Jumat, 31 Desember 2021

Alaska faces 'Icemageddon' as temperatures swing wildly - CNA

LOS ANGELES: Extreme weather in Alaska that has brought record high temperatures and torrential downpours has left authorities in the far northern US state warning of "Icemageddon".

Huge sheets of ice are blocking roads and choking traffic in Fairbanks, Alaska's second largest city, reported the state's transportation department, which has coined the neologism - a play on "Armageddon" - to describe the chilly impasse.

"We're experiencing an unprecedented series of winter storms," the department tweeted.

Scientists say the unchecked burning of fossil fuels and other human activity is changing the climate, making it more unpredictable and prone to wild swings.

Rick Thoman, a weather specialist at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, called the conditions of the past few days "very unusual".

Hours after thermometers on Kodiak Island in the south reached 19.4 degrees Celsius - the warmest December temperature ever recorded in Alaska - the interior of the state saw 25mm of rain fall in just a few hours, a downpour unseen in decades.

Then when temperatures plummeted again, it all froze.

The rainstorm was caused by the same weather system that brought the soaring temperatures, transporting warm, moist air from Hawaii to the frigid far north.

This kind of thing - record high moisture content, record warm air - is exactly what we expect, of course, in our warming climate.

Unsettled weather was continuing to play havoc with flights in an out of Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle, with hundreds of flights cancelled or delayed this week.

In California, snow and persistent rain also continue to cause problems, with localised flooding forcing evacuations in areas around Los Angeles.

In the north of the state, the tourist magnet of Lake Tahoe - where forest fires a few months ago caused residents to flee - has been buried in heavy snow, leaving some people cut off.

More than 5m of snow have now fallen on parts of the Sierra Nevada mountain range this month, an all-time record, according to the Central Sierra Nevada Snow Laboratory at University of California at Berkeley.

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2021-12-31 02:32:00Z
1227576273

Kamis, 30 Desember 2021

Worst stage of the Covid-19 pandemic may end in 2022, WHO chief says - South China Morning Post

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  1. Worst stage of the Covid-19 pandemic may end in 2022, WHO chief says  South China Morning Post
  2. Deaths in 2021: Headline Names Against the Backdrop of Pandemic  The New York Times
  3. 2022 year in preview  The Washington Post
  4. The Pandemic Year 2021: Man vs Virus Fight, Global Vaccination Drives, and More | In GFX  News18
  5. 5 Ways the Pandemic Will Be Different in 2022  AARP
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-12-30 09:00:15Z
1228881969

Omicron variant driving record-breaking Covid-19 infection rates in the US and Europe - South China Morning Post

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2021-12-30 08:36:00Z
1197064766

Rabu, 29 Desember 2021

Blackpink's Lisa, Myanmar model Paing Takhon: The most beautiful and handsome faces of 2021 - CNA

K-pop star Lisa of Blackpink and model Paing Takhon of Myanmar have got the world’s Most Beautiful and Most Handsome Faces of 2021, respectively, according to TC Candler. 

The film critic website, which has been releasing an annual Top 100 list of the world’s top lookers since 1990, announced its latest lineup on Tuesday (Dec 28).

Lisa, whose full name is Lalisa Manoban, topped the Most Beautiful Face list. The 24-year-old Thai member of the popular South Korean girl moved up a notch from number two last year, while Israeli model Yael Shelbia dropped from last year’s top spot to sixth.

Also in the top 10 list were Norwegian blogger Emilie Nereng (2nd), American model Halima Aden (3rd), Filipino actress Ivana Alawi (4th), K-pop group Momoland’s Nancy Jewel McDonie (5th), K-pop group Twice’s Tzuyu (7th), Indonesian singer-actress Lyodra Ginting (8th), American model Jasmine Tookes (9th) and South Korean actress-singer Nana (Im Jin-ah) (10th).

Lisa’s fellow Blackpink members also made the list with Rose, Jisoo and Jennie coming in at 17, 26 and 30, respectively.

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2021-12-29 05:59:00Z
1221618063

Hong Kong siblings arrested on suspicion of laundering HK$384 million - South China Morning Post

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Hong Kong siblings arrested on suspicion of laundering HK$384 million  South China Morning PostView Full coverage on Google News
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2021-12-28 13:18:05Z
CAIiEJN7BCwuuNQKGFfwgdEBGJwqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowief2CjCJ2dUCMNegxwU

Selasa, 28 Desember 2021

Hong Kong to tighten air crew quarantine rules amid Omicron threat - CNA

HONG KONG: Hong Kong health authorities said on Tuesday (Dec 28) the city would tighten quarantine rules for air cargo crew to tackle the growing threat of the Omicron coronavirus variant.

