Total Pageviews

Dengue\'s Carrier, the \"House Cat\" of Mosquitoes, Plagues Urban Areas

A worker employed by the local authorities in Delhi spraying insecticides into an open sewage drain.Enrico Fabian for The New York TimesA worker employed by the local authorities in Delhi spraying insecticides into an open sewage drain.

The best way to avoid getting sick from dengue during epidemics may be to avoid visiting the homes of people from northern climates or homes with children.

Since much of the adult population in South Asia has previously been infected and is thus immune to at least one or more of dengue's four strains, mosquitoes that live or breed near susceptible children or recent arrivals from areas where dengue is not endemic are among the most dangerous, said Dr. Thomas W. Scott, a profe ssor of entomology at the University of California at Davis.

By contrast, mosquitoes that feed solely on immune adults cannot become infectious.

The problem is compounded, several experts said, because India's refusal to acknowledge the scope of the dengue epidemic leads many recent arrivals and tourists to fail to take adequate precautions â€" like diligently wearing clothing that covers their ankles and wrists and using insect repellent.

Sure enough, the expatriate community in Delhi has been devastated by the disease this fall.

“Both my wife and I got dengue at the same time, and we have been out of commission for more than two weeks,” said Marco Carrano, an architect who moved from New York City to Delhi six years ago. “Several close friends are sick, too. It's incredibly debilitating.”

Dengue would barely exist without its pesky propagator, the Aedes aegypti â€" a kind of house cat of mosquitoes. Unlike other mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti feed almost exclusively on humans during daylight hours and rarely venture more than 100 meters from their birthplace. It is a largely urban insect that lives in and around homes and apartments and breeds in small quantities of clean water, like clogged drains and flowerpots.

Instead of feeding just once before laying eggs on a three- to four-day cycle like other mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti feed daily, which multiples their infectiousness. Mosquitoes are attracted to sweat and generally prefer biting young adults and men, studies show. Half of those infected by dengue are bitten in their own homes, studies show, so eradication efforts that only spray insecticides in public spaces and not inside homes â€" as many efforts in India do â€" are rarely successful.

India's yearly dengue epidemic generally follows the monsoon, possibly because the nation's poor infrastructure and ubiquitous trash offer myriad places for mosquitoes to breed a fter rainfall. But the threat of dengue infection never entirely recedes, and outbreaks have been reported in dry regions and seasons. Indeed, dengue's seasonality may be linked more with how temperature changes affect the gut of mosquitoes than with wet weather, Dr. Scott said.

The reason is that mosquitoes do not become instantly infectious after feeding on a person who has the dengue virus. Instead, the virus takes 10 to 14 days to move from the mosquito's gut to its salivary glands, which then inject the virus during feedings. But that transfer between the gut and mouth becomes longer as nighttime temperatures drop, Dr. Scott said. Since mosquitoes only live about six weeks, many more mosquitoes die before becoming infectious as the difference between day and nighttime temperatures grows.

Dengue's history is fairly murky, but many researchers believe it is among the continuing curses of the African slave trade that spread the disease around the world. In 1780 , Dr. Benjamin Rush, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, recorded a major outbreak in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a pandemic swept through the Caribbean, Mexico and the United States in 1827 and 1828.

Concerted eradication campaigns and widespread use of the insecticide DDT eliminated dengue from much of the Western Hemisphere by the mid-1950s, but it has slowly crept back.



Election Monitoring in the Age of Social Media

A judge in Philadelphia ordered poll workers to cover up a mural depicting President Obama at a school in Philadelphia on Tuesday, after a photograph posted on Twitter, showing voting machines set up in front of the president's image, spread rapidly across the social network.

Valerie Caras, the communications director for the Republican Party of Pennsylvania, drew attention to the image, taken by one of the party's volunteer election monitors at the polling place for Philadelphia's 5th Ward, 18th Division, inside the Benjamin Franklin Elementary School.

Just an hour later, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee, Tim Miller, posted an image on his Twitter feed, showing the order to ha ve the mural covered up, which was issued by John Milton Younge, a Democrat.

The mural on the wall of the elementary school appeared to pay tribute to President Obama's 2008 campaign, featuring the words “hope” and “change,” on either side of his image, and a quote from a speech he gave during the Democratic primary campaign that year, on Feb. 5, 2008, in which he said: “Change will not come if we wait for some other person or if we wait for some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.”



