its capacity to recycle water"
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Near Conquista D'oeste, Mato Grosso, Brazil - 26 August 2019
20. Aerial of some of the Nambikwara Sarare indigenous people standing looking up at drone ++Mute++
21. Nambikwara Sarare tribe seated
22. Sarare river
23. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Saulo Katitaurlu, leader of the Nambikwara Sarare tribe:
"Some years ago there were a few (fires) but now there are more. With the Amazon burning, this is the largest that ever happened and the smoke is coming here. Today the sky is clean but two days ago it was full of smoke and hot. It never happened here before, but today we have this difficulty because of that problem."
24. Various of indigenous children playing on tree
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 25 October 2019
25. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Nobre, member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences:
"The Amazon (has) maybe 15 to 30 years before irreversibly becoming a dry savannah. So a large portion of the southern Amazon."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Canutama, Amazonas State, Brazil - 2 September 2019
26. Various drone footage of land recently burned and deforested ++MUTE ++
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Near Vila Nova Samuel, Rondonia State, Brazil - 25 August 2019
27. Various of smouldering trees and smoke
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Helheim Glacier, eastern Greenland - 14 August 2019
28. Students sitting on the top of the mountain, Helheim Glacier in the background
29. SOUNDBITE (English) David Holland, NYU Air and ocean scientist:
"So this is Helheim Glacier, far off to my right, in front the melange is the Helheim Fjord. And this glacier has retreated more than 10 kilometres or so in the last decade or so from that position far off from my left to where you see it today."
30. David Holland points to the edge of glacier, UPSOUND (English) "So that's where the ice is grounded on the sea floor down about 800 metres."
31. Sunset over Helheim Glacier ++TIME LAPSE++
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 25 November 2019
32. SOUNDBITE: (English) Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer
"Two biggest climate stories of 2019 are Greta Thunberg and Donald Trump, and they're on opposite ends."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 23 September 2019
33. Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg being escorted by security as President Donald Trump arrives at the United Nations, pull-out as President Trump arrives
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 25 November 2019
34. SOUNDBITE: (English) Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer
" Donald Trump, who still denies that climate change is real and has pulled the United States out of the Paris agreement."
POOL
Washington, United States - November 3, 2019
35.Trump approaches cameras after stepping off Marine One helicopter
36. SOUNDBITE (English) Donald Trump, US President
"You got fires eating away at California every year because management is so bad, the governor doesn't know -- he's like a child. He doesn't know what he's doing."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Somis, California, United States - 31 October 2019
37. Firefighters spraying fire on mountainside
38. Various of fire on mountainside
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, United States - 25 November 2019
39. SOUNDBITE: (English) Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer
"Greta Thunberg has been part of a global movement by young people, she is not the only one. She is just the visible symbol. And things have coalesced around her and her Friday strikes in just a year and a half. It went from her outside the parliament there to a global thing where millions of people are stopping work and school on Fridays."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Washington, DC, United States - 13 September 2019
40. Mid shot of demonstrators singing with Greta sitting among them
41. Wide shot of demonstration
42. SOUNDBITE (English) Greta Thunberg, Teen climate change activist: ++AUDIO AS INCOMING++
"I am so incredibly grateful for every single one of you and I'm so proud of you ."
43. Pull out to wide shot of crowd chanting "Greta, Greta..."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 25 October 2019
44. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Nobre, member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences:
"Teenagers of today are putting their fingers in the in the heads of our generation, the adults, saying you are not doing what you should do. You are really harming my future. You are putting my future at risk. And then these children also, they see their future closely linked to the sustainability of the planet."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stockholm, Sweden - 26 July 2019
45. Wide of banners and small group of young people sitting near parliament
46. Banner reading (English) "We have no Planet B"
47. Climate activist Greta Thunberg sitting on the ground next to Swedish parliament with other youth protesters
48. Wide of small group of protesters
49. SOUNDBITE (English) Greta Thunberg, climate activist:
"We are facing a global crisis and if we don't do anything soon then it might be too late to undo the irreversible climate breakdown. And we need to stand together, no matter where you are from or who you are. So please try to understand what is happening. We need to hold the older generations accountable and do whatever we can to show that we have had enough."
