WhatsApp Beta for Android Now Lets You Share Animated Gif Images

One of the most anticipated features on WhatsApp is the impending arrival of gif images support. In August,WhatsApp let you convert 6-second videos to gifs and share them with your contacts, and now with the latest beta version, WhatsApp has finally made things official. It has brought full-fledged gif support to the instant messaging platform, with WhatsApp beta for Android version 2.16.293.
For now, beta testers can fiddle can send and receive gifs to its contacts and group messages freely. To send gifs, you can now just select the attach file button, head to gallery, and find your content segregated into images, videos and gifs. You can select the needed gif from that section and share it with individual contacts or groups. Before sending, you can even crop the gif image in your preferred size and then hit send. Furthermore, all the received gifs will be automatically stored in "WhatsApp Animated Gifs" folder inside WhatsApp's directory.
As mentioned, this feature is in beta, and in order to use it, you need to register for the Google Play beta testing program for WhatsApp, and then download the latest build from the store. Alternatively, you can even download the signed apk file from APK Mirror, though the first method is preferred if you'd like to receive all betas straight from WhatsApp. Interestingly, WhatsApp compresses these gifs images into mp4 files, in order to make them more data-friendly.
Apart from this, WhatsApp for Android introduced Snapchat-like abilities in its inbuilt camera with its latest update. The photos and videos taken from the camera can now be drawn and scribbled on. You can even add emojis and stickers, and write text on top of them, just like you can on Snapchat. This feature is currently being rolled out only to WhatsApp for Android users, and iPhone users are expected to get drawing abilities soon.

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Google set to announce its Pixel range of smartphones

On Tuesday, the tech behemoth is likely to unveil its new Nougat 7.1 and the smartphone

Apple made waves with its iPhone 7, no matter its premium pricing. Well, now it might be Google's turn to reap the mobile tech demand, with its new homebred Pixel smartphones.
In collaboration with HTC, which is developing the hardware, Google has been dropping hints about Pixel, its replacement for the outgrown Nexus series. On Tuesday, it is expected to finally unveil its latest Android 7.1 Nougat OS as well as the smartphone. This was confirmed by the photos and information leaked by UK-based smartphone retailer Carphone Warehouse on Monday.Competing with the iPhone means your product had better be cutting-edge. And Google Pixel, a mobile offshoot of the Chromebook Pixel and the Pixel C Android Tablet, boasts of all the necessary specs.

Equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 processor, 4GB RAM, amoled screens, fingerprint scanners, 12MP-8MP camera with optical image stablisation, 1080P and quad-HD displays, Pixel — along with its larger sibling, Pixel XL — will come with a 5-inch- and 5.5-inch-screen versions.And all you charge-starved busybodies, guess what; it'll come with a battery that can go 7 hours with just 15 minutes at the socket.
With the Nexus, Google had a bit of an aggressive pricing policy. But since Pixel is state-of-the-art, the devices will reportedly be priced starting at $649.We will have to wait till the Tuesday event to see how much of the Carphone Warehouse leak is true to the book.

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Lenovo unveils new range of consumer laptops

The new range of models further strengthens Lenovo’s endeavour to offer innovative and breakthrough technology to its customers