Campaigns Turn to Stars to Get Out the Vote

In the final days of a close race, as the candidates made their final pitches at rallies in swing states, both campaigns tried to harness the star power of their most celebrated supporters.

At a late-night rally in New Hampshire on Monday, Mitt Romney's opening act was Kid Rock. Before his final song, “Born Free,” the Michigan-born performer channeled the Romney campaign's one-word slogan, “Believe,” asking the crowd: “I want to know, do you believe? I want to know if you believe that you still live in the greatest country in the world!”

Video of Kid Rock performing at a rally in support of Mitt Romney on Monday night in New Hampshire.

Earlier on Monday, President Obama appeared on stage with Jay-Z and Bruce Springs teen at a rally in Ohio. As The Ohio Capital Blog reported, Mr. Springsteen, channeling Woody Guthrie, played a ditty inspired by the Obama campaign slogan, “Forward.”

Video from The Ohio Capital Blog of Bruce Springsteen performing at an Obama rally on Monday.

The same blog also captured video of Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio, dancing during Jay-Z's performance.

Video from the Ohio Capital Blog of Senator Sherrod Brown enjoying a Jay-Z performance on Monday.

Hoping to bolster the enthusiasm of small-town voters in Ohio, the Romney campaign dispatched a local hero, Jack Nicklaus, to rally the troops on Monday at a breakfast meeting in Port Clinton. The golfer, recently described by Mr. Romney as “the greatest athlete of the 20th century,” argued that the former Massachusetts governor would govern in a bipartisan fashion in his address at the Republican party headquarters in the town of 6,000.

Jack Nicklaus, speaking on behalf of Mitt Romney, on Monday in Port Clinton, Ohio.

Over the weekend, the Obama campaign unveiled a YouTube endorsement from the comedian Will Ferrell, who offered “to do anything to get you to vote on Nov. 6.”

An ad for the O bama campaign featuring the comedian Will Ferrell.


Image of the Day: Nov. 6

Simon Crean, Australian Minister for Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government, conferred the Order of Australia honor on cricketer Sachin Tendulkar in Mumbai, Maharashtra.Indranil Mukherjee/Agence France-Presse - Getty ImagesSimon Crean, Australian Minister for Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government, conferred the Order of Australia honor on cricketer Sachin Tendulkar in Mumbai, Maharashtra.

Image of the Day: Nov. 6

Simon Crean, Australian Minister for Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government, conferred the Order of Australia honor on cricketer Sachin Tendulkar in Mumbai, Maharashtra.Indranil Mukherjee/Agence France-Presse - Getty ImagesSimon Crean, Australian Minister for Regional Australia, Regional Development and Local Government, conferred the Order of Australia honor on cricketer Sachin Tendulkar in Mumbai, Maharashtra.

Mumbai\'s Historic Haji Ali Bans Women From Most Sacred Area

People walking up to the Haji Ali mosque in Mumbai, Maharashtra, in this undated photo.Haji Ali Dargah TrustPeople walking up to the Haji Ali mosque in Mumbai, Maharashtra, in this undated photo.

An iconic image of Mumbai â€" the Haji Ali mausoleum, 500 yards off the shoreline in the glittering Arabian sea â€" attracted controversy Tuesday after a Muslim women's group said women have been banned from entering the inner tomb.

Barring women from the centuries-old tomb is against the spirit of Islam and against rights enshrined in the Indian constitution, said the group, Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan.

“It's hurting us not just as women but as citizens of this country,” the group's founder, Noorjehan Safia Nia z, an activist who focuses on Muslim law and women's rights, said in a telephone interview.

During a visit to the mausoleum in March 2011, her group, which promotes the development of Muslim women, was able to pray inside the area of the tomb, where the saint Pir Haji Ali Shah Bukhari is buried. Pilgrims typically enter the room, where the saint is buried in the center, to touch the grave and offer prayers and flowers.

When the women's group came in July, Ms. Niaz said members were denied access to the inner area. “What happened in one year? Who took this decision?” Ms. Niaz said.

Ms. Niaz kicked off a media tour on the topic on Tuesday, after learning other mausoleums in Mumbai had also banned women. Her tour quickly sparked a debate in India about what areas of Muslim religious sites women are, or should be, allowed to visit.