The global financial hub has identified several dozen Omicron infections via regular testing during quarantine but neither Omicron, nor other variants, have spread into the community in recent months.

But some of the new infections with Omicron were detected among air crew, who had only been required to quarantine at home, unlike most other people returning to the city, who have to quarantine in hotels.

The new measures require that returning air cargo crew spend three days in hotel quarantine before a period of home isolation. Most recent infections of air crew staff have been discovered in the first three days.

"We expect most cases in the future to be of the new Omicron variant," said Edwin Tsui, controller of the Centre for Health Protection. "We have a very high community outbreak risk. A single spark can start a fifth wave."

Vaccination rates in Hong Kong are lagging those in many similar cities with less than 70 per cent of the eligible population having received two doses of either China's Sinovac or Germany's BioNTech vaccines.

This month, authorities demanded that all government workplaces ensure that all eligible staff are vaccinated by mid-February.

The South China Morning Post newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing unidentified sources, that the measure may soon be extended to schools.

Hong Kong has followed Beijing's lead and implemented some of the world's strictest travel restrictions, hoping China, its main source of economic growth, would allow some cross-border movement.

Most non-residents are banned from travelling to the city and authorities demand mandatory hotel quarantine of up to 21 days for arrivals from most countries at the expense of the travellers.

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2021-12-28 09:38:27Z
1231992179

Senin, 27 Desember 2021

Minggu, 26 Desember 2021

It could be a long road to recovery, even after patients get all-clear from Covid-19 - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Madam Loh Luan Kim has lupus, an autoimmune disease, but medication has kept it at bay to the extent that no one knows she has the disease.

The 50-year-old Malaysian, who works as a cashier in a massage outlet, got her Covid-19 vaccination the moment she could.

All was well until she was infected with breakthrough Covid-19 on Nov 2.

Now, almost two months on, and more than a month after she became free of the virus, the after-effects of the disease still linger.

She suffers from long Covid, a name coined for the extended suffering by some people following a Covid-19 infection that could last for weeks, months, even a year or more.

International data says as many as half the patients suffer some form of long Covid. In Singapore, one in 10 people infected suffer long Covid for more than six months.

Some lose their sense of taste or smell, tire easily, have muscle and joint pain, loss of appetite, or like Madam Loh whose lungs were affected, become easily breathless with minor exertion.

This can happen not just to people who had severe illness, but also those with just a mild bout.

Dr Mark Chan, divisional chairman for integrative and community care and a senior geriatric medicine consultant at Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH), said long Covid may affect people without pre-existing medical conditions, although older patients and those with existing medical conditions are more likely to suffer from it.

Madam Loh was one of those with a pre-existing medical condition.

An X-ray following her Covid-19 infection found black spots in her lungs, and she was in TTSH for a week.

She still needed about two litres of oxygen a day even after her body was clear of the virus and she had been moved to TTSH’s Covid-19 treatment facility (CTF) at Ren Ci Community Hospital to recover.

"When I walked, my heart beat very fast. It was like I couldn't breathe," she said in Cantonese. "It was usually worse in the morning, and better in the afternoon."

The second week she was at the CTF, a nurse taught her how to start exercising, with frequent rests in between.

She recalled: "Even going to the toilet, I needed to rest. I was very worried when I got so tired just going to the toilet.

"But the nurses kept saying I would recover, so I was not so concerned, not so depressed, even though I saw older patients in their 80s and 90s who did not need oxygen."

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2021-12-26 12:30:00Z
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Heavy rains displace thousands in northeast Brazil - CNA

The Bahia and federal governments mounted a joint operation on Saturday, in collaboration with other states, to mobilise personnel, aircraft and equipment, as well as provide relief to residents in the flooded areas.

"We are fully mobilised, taking all measures to ensure the necessary support to the victims of the heavy rains that hit Bahia this Christmas," the state's governor, Rui Costa, said in a video message.

Flooding and traffic blocks were reported on 17 roads, with some caused by landslides and rockslides, the state's infrastructure secretary reported.

December rainfall in Bahia's capital Salvador totalled 250mm through Friday, a figure five times the historic average, city officials said.

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2021-12-26 01:11:00Z
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Sabtu, 25 Desember 2021

Thousands of flights cancelled globally as Omicron mars Christmas weekend - CNA

NEW YORK: Commercial airlines around the world cancelled more than 4,300 flights over the Christmas weekend, as a mounting wave of COVID-19 infections driven by the Omicron variant created greater uncertainty and misery for holiday travellers.

Airline carriers globally scrapped at least 2,366 flights on Friday (Dec 24), which fell on Christmas Eve and is typically a heavy day for air travel, according to a running tally on the flight-tracking website FlightAware.com. Nearly 9,000 more flights were delayed.