With an eye on the festive season, Chinese technology company Lenovo on Monday launched a new range of consumer laptops in the country that promises a faster and more powerful experience.The models — ideapad 510s, ideapad 710s, ideapad Y700, ideapad 310, ideapad 510 and Miix 310 — further strengthens Lenovo’s endeavour to offer innovative and breakthrough technology to its customers, the company said in a statement.“Lenovo believes in listening to its consumers to create products that address evolving consumer tastes, and at times also leading them to new form factors,” said Rajesh Thadani, Head and Executive Director, Consumer, Online and E-commerce, Lenovo India.The Rs. 51,090 ideapad 510s, which in addition to being thin and light, enables users who are on-the-move to be productive and entertained with lightning-fast charging and a Harman Kardon audio system.
The Rs. 73,390 ideapad 710s is ideal for those who are looking at lightweight laptops that offer heavy-duty performance. It packs a 13.3-inch full HD IPS panel and is equipped with a high-speed PCIe solid-state drive and quick-charging facility.The Rs. 1,28,090 ideapad Y700 is a desktop-class gaming laptop that caters to growing demand for gaming PCs in India.The highlight of the device is the hard-bundled gaming kit worth Rs. 19,496 which gamers can buy at Rs. 2,999 only and includes an armoured back-pack, mechanical mouse, gaming mouse and a special headset.The ideapad 310 comes with full HD touch screen display and 7th Gen Intel CPU along with NVidia graphics capability and is priced at Rs. 28,390.The all-new ideapad 510 comes with Harman Kardon audio, 7th Gen Intel processors, IPS panel full-HD display and 4GB NVidia discrete graphics and is available at Rs. 61,690.Weighing just 580g, Miix 310 (priced at Rs. 17,490) offers consumers choice of a 2-in-1 detachable featuring a full HD display, 64GB eMMC storage and 4GB of RAM.The new Yoga 510 comes with fast charging capability and is priced at Rs. 40,990.Lenovo products can be experienced at Lenovo Exclusive stores and outlets such as Croma, Reliance Digital and Ezone.

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Physics Nobel shared by three, one half by one and the other by two

They get the award "for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter."

The Nobel Prize in Physics for 2016 has been divided, one half awarded to David J. Thouless, the other half jointly to F. Duncan M. Haldane and J. Michael Kosterlitz "for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter."
Announcing the Prize on Tuesday in Stockholm, a statement by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said that “This year’s Laureates opened the door on an unknown world where matter can assume strange states. They have used advanced mathematical methods to study unusual phases, or states, of matter, such as superconductors, superfluids or thin magnetic films. Thanks to their pioneering work, the hunt is now on for new and exotic phases of matter.”Last year, Physics Nobel was awarded to Takaaki Kajita and Arthur B. MacDonald for their work with neutrinos.

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A house for Mr. Gandhi

As the country remembers the Mahatma, the lesser-known Gandhian landmarks find themselves in varying degrees of neglect