50. Close up of sign reading (English) "Ignorance is death"
51. Pan from protesters to parliament
52. Close up of sign reading (Swedish) "School Strike for Climate"
LEADIN
Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of mostly young people are expected to rally in cities around the world on Friday to demand that governments step up their efforts to curb climate change ahead of the UN Climate meeting in Madrid.
The youth movement, led by Greta Thunberg, has been one of the biggest news stories this year in which extreme weather and climate change events have often dominated the headlines.
STORYLINE:
In September 2019 rural Chile faced its worst drought in half a century.
Farmer Alfredo Estay could only watch as his cattle died one by one.
When the Associated Press visited Estay in September he said he had about 80 cows and a handful of calves left out of a total of 180 because hunger and thirst had starved them to death.
"I do not count them because every day one dies, (or) two, three." he said.
Chile is among the 10 most vulnerable countries in the world due to the impact of climate change.
It meets seven of the nine criteria designations established by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, including less rainfall and lower river flows.
Associated Press Science Writer, Seth Borenstein, explains how a warming climate affects our weather. "We're seeing more extreme weather because we have more heat trapping gases in the air. So what that does is climate change affects the extremes. You see more droughts, you see more downpours and less of the middle."
The historic Italian city of Venice is famous for its waterways, but in early November high tides inundated its famous piazzas.
It was the first time since records began in 1872 that three high tides had hit at least 1.5 metres in the same year - let alone the same week.
Venice's mayor has put the flooding damage at hundreds of millions of euros and Italian officials declared a state of emergency for the area.
Australia, Brazil and California have been plagued by devastating wildfires.
"In California, we have seen a fivefold increase in wildfires since the 80s, and that has been connected to climate change" says Borenstein.
In Somis a fire burned nearly 15 square miles (39 sq. kilometers) and continues to threaten more than 2,500 homes and other buildings, charring avocado orchards.
The Brazil Amazon rainforest was hit by a wave of fires this year prompting global outrage.
August saw the highest number of fires in the Brazilian Amazon since 2010, and a sharp increase compared to the year before.
Since the start of the year until early September there were more than 95,500 fires in Brazil, up 59% from the same period in 2018, according to Brazilian government data.
Carlos Nobre, one of Brazil's most prominent scientists, says that we're close to a "tipping point "We are closer to an irreversible disaster, a collapse, with between 60 up to 70% over the whole Amazon forest, than we thought a few years ago. "
"Many studies have indicated that deforestation plus global warming acting together might drive the forest to disappear " he adds.
Nobre, a University of Sao Paulo climate scientist, says the Amazon acts as a sink, draining heat-trapping carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Currently, the world is emitting around 40 billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere every year.
The Amazon absorbs 2 billion tons of CO2 per year (or 5% of annual emissions), making it a vital part of preventing climate change.
Fires in the Amazon not only mean the carbon-absorbing forest is disappearing, but the flames themselves are emitting millions of tons of carbon every day.
The rainforest recycles its own water to produce a portion of the region's rain, so deforestation makes rains less frequent, extending the dry season says Nobre.
"The length of the dry season (in the south of the Amazon) is becoming longer. In the forest areas this dry season is even longer. The forest in those areas is removing less carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And during the dry season the temperature in that area is 3 degrees warmer than 50 years ago. Part of that warming is global warming, but part is not it is because the forest is losing its capacity to recycle water" he explains.
Nobre estimates that if 20% to 25% of the forest is destroyed, the dry season will expand enough that it will no longer be a forest, but a savannah.
The recent fires in the Amazon are not wildfires. They were manmade and are mostly set illegally by landgrabbers who are clearing the forest for cattle ranching and crops.
Deforesting the Amazon is a long, slow process.
People clear the land by cutting down the vegetation during the rainy season, letting the trees dry out and burning them during the dry season.
Fully clearing the dense forest for agricultural use can take several years of slashing and burning.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has decreased the power and autonomy of forest protection agencies, which he says get in the way of licensing for developing land.
Brazil's indigenous population is witnessing their forest home disappearing. They say the government isn't doing enough to tackle the problem.