The website showed that 1,616 Christmas Day flights were called off worldwide, along with 365 more that had been scheduled for Sunday.

Commercial air traffic within the United States and into or out of the country accounted for more than a quarter of all the cancelled flights over the weekend, FlightAware data showed.

Among the first US carriers to report a wave of holiday weekend cancellations were United Airlines and Delta Air Lines, which scrubbed nearly 280 flights combined on Friday alone, citing personnel shortages amid the surge of COVID-19 infections.

COVID-19 infections have surged in the United States in recent days due to the highly transmissible variant Omicron, which was first detected in November and now accounts for nearly three-quarters of US cases and as many as 90 per cent in some areas, such as the Eastern Seaboard.

The average number of new US coronavirus cases has risen 45 per cent to 179,000 per day over the past week, according to a Reuters tally.

New York reported more than 44,000 newly confirmed infections on Friday alone, shattering that state's daily record. At least 10 other states set new one-day case records on Thursday or Friday.

Rising hospitalisations were hitting healthcare systems especially hard in the US Midwest, with intensive care units in Indiana, Ohio and Michigan bracing for the worst even as they remain under pressure from an earlier wave of Delta variant cases.

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2021-12-25 00:02:00Z
1227706405

Jumat, 24 Desember 2021

UK study on Covid-19 variant Omicron bolsters evidence of lower hospital risk - The Straits Times

LONDON (BLOOMBERG) - Omicron appears to be less severe but more contagious than any other Covid-19 strain to date, a British government study concluded, bolstering research that has shown a lower risk of hospitalisation from the fast-spreading variant.

People infected with Omicron are 50 per cent to 70 per cent less likely than those infected with Delta to be admitted to hospitals, the UK Health Security Agency said on Thursday (Dec 23).

Patients infected with Omicron are also 31 per cent to 45 per cent less likely to arrive at emergency departments than those infected with Delta.

The agency's data came with an important caveat: While a booster shot improves protection against Omicron, its effectiveness starts to wane more rapidly than with Delta and is 15 per cent to 25 per cent lower starting 10 weeks after the third dose.

The agency also cautioned that the new variant is so infectious that it could still produce significant numbers of severe cases.

The findings build on studies released a day earlier with similar assessments of Omicron's lower hospitalisation risk - a rare reassurance for a variant whose transmissibility is fast overtaking Delta's.

Researchers in Scotland found Omicron was associated with a two-third lower risk of hospitalisation compared to the earlier variant, while a South African study pegged the reduction of hospitalisation risk at 80 per cent.

Another study, from an Imperial College London team working with a larger data set, found that people infected with Omicron were almost half as likely to need an overnight hospital stay.

Separate developments related to prevention and treatment added to the moment of optimism in a pandemic that has killed almost 5.4 million people worldwide and sickened millions more. A third dose of AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine significantly boosted neutralising antibodies against Omicron, according to lab studies at the University of Oxford.

A separate study involving a booster made by China's Sinovac Biotech - producer of one of the most world's most widely used Covid-19 vaccines - did not fare as well.

That shot did not produce sufficient levels of neutralising antibodies to protect against Omicron, according to lab test results published on Thursday.

The research suggests that people who have received Sinovac's shot, known as CoronaVac, should seek out a different vaccine for their booster.

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2021-12-23 23:22:30Z
1191888452

Kamis, 23 Desember 2021

Omicron may double risk of getting infected on planes, IATA says - The Straits Times

MONTREAL (BLOOMBERG) - Aircraft passengers are twice or even three times more likely to catch Covid-19 during a flight since the emergence of the Omicron variant, according to the top medical adviser to the world's airlines.

The new strain is highly transmissible and has become dominant in a matter of weeks, accounting for more than 70 per cent of all new cases in the US alone.

While hospital-grade air filters on modern passenger jets make the risk of infection much lower on planes than in crowded places on the ground such as shopping malls, Omicron is rapidly spreading just as more travellers take to the skies for year-end holidays and family reunions.

Business class may be safer than more densely packed economy cabins, said Dr David Powell, physician and medical adviser to the International Air Transport Association, which represents almost 300 carriers worldwide.

As before, passengers should avoid face-to-face contact and surfaces that are frequently touched, and people sitting near to each other should try not to be unmasked at the same time during meals, he said.

"The relative risk has probably increased, just as the relative risk of going to the supermarket or catching a bus has increased," said Dr Powell, former chief medical officer at Air New Zealand, who spoke to Bloomberg News on Tuesday (Dec 21) about flying during the pandemic.

What are the risks of infection during a flight?

Whatever the risk was with Delta, we would have to assume the risk would be two to three times greater with Omicron, just as we've seen in other environments. Whatever that low risk - we don't know what it is - on the airplane, it must be increased by a similar amount.