“You can talk in English if you want,” D.B. Jain, a laparoscopic surgeon, says to me, as I sit across his desk. “Pani!” he calls out. An attendant appears with glasses of cold water which he places in front of me and Ansar Ali, who works at the National Gandhi Museum (NGM). Ali has been trying to help me locate the house of another surgeon — Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari, one of the central figures of India’s freedom movement. All we know is a possibly outdated address in Daryaganj and the fact that where Dr. Ansari’s garden once stood is the Shakahar Hotel.
On a quest to locate some of the lesser known sites associated with Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and the freedom movement, I discover that many of them are totally obscure, their preservation often left to chance.After much to and fro in our search, we zeroed in on Dr. Jain’s gate. It was locked. Understandably cautious, he initially talked to us over the chained gate.
Later, sitting in his examination room, we learn that Dr. Jain now owns the house, his grandfather having bought it from Dr. Ansari’s family. The house has hosted many significant meetings, as Dr. Ansari, a surgeon, was also a member of the Indian National Congress (INC) and its president in 1927. He had also served as president of the Muslim League and was one of the founders of Jamia Millia. The house’s most famous guest was Gandhi, who met Dr. Ansari in 1915, through Sushil Kumar Rudra, the principal of St. Stephen’s College. Gandhi would often walk, from this house, five miles to Viceroy House, and return to apprise the Congress Working Committee of his deliberations with Lord Irwin. These deliberations would eventually lead to the Gandhi-Irwin Pact of 1927.Dr. Jain’s grandfather, a municipal commissioner and contemporary of Dr. Ansari, has told his grandson of a time when Gandhi was very weak from a fast while staying at the house. When asked what ought to be done if he died, Gandhi said, “Peeche jala diye (Cremate me at the back).”Dr. Jain indicates with a movement of his hands that the story is possibly just family lore, but it is not unbelievable. Rajghat, where Gandhi was eventually cremated, vaguely fits that description in terms of its location relative from Daryaganj. What can be verified is Gandhi’s secretary Pyarelal’s documentation of an incident in 1933 when Gandhi was fasting in Pune and became critically ill. Gandhi sent a message to Dr. Ansari saying he would like “nothing better” than to die on the doctor’s lap, to which the doctor said he would not let Gandhi die either on his or anyone else’s lap.Nothing commemorates this landmark, which was once witness to momentous friendships, policies and debates central to the freedom movement. “There was a plaque some time ago,” Dr. Jain says. Dr. Ansari’s property stays preserved otherwise only because of individual interest and some luck. It is to preserve and document similar sites, video and audio recordings, and documents related to the Mahatma that the Gandhi Heritage Sites Panel was formed. Headed by Gopalkrishna Gandhi, former diplomat, governor and Gandhi’s grandson, the panel submitted its report to the government in 2008. It identified sites, both in India and abroad, including a core list of 39 sites, four of which are in London and South Africa.
The Indian sites are, not surprisingly, scattered across the country, traversing its length and breadth as Gandhi himself did. From the one in Madurai, where Gandhi swapped his relatively elaborate Indian dress for the minimalist dhoti, to the dargah of Bakhtiar Chisti in the Mehrauli area of Delhi, which Gandhi visited days before his assassination. The Panel’s main recommendations were to set up a Gandhi Heritage Mission to oversee the preservation of both the physical sites as well as documents and recordings related to Gandhi’s life. The Panel also recommended the creation of a Gandhi Heritage Portal for digital preservation of documents and pictures. Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad was given charge of enabling the Mission’s projects, which were to be funded from a corpus of Rs. 50 crore, and of creating and maintaining the portal.As I walk up the mud path towards Sabarmati Ashram, I can hear the sounds of young voices. A class at the girls’ school of the Harijan Ashram Trust is in session and the children are reciting a lesson in Gujarati. I see a group of young people, likely from another country, walking down the path, some with matted hair, in tie-dye T-shirts and flip flops and with backpacks. A stray dog stares at me, its feet neatly placed on either side of tread marks made in the somewhat moist soil. It has rained recently. Construction workers walk in and out of some of the cottages. A man in a spotless white kurta pyjama stands at a gate in front of the cottages. Tridip Suhrud is the director of Sabarmati Ashram. He is a Gandhi scholar, not a Gandhian per se, he clarifies, during our conversation that morning. “I do enjoy wearing a T-shirt and riding my bicycle every morning,” he says. Suhrud got involved with the Ashram’s administration more than a decade ago when the managing trust was looking for ways to reinvigorate the site.
“We started rebuilding the ashram around the portal… we saw it as an opportunity to reinvent ourselves,” Suhrud says. The portal was launched in 2013.