In an indigenous reserve near Conquista D'Oeste, Mato Grosso state, they complained that environmental officials were carrying out fewer inspections than in the past.
According to Nambikwara Sarare leaders, the fires were affecting their lives and their land, bringing disease and damaging animal life.
"Some years ago there were a few (fires) but now there are more. With the Amazon burning, this is the largest (fire) that ever happened and the smoke is coming here" said Saulo Katitaurlu, the leader of the Nambikwara Sarare tribe.
In the Arctic the ice is melting.
Summer this year has hit Greenland hard with record-shattering heat and an extreme melt.
One of the places hit hardest is here on the southeastern edge of the giant frozen island.
Helheim, one of Greenland's fastest-retreating glaciers, has shrunk about 6 miles (10 kilometres) since scientists came here in 2005.
According to several scientists, also studying melting ice in Greenland, what's happening is a combination of man-made climate change and natural but weird weather patterns.
Glaciers here do shrink in the summer and grow in the winter, but nothing like this year.
New York University air and ocean scientist, David Holland, is here to collect data to help explain why salty, warm, once-tropical water attacking the glacier's "underbelly" has been bubbling to the surface.
"So this is Helheim Glacier far off to my right, in front the melange is the Helheim Fjord. And this glacier has retreated more than 10 kilometres or so in the last decade or so from that position far off from my left to where you see it today" he said in August.
A NASA satellite found that Greenland's ice sheet lost about 255 billion metric tons of ice a year between 2003 and 2016, with the loss rate generally getting worse over that period.
Holland suspects that the warm, salty water that comes in part from the Gulf Stream in North America is playing a bigger role than previously thought in melting Greenland's ice.
And if that's the case, that's probably bad news for the planet, because it means faster and more melting and higher sea-level rise.
According to NASA scientists, by the year 2100, Greenland alone could cause 3 or 4 feet (more than 1 metre) of sea-level rise.
Two of the biggest climate stories of 2019 were the global youth climate movement and US President Donald Trump withdrawing the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement.
Trump also threatened to cut U.S. funding to California for aid during wildfires that have burned across the state during dry winds this fall (autumn).
Trump tweeted that California Gov. Gavin Newsom has done a "terrible job of forest management."
"He's like a child, he doesn't know what he's doing," said Trump.
However, the Californian state controls just a small percentage of forest land. The federal government manages most of it.
Borenstein says that both Trump and Greta Thunberg have become symbols for people who hold opposing views on climate change.
"Greta Thunberg has been part of a global movement by young people, she is not the only one. She is just the visible symbol. And things have coalesced around her and her Friday strikes in just a year and a half. It went from her outside the parliament there to a global thing where millions of people are stopping work in school on Fridays."
Nobre agrees that global leaders need to listen to the next generation.
"Teenagers of today are putting their fingers in the in the heads of of our generation, the adults, saying you are not doing what you should do. You are really harming my future. You are putting my future at risk. And then these children also, they see their future closely linked to the sustainability of the planet" he says.
Thunberg, the Swedish teenager whose social media-savvy brand of eco-activism has inspired tens of thousands of students in Europe to skip classes and protest for faster action against climate change is on her way to the climate talks in Madrid from the United States, hitching a lift on a eco-friendly sailing boat.
Since starting her "school strikes" in August 2018, Thunberg has appeared before policymakers at last year's U.N. climate conference in Poland, challeneged business and political leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and met with Pope Francis, who praised Thunberg's efforts and encouraged her to continue campaigning.
Thunberg has arguably become the figurehead for a new generation of European eco-activists worried that they'll suffer the fallout from their parents' and grandparents' unwillingness to take strong action to combat climate change.
Thunberg, who spoke to the Associated Press in July, had a message for young people :
"We are facing a global crisis and if we don't do anything soon then it might be too late to undo the irreversible climate breakdown. And we need to stand together, no matter where you are from or who you are. So please try to understand what is happening. We need to hold the older generations accountable and do whatever we can to show that we have had enough."
The United Nations Climate talks are taking place in Madrid from Dec. 2-13.
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