What should passengers do to minimise the risks?

Avoid common-touch surfaces, hand hygiene wherever possible, masks, distancing, controlled-boarding procedures, try to avoid face-to-face contact with other customers, try to avoid being unmasked in flight, for meal and drink services, apart from when really necessary. The advice is the same, it's just that the relative risk has probably increased, just as the relative risk of going to the supermarket or catching a bus has increased with Omicron.

For a two-hour flight, it's pretty easy to say, 'just keep your mask on the whole time'. But if it's a 10-hour flight, it becomes pretty unreasonable to ask people not to eat and drink. What most airlines have been doing is encouraging, but not insisting, on customers trying to stagger their mask-off periods a little bit.

In simple terms, two people masked have minimal transmission from one to the other. If one of you removes your mask, then that person's at greater risk of transmitting and at slightly greater risk of receiving. But if both of you remove then obviously, there's no barrier there and you can freely transmit one to the other.

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2021-12-23 02:42:14Z
1215306581

Intel facing China backlash after Xinjiang statement - CNA

SHANGHAI: US chip maker Intel is facing a backlash from China after telling its suppliers not to source products or labour from the northwestern region of Xinjiang.

Intel said it had been "required to ensure that its supply chain does not use any labour or source goods or services from the Xinjiang region" following restrictions imposed by "multiple governments".

The United States has accused China of widespread human rights abuses in the predominantly Muslim region of Xinjiang, including forced labour. Beijing has repeatedly denied the claims.

The Global Times, a nationalist tabloid run by the ruling Communist Party's People's Daily stable of newspapers, branded Intel's statement as "absurd", adding that the company - which earned 26 per cent of its total revenues from China in 2020 - was "biting the hand that feeds it".

"What we need to do is to make it increasingly expensive for companies to offend China so their losses outweigh their gains," the newspaper said in an editorial.

Netizens also expressed anger at Intel's letter.

On China's Twitter-like Weibo microblog service, singer Karry Wang said he would no longer serve as brand ambassador for Intel, adding in a statement that "national interests exceed everything".

Many Weibo users also called on Chinese citizens to boycott Intel, with one posting under the name "Old Catalan" saying, "Must resist, do not buy!"

Multinational companies have come under pressure as they aim to comply with Xinjiang-related trade sanctions while continuing to operate in China, one of their biggest markets.

The Global Times said in its editorial that multinationals "should be able to endure, properly handle and balance pressure from all parties".

Intel could not immediately be reached for comment.

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2021-12-23 00:44:00Z
1219390185

Rabu, 22 Desember 2021

Despite consumption hit, China to stand fast on tough COVID-19 curbs - CNA

BEIJING: China's strict COVID-19 policy is weighing on consumption and rattling foreign firms, but its effectiveness and the imperative to maintain stability heading into a sensitive year mean Beijing will stick to its approach, experts say.

China has reported just one COVID-19 fatality this year, retaining a tough line even as many other countries ease restrictions, imposing targeted shutdowns and travel curbs even when they disrupted local economies.

Avoiding major outbreaks is especially critical in a year when Beijing hosts both the Winter Olympic Games and the once-every-five-years Communist Party Congress, where President Xi Jinping is expected to clinch a third term as party secretary.

Beijing has been eager to burnish its record on tackling COVID-19, which a government white paper has described as among the "most important achievements" of its governance model - and often points out the high death tolls elsewhere, especially the United States.

"Stability is the number one priority next year," said Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank (China). "Relaxing the zero tolerance policy will not help that goal."

The rapid emergence of the Omicron variant, already causing many countries to backtrack or pause reopening plans, will most likely reinforce Beijing's position. China has reported several imported Omicron cases and one locally transmitted case.

China "cannot let its guard down to the slightest degree" against the new variant, Lei Zhenglong, an official at the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Monday (Dec 20).

The international spotlight will be on Beijing when the Winter Games kick off on Feb 4, before the October Party Congress provides the political highlight of the year.

ESPN reported on Tuesday that the National Hockey League will not send its players to compete in the men's ice hockey tournament at the Olympics because of COVID-19 concerns.

Experts, meanwhile, have expressed concern about the number of older people who remain unvaccinated and the efficacy of the vaccines in use in the country, which has yet to approve foreign vaccines such as those made by Pfizer and Moderna.

Even though 80 per cent of people aged over 60 were vaccinated at the end of November, according to Zheng Zhongwei, another NHC official, that left around 50 million in that age bracket - more than the population of Spain.

Peter Wang, an epidemiology professor at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada, said the "relatively low" efficacy for Chinese vaccines and uncertainty of how long their protection could last would most likely make China wary of opening up soon.

