The Nipah virus doesn’t spread as fast as COVID-19, but when it strikes, it kills up to 75% of those infected. First detected on Malaysian pig farms in 1998 and later resurfacing in India and Bangladesh through bats and contaminated date palm sap, Nipah now ranks among the WHO’s “priority pathogens.” This editorial traces its origins, major outbreaks and why, even in 2026, the world remains dangerously exposed.
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Breaking
- Himachal Weather: Orange Alert in Shimla, Kangra as Rain, Snowfall Continue Across State
- RR vs CSK Live Streaming: When, Where and How To Watch Rajasthan Royals vs Chennai Super Kings IPL 2026 Match
- IPL 2026 Full Schedule: Dates, Teams, Venues and Complete Match List
- Rupee Breaches 95 Against US Dollar for First Time, Hits Record Low Amid Oil Shock and Market Stress
- Lok Sabha Passes IBC Amendment Bill: Why the Changes Matter for Banks, Companies and Homebuyers
- Officials Warn AI Could Help Trigger Major Cyberattack This Year
- Orange Alert in Himachal for Rain, Thunderstorm and Hail Over Next Two Days
- HPU Prepares to Restart Non-Teaching Recruitment, Proposal to Be Sent to Himachal Government