We walk across the road to the other side of the ashram. Today, the Sabarmati Ashram Preservation and Memorial Trust owns less than 2.5 acres of the original 80 acres purchased by Gandhi. The rest of the land is owned by associated trusts. Little white houses, with red tiled roofs, sit clustered across the road — these are inhabited by the Dalit families who joined the ashram when it was set up in 1917.One rainy night in 1917, Gandhi and his companions moved to Sabarmati Ashram in a convoy of bullock carts that made its way from the ashram at Kochrab, not 10 km away. The new ashram on the banks of the Sabarmati was not quite ready, but there was no time to waste. The plague had struck Kochrab. The piece of land that Gandhi had purchased for the new ashram happened to be located between a cremation site and a prison and Gandhi thought this was entirely appropriate since, according to him, a true satyagrahi would inevitably end up at one or the other. In 1922, Gandhi himself was His Majesty’s guest at the jail in Sabarmati following his arrest for writing seditious articles in Young India.The jail and crematorium have been modernised and are functional. “On a good day, you can even smell it,” Suhrud says, laughing.Gandhi used the ashram until 1930, when he and 78 followers embarked on the Salt March to Dandi. Thereafter, he disbanded it, partly in solidarity with thousands who had had their lands confiscated by the government.
With one million visitors a year, maintaining the ashram infrastructure today is no mean task. With the reinvention came a research and climate-controlled archival centre, new job descriptions and even WiFi. Buildings designed by the celebrated Charles Correa have been renovated and some original structures such as the house of Gandhi’s nephew Maganlal, who was the ashram’s manager, and Hriday Kunj, Gandhi and Kasturba’s house, are well preserved. Someone sits in Hriday Kunj, spinning continuously on the charkha as long as the ashram is open. Gandhi’s room has a few of his original writing desks and the ubiquitous three monkeys. (I was to encounter no less than three sets of these during my travel, but I am still not clear which set is the original).In Delhi, I visit the old St. Stephen’s College at Kashmere Gate. It is now the office of Delhi’s Chief Electoral Officer, Chandra Bhushan Kumar, who wants to build a museum on elections with a ‘Gandhi Corner’ for which he has enlisted the help of the NGM. The building has a long relationship with Gandhi. When Gandhi, fresh from his successful experiments in South Africa, arrived in New Delhi on April 12, 1915, he stayed with Principal Rudra. He continued to stay there on his visits to Delhi through 1925. The Khilafat Movement was launched here and the Non-Cooperation Movement was “conceived and hatched under his [Rudra’s] hospitable roof,” Gandhi wrote.I notice a few old structures — a staircase here, a shelf there. The Mission’s experts are consulting the archives at St. Stephen’s College to try and reconstruct the exact location of Gandhi’s stay and his lecture to the students.Gandhi heritage sites in the public eye, controlled by robust trusts, tend to do well. Gandhi Smriti and Darshan Samiti (GSDS), Delhi, which runs an exhibition and archiving centre near Rajghat, and manages the former Birla House, is a case in point. Birla House, where Gandhi spent his final 144 days and where he was assassinated, is now a multimedia museum and a memorial to his last living quarters and the spot where he died. The place is well maintained and supports an ecosystem that extends beyond the physical space. The young guides are usually from disadvantaged backgrounds and are paid honorariums ranging from Rs. 13,000 to Rs. 16,000 per month. GSDS trains volunteers in eight different trades, including pottery, music and mime; some of them have gone on to lead programmes in Tihar Jail to train prisoners.
But not all high-profile Gandhi heritage sites are as well-kept. In May 2016, The Hindu’s Sunday Magazine reported that Pune’s Aga Khan Palace, where Gandhi, Kasturba and Gandhi’s secretary Mahadev Desai were imprisoned for the Quit India Movement, was dilapidated and in desperate need of repairs. Four months later, the situation is yet to be rectified.“The building and garden are well maintained, but the museum is still in a shabby state,” says Nilam Mahajan, who has been a guide at the museum for the past 36 years, over the phone. Suhrud says the Mission is awaiting a detailed project report to take the preservation ahead.India’s 20th century heritage is especially vulnerable, says Anil Nauriya, a writer and Supreme Court lawyer. The Ancient Monuments Act enables the Archaeological Society of India (ASI) to protect monuments at least 100 years old, leaving newer monuments vulnerable.Dilkush, Sultan Singh’s house where Gandhi ended his 1924 fast for Hindu-Muslim amity, is just one such example. In its place now, in the Subzi Mandi area of Delhi, stands an automobile spare parts shop. In the years after Partition, the priority was to resettle people and not preserve buildings, says Nauriya.“When you preserve a structure and everybody passes by and they know what it signifies… it creates a new mindset in the person who sees it. It is a way of educating people.”Talking to people involved with Gandhi heritage work, it emerges that a PPP model for preserving privately-owned sites may be a good way forward.As the chairman of the Panel has observed, Gandhi “impacted on the physical surroundings that he was in by engaging intensely with those venues, whether by tilling ground, raising cottages, cleaning them, being a prisoner in them, or investing them with the magnetism of voluntary starvation, prayer and, finally, of martyrdom.”