Clinical trial-based efficacy readings for the two main Chinese vaccines, manufactured by Sinopharm and Sinovac, ranged between 50 per cent and 83.5 per cent against the symptomatic disease. That is below the 90 per cent-plus figures for shots from Pfizer and Moderna.

Two recent studies showed antibody response from the two vaccines was weaker against Omicron than against some older versions of the virus, but it remains unclear how the variant would affect the vaccines' overall effectiveness.

WORST-CASE SCENARIO

The COVID-19 policies are credited with helping the country's industrial sector by preventing widespread factory shutdowns and keeping the export machine humming.

Booming exports, bolstered by surging demand from goods from COVID-hit and locked-down economies, drove the country's growth in 2021, hitting double-digit growth every month so far.

However, Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at Oxford Economics, says the hit to consumption likely now outweighs any benefits.

Retail sales rose just 3.9 per cent in November, well below pre-pandemic trends. The catering and hospitality sectors have been hit particularly hard.

"Nowadays the approach is a net negative for the economy," said Kuijs, noting that other highly vaccinated countries have moved to a "living with COVID" approach that makes growth increasingly resilient to new outbreaks and variants.

Foreign firms have warned that expatriate workers are leaving amid concerns over separation from their families, foreign chambers of commerce have reported, and it is hard to get technicians or executives in to upgrade plants or cut deals.

"In a worst-case scenario we fear there may not be meaningful change until late 2022, or even into 2023," said Joerg Wuttke, president of the European Chamber of Commerce in China.

Quarantine requirements for international arrivals vary but are typically at least two weeks and often longer. The northern city of Shenyang, for example, requires travellers to spend four weeks in quarantine and another month of "health management", during which they are advised not to leave home unnecessarily.

On the other side of the equation, an intolerably high number of deaths could result if China loosens controls immediately without higher vaccination coverage for the elderly, said NHC's Zheng.

China, where the pandemic first emerged in the central city of Wuhan, has officially reported just 4,636 deaths, well below many other countries and a tiny fraction of its population, and relatively few in the country of 1.41 billion have been infected.

Preparing the population for a steep rise in cases would be key when Beijing eventually pivots to opening up, said Hsu Li Yang, a infectious diseases professor at the National University of Singapore.

"You have to prepare for that once you open up, the virus would spread all over the country because it's just almost impossible to contain it," Hsu said, adding that transmission-slowing measures such as isolating infections from healthy people may still be necessary.

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2021-12-22 04:30:49Z
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Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day - Bloomberg

Putin warns he’s ready to use his military. McDonald's is forced to ration customers' fries in Japan. Global stocks rebound. Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Vladimir Putin warned he's ready to use his military to counter NATO’s expansion toward Russian borders, but said he hoped for a diplomatic solution to rising tensions as the U.S. said it was ready to discuss his security demands. The Russian president told the German chancellor that Moscow wants "legally enshrined" security guarantees that would bar any NATO advance eastward or the deployment of missiles in countries bordering Russia. The U.S. and Europe accuse Russia of a massive build-up of troops near Ukraine in preparation for a possible invasion as early as next month, something Russia denies. The U.S. and its allies are working on plans to impose painful new sanctions on Russia if it invades Ukraine. 

President Joe Biden said omicron will result in more infections among vaccinated Americans, but with few or no symptoms, while the unvaccinated potentially face a winter of severe illness and death. He said those who had had their shots should proceed with Christmas plans, as the U.S. revealed omicron had become the country’s dominant strain. In the U.K. Boris Johnson put a relatively normal Christmas at the top of his wish, ruling out stricter restrictions before the festivities end. Elsewhere Thailand halted its quarantine-free entry program, dealing a fresh blow to the tourism industry; Singapore found its first omicron cluster; and New Zealand pushed back its border reopening. Meanwhile, back in the States, the FDA is poised to authorize separate pills from Pfizer and Merck to treat higher-risk infected patients as soon as this week.

A global rebound in stocks may continue in Asia on Wednesday as investor sentiment improves after being roiled by uncertainty over the omicron virus strain and stimulus outlook. Futures for Japan, Australia and Hong Kong rose. The S&P 500 snapped three days of declines and the technology-heavy Nasdaq 100 climbed more than 2%. A gauge of Chinese shares traded in the U.S. surged about 7%. Thinner trading volumes heading into the Christmas holidays could exacerbate market swings

China’s crackdown on Taiwanese companies operating on the mainland risks accelerating a gradual decoupling that’s been happening for years due to higher costs and increased local competition. Far Eastern Group was fined $14 million in November for what officials and state media said were environmental, land-use, health and safety violations. But Chinese officials made it clear that the the fines were connected to Far Eastern’s role as one of the biggest donors to the party of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen. Taiwan’s Economic Minister said the Far Eastern incident had triggered a wave of Taiwanese businesses looking to return home

China plans to ban employers from stating gender preferences in job ads or asking female applicants about their marital and pregnancy status under a proposed overhaul of an almost three-decade-old women’s rights law. While gender discrimination is already broadly illegal in China, current laws are vague and enforcement is poor. Meanwhile in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has presented controversial new legislation in parliament, seeking to raise the legal age at which women can marry to 21 from 18.