A trustee at the Haji Ali dargah, or tomb, said there have been no recent changes to rules about women's access to the tomb. “They can see. They can pray,” said Abdul Sattar Merchant, chairman and managing trustee of the mausoleum. Asked whether women were allowed to enter the room where the saint is buried, called the astana, he said, “What has been happening is continuing.”

Other officials associated with the mausoleum confirmed Tuesday that there was a ban.

“If Islamic scholars have issued a fatwa, in accordance with the Islamic law of Sharia, and have demanded that women not be allowed in dargahs, we have only made a correction,” the news channel NDTV quoted a mausoleum trustee, Rizwan Merchant, as saying. “All that we are requesting to our sisters is not to enter inside the dargah.”

Religious scholars said there is nothing in the Koran, the Muslim holy book, or the Islamic law known as Sharia that bans women from mosques or mausoleums, or from inner tombs, like the one at Haji Ali.

“There's no such command in the Kora n. There's no such principle in Sharia,” said Asghar Ali Engineer, director of the Institute of Islamic Studies in Mumbai. “This is mere conservatism and upholding patriarchal values.”

Nonetheless, women, except those in the Bora Muslim community, aren't allowed access to most mosques and many mausoleums in India, although those considered “historical monuments,” like the Taj Mahal or the Jama Masjid, permit women.

Mr. Engineer attributed the lack of access for women in India, and across other areas in South Asia like Pakistan, to a feudal culture. Women in countries outside the subcontinent with large Muslim populations don't face the same limitation, he said.

“Even today, in Arab countries, women can enter mosques and pray,” he noted.

At Haji Ali, a thread of cut rock connects the tomb and mosque to the Mumbai shore. It has been a scenic draw for locals and pilgrims for decades.

Mr. Merchant, the managing trustee there, said that there were tens of thousands of men and women pouring into the mausoleum every day, although women are a fraction of the number of men attending.

“How can we allow women to mix with men?” Mr. Merchant said. He also said that women sometimes didn't wear burqas, a Muslim veil for women, inside the tomb.

Others worry that the new ban inside the tomb would spread to other mausoleums.

“If it can happen at Haji Ali, it can happen in smaller dargahs also,” said Ms. Niaz. She said that her group has visited about 20 mausoleums in Mumbai and found that seven didn't allow women inside, although she isn't sure how many of those always had a policy of banning women.

She said she plans to meet government officials in the coming weeks. “We'll make this an issue of debate and discussion,” Ms. Niaz said.



\"Nobody Ignores Indians\"

A series of offbeat, provocative and sometimes downright earnest media campaigns hope to get South Asian-American voters to the polls on Tuesday.

One, the “14th Annual Desi Spelling Bee,” organized by 18millionRising.org, features South Asian-American actors as spelling bee contestants, who are given words like “undecided” and “ignored” to spell.

“Eighty-four percent of Indians were ignored by both parties with regard to voting in 2012,” the spelling bee judge tells one contestant. “Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,” the contestant responds. “Nobody ignores Indians.”

“Twenty-five percent of South Asians are considered undecided voters,” another spelling bee commercial said. “Asian-Americans will be the deciding swing voters in November's election,” said a third. The videos don't endorse an y particular candidate, just urge South Asian voters go to the polls.

South Asian voters generally favor Democrats, a poll released earlier this year found, but Asian-Americans in general have yet to be “fully engaged” by either Democrats and Republicans.

A Pew Research Center study released earlier this year shows that Asian-Americans recently passed Hispanic-Americans as the largest group of new immigrants in the United States. But Asian-Americans have been virtually ignored in recent presidential campaigns, leading some political experts to speculate earlier this year that this bloc would be a key swing vote, courted by both Republicans and Democrats.

A separate campaign, dubbed “We Are America,” uses social media and celebrities to encourage South Asian voters to go to the polls in favor of President Barack Obama. In a series of public service announcements, the actors Sarita Choudhury (“Homeland”) Sheetal Sheth and the musician Reena Shah, among others, discuss President Obama's positions on civil rights and women's rights, as well as other issues. The campaign's Facebook page solicits pictures from South Asian-Americans around the country.

“Even though a large number of South Asians supported President Obama in the last election, four years later they have lost touch and felt a bit left out in this year's election process from the Democratic Party's outreach,” said Tim Dutta, one of the campaign's founders.