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EU Parliament votes in favour of ratifying Paris agreement

This vote will pave way for the treaty to enter into force by this year

In a historic vote held at the plenary session of the EU Parliament in Strasbourg, a majority of the members voted in favour of ratifying the Paris agreement. Out of the 678 votes recorded, 610 were in favour of ratification. Only 38 votes were in the negative, and the rest of the members abstained from voting.The EU-28 nations account for approximately 12 per cent of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and are the third-largest GHG emitters in the world.At a press conference held soon after the vote, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who was present during the vote, said that EU nations will submit their joint instrument of ratification within a few days, and with this vote, the Paris Agreement will be ready to enter into force as the cumulative emissions of the ratifying parties will cross the minimum required threshold of 55 per cent of global emissions.So far, 62 parties, accounting for almost 52 per cent of global emissions have ratified the Paris Agreement. The Agreement will enter into force 30 days after at least 55 parties, representing at least 55 per cent of global emissions have ratified.
In a statement released on Tuesday, EU President Jean-Claude Juncker said, “Today the European Union turned climate ambition into climate action. The Paris Agreement is the first of its kind and it would not have been possible were it not for the European Union. Today we continued to show leadership and prove that, together, the European Union can deliver.”Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Cañete said, “Our collective task is to turn our commitments into action on the ground. And here Europe is ahead of the curve. We have the policies and tools to meet our targets, steer the global clean energy transition and modernise our economy. The world is moving and Europe is in a driver's seat, confident and proud of leading the work to tackle climate change”.The EU Commission has already brought forward the legislative proposals to deliver on their commitment to reduce emissions by at least 40 per cent by 2030, the statement said.

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There is a plot to murder me, says Wigneswaran

The Chief Minister of Sri Lanka’s Tamil-majority Northern Province C.V. Wigneswaran has charged elements in the south of plotting his murder. “I have been receiving information continuously that there are efforts being taken to kill me and to put the blame on the LTTE,” he said, in a message read out at a recent book launch.
The Chief Minister’s accusations come a week after he led the ‘Eluga Tamil’ rally in Jaffna. The demonstration highlighted Tamil people’s concerns over militarisation and alleged Sinhala colonisation in the north. Several thousand Tamils flocked to the rally that some compared to the LTTE-linked ‘Pongu Tamil’ rallies in 2002-04.Days after, Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), a Sinhala-Buddhist organisation notorious for its anti-Muslim campaigns in the south, protested in the Tamil-majority town of Vavuniya, asserting Sinhalese rights. In one photograph of the demonstration, shared on social media, a man held a poster with the message “Bin Ladan, Prabakaran now Vignashwaram [sic]. Last episode will be televised soon”.
CEO of the BBS Dilantha Withanage however denied that the threat came from them. “We were onl
y one of the organisations that participated in the Vavuniya rally, but unfortunately whenever our leader Gnanasara Thero goes somewhere, the media distorts the news,” he told The Hindu, referring to the controversial monk accused of hate speech prompting anti-Muslim clashes.Meanwhile, the two rallies – in Jaffna and Vavuniya – have sparked debate within Sri Lanka, as a section of Tamils and Sinhalese voice concern over the rekindling of extreme nationalism in the north and south– something they blame for the island’s ethnic strife.Some Sinhala politicians and Colombo-based media have condemned the Jaffna rally as counterproductive to ongoing efforts towards reconciliation. In its editorial page on Sunday, the State-owned Sunday Observer newspaper published a cartoon portraying Mr. Wigneswaran as exhuming the remains of the LTTE.“We are characterised as racist or extremist when we voice the concerns of the Tamil people. They say we provoke the Sinhalese and that we are trying to stir up another ethnic conflict,” the Chief Minister said. The time is ripe for Tamils in the island’s north, east, Central Province and Colombo to come together and demand their rights, the Chief Minister said.

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Turkey suspends 12,800 police officers from duty

The Turkish police headquarters has said 2,523 of those suspended were police chiefs.

Turkish police say some 12,800 police officers have been suspended from duty over their suspected links to U.S.—based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen’s movement, accused by Turkey of masterminding the failed July 15 coup.
In a statement posted on its website Tuesday, the Turkish police headquarters said 2,523 of those suspended were police chiefs.The move comes a day after the Cabinet extended by a further three months a state of emergency declared after the coup, which has facilitated the government’s massive crackdown on Gulen’s movement.Tens of thousands of people have been dismissed or suspended from government jobs including in the military, police, judiciary and the education ministry. Around 32,000 people have been arrested for alleged links to the failed coup.Gulen has denied involvement in the coup attempt.