What We’ve Been Reading

And finally, here’s what Tracy’s interested in today

On Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent the lira on a round trip with the unveiling of emergency measures aimed at halting the Turkish currency's stunning slide. My Bloomberg colleague Asli Kandemir has a great explainer of exactly how it's supposed to work over here. But put simply, Turkey is promising to make up for losses incurred by holders of lira deposits should the lira's decline against hard currencies exceed bank interest rates. The hope is that by setting up a floor under the Turkish currency, people will feel more comfortable keeping their lira as opposed to shifting it to dollars or gold (or Bitcoin!) to escape inflation and negative real rates. Using the program, however, comes with one big catch: participants have to agree to lock-up their lira for between three and 12 months.

So far the lira has held onto gains after rallying nearly 50% this week

I've seen lots of different descriptions of Erdogan's new plan, with some arguing that it amounts to a backdoor rate hike and others saying that it looks like a clandestine currency peg. Then there's the DeFi interpretation. There are shades of 'HODL' and (3,3) here, two of the crypto market's biggest memes. The first saying is an enjoiner to encourage people to hold onto their crypto when times are tough (rather than selling), while (3,3) was created by OlympusDAO to describe the game theory behind its OHM coin. With Olympus, people basically stake (deposit) money in order to earn rewards in Ohm. The payouts are highest when everyone stays staked and agrees not to unstake (or withdraw). So (3,3) represents the maximum positive outcome for OlympusDAO participants.

In a similar way, Erdogan's plan works so long as people agree to keep their money locked up and the lira stops falling (unlike with OHM, there are minimum lock-up periods and users will be penalized if they withdraw their money too early). If people don't choose to HODL lira and the currency keeps declining, then Turkey's Treasury could be on the hook for a wider and wider differential between bank rates and hard FX. The concern, as my Bloomberg colleagues have written, is that this places a burden on the budget which could well end up getting monetized and then generate even higher inflation and more withdrawals. In other words, Erdogan just made a very big bet on the power of (3,3).

You can follow Tracy Alloway on Twitter at @tracyalloway.

— With assistance by Tracy Alloway

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    2021-12-21 23:36:13Z
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    Selasa, 21 Desember 2021

    Thailand reinstates mandatory COVID-19 quarantine over Omicron concerns - Reuters

    A waitress waits for customer at a restaurant in Khaosan Road, one of the favourite tourist spots, as Thailand bans entry from eight African countries over the coronavirus Omicron variant, in Bangkok, Thailand, November 30, 2021. REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa

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    Dec 21 (Reuters) - Thailand will reinstate its mandatory COVID-19 quarantine for foreign visitors and scrap a quarantine waiver from Tuesday due to concerns over the spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus.

    The decision to halt Thailand's "Test and Go" waiver means visitors will have to undergo hotel quarantine, which ranges between 7 to 10 days.

    Meanwhile, a so-called "sandbox" programme, which requires visitors to remain in a specific location but allows them free movement outside of their accommodation, will also be suspended in all places except for the tourist resort island of Phuket.

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    "After Dec. 21, there will be no new registrations for 'Test and Go', only quarantine or Phuket sandbox," said deputy government spokeswoman Rachada Dhanadirek.

    The announcement came a day after Thailand reported the first case of local transmission of the Omicron variant. read more

    It also came weeks after Thailand reopened to foreign visitors in November, ending nearly 18 months of strict entry policies that contributed to a collapse in tourism, a key industry and economic driver that drew 40 million visitors in 2019.

    About 200,000 visitors who had previously registered for the quarantine waiver and sandbox programme will still be eligible, said government spokesman Thanakorn Wangboonkongchana.

    "This is not to shut off tourists but to temporarily suspend arrivals," he said.

    The decision will be reviewed on Jan. 4, he added.

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    Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat; Writing by Patpicha Tanakasempipat; Editing by Ed Davies

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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    2021-12-21 09:13:00Z
    1204119452

    Covid-19 vaccine bookings for children in S'pore aged 5 to 11 to start on Dec 22; jabs from Dec 27 - The Straits Times

    SINGAPORE - Covid-19 vaccination for children aged five to 11 will begin next Monday (Dec 27), with bookings opening from Wednesday - first for Primary 4 to 6 pupils.

    The vaccination exercise for more than 300,000 children will be done across 15 paediatric centres, which will be rolled out in batches.

    The Ministry of Education (MOE) and the Early Childhood Development Agency (ECDA) announced on Tuesday (Dec 21) details for the vaccination programme, which will be open to all children who are Singapore citizens, permanent residents and long-term pass holders.

    Older children will go first, starting with Primary 4 to Primary 6 pupils attending MOE schools next year. Close to 120,000 SMS invitations will be sent on Wednesday to their parents to book appointments. The text messages will include a unique link to book a vaccination appointment.

    From next Monday, parents of all other children born between 2009 and 2012, and who are not in MOE schools, can register their interest for the vaccination. They can do so at the MOH National Appointment System (NAS) at this website.

    Primary 1 to Primary 3 pupils will be next, and their parents will receive booking invites from the week of Jan 3 next year.

    This will be followed by all children aged five and above (born between 2013 and 2017), from the week of Jan 10. Their parents can also register their interest on NAS.

    The 15 paediatric vaccination centres will be spread across Singapore and are mainly located with existing vaccination centres for adults and older children.

    The MOE and ECDA said that there will be separate queues and spaces at the centres for younger children to ensure safe distancing and correct administration of the vaccine.

    These centres will be manned by medical personnel trained in paediatric care, as well as staff trained in administering vaccination to children.

    Seven centres will start operations from next Monday, followed by seven more centres from Jan 3. Each centre can take up to 1,000 appointments a day.

    An additional paediatric vaccination centre within Yusof Ishak Secondary School will also be set up to cater to families in the Punggol and Sengkang area, which will start on Jan 11.

    In a statement on Tuesday, Education Minister Chan Chun Sing said: "As parents, we all want to keep our children safe and healthy. Our children come into regular contact with family and friends as part of their daily lives.

    "While the risk of our children being infected can never be entirely prevented, vaccination will reduce their chances of being seriously ill, if they are infected."

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    2021-12-21 03:00:00Z
    1195791551

    No increase in frequency of side effects after Covid-19 vaccine booster shots: HSA - The Straits Times

    SINGAPORE - There has been no increase in the frequency of side effects among people who got their Covid-19 vaccine booster shots, said the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) on Monday (Dec 20).

    It has received 304 adverse event reports linked to booster shots of the Pfizer-BioNTech/Comirnaty vaccine, and another 87 reports linked to the Moderna/Spikevax vaccine.

    This works out to 0.03 per cent of the 1,451,798 booster doses administered between Sept 15 and Nov 30.

    Common side effects included rashes, facial swelling, chest discomfort, palpitations and fever.

    The HSA also received 24 reports of severe side effects linked to the booster shots, representing 0.002 per cent of administered doses.

    These included four cases of myocarditis - inflammation of the heart muscles - as well as other cases of heart failure, seizures, numbness and weakness of the limbs and blood clots.

    No cases of anaphylaxis - a life-threatening allergic reaction - have been reported for booster doses so far.

    A total of 86 anaphylaxis cases were linked to the first two shots of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, and another eight cases to the Sinovac-CoronaVac vaccine.

    The reported side effects are similar to those experienced by some people after the first two doses of mRNA vaccines, HSA said in its latest safety update on vaccination.

    "As the booster dose programme was recently rolled out, HSA continues to closely monitor the adverse events and will inform the public of any significant events that are observed, as well as take relevant regulatory action as required," it added.

    In the report, HSA also gave details of the number of reports filed after people suffered side effects that doctors suspected to be associated with Covid-19 vaccines.

    It received 11,601 adverse event reports associated with the Pfizer vaccine, representing 0.14 per cent of doses administered. It also received 2,591 reports linked to the Moderna vaccine, representing 0.12 per cent of doses.

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    2021-12-20 14:48:11Z
    CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnN0cmFpdHN0aW1lcy5jb20vc2luZ2Fwb3JlL2hlYWx0aC9uby1pbmNyZWFzZS1pbi1mcmVxdWVuY3ktb2Ytc2lkZS1lZmZlY3RzLWFmdGVyLWJvb3N0ZXItc2hvdHMtaHNh0gEA

    Senin, 20 Desember 2021

    China urges real estate project acquisitions to aid struggling developers - CNA

    Regulators are urging Chinese banks to actively provide lending to fund acquisitions of projects owned by cash-strapped developers, and avoid cutting, or withdrawing, loans to these companies, China Securities Journal reported.

    But only the acquisition of real estate projects, rather than acquiring stakes in the struggling developers, would be encouraged, the newspaper said, citing unidentified sources.

    Meanwhile, developers without financial problems are also being encouraged to issue bonds to fund such acquisitions, and PBOC is urging financial institutions to invest in such debt instruments, according to the newspaper.