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Russian bombers hit Aleppo as rebels repel assault

Pro-government media said the army was pressing ahead in a major campaign supported by Iranian-backed militias and Russian air power to take full control of the divided city after a ceasefire collapsed last month.

Rebels said on Tuesday they repelled a Syrian army offensive in southern Aleppo as Russian and Syrian warplanes continued to pound residential areas in besieged parts of the city where thousands of civilians are trapped.
They said they inflicted losses on pro-government fighters after several hours of clashes on the fringe of Sheikh Saed district, at the southern edge of the rebel-held eastern half of Aleppo city.“We repelled their attempt to advance in Sheikh Saed and killed 10 regime fighters and destroyed several vehicles,” said a fighter from the Failaq al-Sham rebel group who gave his name as Abdullah al-Halabi.Pro-government media said the army was pressing ahead in a major campaign supported by Iranian-backed militias and Russian air power to take full control of the divided city after a ceasefire collapsed last month. State television said insurgent shelling killed five people in government-held areas of the city on Tuesday.The army offensive is backed by an air campaign by President Bashar al-Assad's government and its allies that has hit hospitals, destroyed infrastructure and caused hundreds of civilian casualties.Another rebel commander from the Nour al-Din al-Zinki group said the army opened several fronts simultaneously to stretch the rebel forces, and dropped leaflets from helicopters calling on them to surrender.After securing the strategic Handarat camp in the northern edge of the city last Thursday following what rebels described as carpet bombing, the army pressed on south of the camp.
It took the ruins of the former Kindi hospital, from where soldiers could control the Jandoul traffic circle, a major road intersection. “They levelled the ground and our people had no choice but to retreat under the bombing of the Russians,” the Zinki commander said.Rebels say Kurdish YPG militia controlling the strategic Sheikh Maqsoud district in north Aleppo city have also taken advantage of the army gains to move towards the Shuqayyif industrial area that lies between Handarat and their enclave.That would allow the army and its allied militias to move deeper into rebel-held northern districts of the city, although rebels expect the army thrust will slow in residential areas that offer them more cover from air raids.“The battles inside the city's districts as the regime applies more pressure will be difficult as these areas are better defended and will allow the rebels to hold out,” said Halabi.In the heart of the city, war planes believed to be Russian and flying at high altitude hit Bustan al Qasr, Hay al Huluk and Fardous neighbourhoods with reports of casualties, several rebel contacts said.In the Aleppo countryside, Russian and Syrian war planes dropped incendiary bombs on the towns of Darat Izza and al-Zirba.Separately, rebels fighting Islamic State militants said they killed at least 30 militants after a failed attempt to gain ground in Eastern Qalamoun area, north of Damascus, where fighting has escalated in recent weeks.

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U.S. warships make landmark visit to strategic Vietnam port

Cam Ranh is the jewel in the crown of Vietnam's military, with an air base once used by the U.S. and Soviet forces and a deep water bay home to its modern, Russian-built submarines.

Two U.S. warships have made their first port call in 21 years at Vietnam's strategic naval base at Cam Ranh Bay, marking an important step in improving military ties between the former enemies.
Submarine tender USS Frank Cable and guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain arrived at the deep-water naval base in Khanh Hoa province, the U.S. navy said on Tuesday, in the first such call by U.S. warships since the two countries normalised relations in 1995.The visit came after the full lifting of a U.S. embargo on trade in lethal arms with Vietnam in May as part of President Barack Obama's strategic “rebalance” toward Asia.At the same time, tension has been rising over rival territorial claims in the South China Sea, straining ties between Vietnam and its giant neighbour China.
Vietnam has been intensifying efforts to diversify relations in Europe and Asia and engage more with the United States.Cam Ranh is the jewel in the crown of Vietnam's military, with an air base once used by the U.S. and Soviet forces and a deep water bay home to its modern, Russian-built submarines.Visits by foreign ships are rare and usually reserved for maintenance. Japanese and French warships have recently made port calls at Cam Ranh.Established as a base by the United States during the Vietnam War, Cam Ranh Bay had been used largely by Russian forces since then.The John S. McCain visited nearby Danang city before sailing to Cam Ranh Bay, the U.S. Navy said.

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