    Developers including China Merchants Shekou Industrial Zone Holdings plan to issue debt instruments via the interbank market in the near term to fund mergers and acquisitions, local media has reported.

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    2021-12-20 03:24:00Z
    CBMid2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vYnVzaW5lc3MvY2hpbmEtdXJnZXMtcmVhbC1lc3RhdGUtcHJvamVjdC1hY3F1aXNpdGlvbnMtYWlkLXN0cnVnZ2xpbmctZGV2ZWxvcGVycy0yMzkwNzUx0gEA

    Minggu, 19 Desember 2021

    Italy eyes new COVID-19 measures amid Omicron worries: Reports - CNA

    ROME: Italy's government is considering new measures to avoid a surge in COVID-19 infections during the holiday period, local newspapers reported on Sunday (Dec 19), amid worries over the spread of the highly contagious Omicron coronavirus variant.

    After holding a meeting with ministers on Dec 23, Prime Minister Mario Draghi could impose an obligation on the vaccinated to show a negative test to access crowded places, including discos and stadiums, daily Corriere della Sera reported.

    Negative tests could also be required to enter cinemas and theatres, along with wearing masks outdoors.

    Under current rules, people who have been vaccinated or have recently recovered from the disease have free access to indoor seating at bars and restaurants, museums, cinemas, clubs and sporting events.

    "Some measures, such as making masks compulsory even outdoors ... could be taken soon," Franco Locatelli, one of the government's main scientific advisors, told the newspaper.

    Italy - where vaccination is already mandatory for healthcare workers, school staff, police and the military - could extend the jab obligation to all workers from January, Corriere della Sera reported.

    The National Health Institute (ISS) said on Saturday the Omicron variant is spreading quickly in Italy, with new cases identified in the country's north and south. A total of 84 infections have so far been identified.

    Italy, the first Western country to be hit by the COVID-19 pandemic early last year, has seen an increase new infections and deaths in recent weeks, but daily caseloads remain well below some other European countries such as Britain and Germany.

    Earlier this week, Rome extended a COVID-19 state of emergency to Mar 31 and ruled that all visitors from EU countries must take a test before departure.

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    2021-12-19 11:31:54Z
    1206595423

    Sabtu, 18 Desember 2021

    Omicron cases doubling in 1.5 to 3 days in areas with local spread: WHO - The Straits Times

    GENEVA (REUTERS) - The Omicron coronavirus variant has been reported in 89 countries and the number of cases is doubling in 1½ to three days in areas with community transmission, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Saturday (Dec 18).

    Omicron is spreading rapidly in countries with high levels of population immunity, but it is unclear if this is due to the virus' ability to evade immunity, its inherent increased transmissibility or a combination of both, the WHO said in an update.

    The agency designated Omicron a variant of concern on Nov 26, soon after it was first detected, and much is still not known about it, including the severity of the illness it causes.

    "There are still limited data on the clinical severity of Omicron," the WHO said.

    "More data are needed to understand the severity profile and how severity is impacted by vaccination and pre-existing immunity."

    It added that "there are still limited available data, and no peer-reviewed evidence, on vaccine efficacy or effectiveness to date for Omicron".

    The WHO warned that with cases rising so rapidly, hospitals could be overwhelmed in some places.

    “Hospitalisations in the UK and South Africa continue to rise, and given rapidly increasing case counts, it is possible that many healthcare systems may become quickly overwhelmed.”

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    2021-12-18 22:40:23Z
    1191888452

    Omicron cases doubling in 1.5 to 3 days in areas with local spread: WHO - CNA

    GENEVA: The Omicron coronavirus variant has been reported in 89 countries and the number of cases is doubling in one-and-a-half to three days in areas with community transmission, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Saturday (Dec 18).

    Omicron is spreading rapidly in countries with high levels of population immunity, but it is unclear if this is due to the virus' ability to evade immunity, its inherent increased transmissibility or a combination of both, the WHO said in an update.

    The agency designated Omicron a variant of concern on Nov 26, soon after it was first detected, and much is still not known about it, including the severity of the illness it causes.

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    2021-12-18 10:58:00Z
    1191888452

    Jumat, 17 Desember 2021

    Omicron more likely to reinfect than Delta, no milder: Study - CNA

    The risk of reinfection with the Omicron coronavirus variant is more than five times higher and it has shown no sign of being milder than Delta, a study showed, as cases soar across Europe and threaten year-end festivities.

    The results of the study by Imperial College London were based on UK Health Security Agency and National Health Service data on people who tested positive for COVID-19 in a PCR test in England between Nov 29 and Dec 11.

    "We find no evidence (for both risk of hospitalisation attendance and symptom status) of Omicron having different severity from Delta," the study said, although it added that data on hospitalisations remains very limited.

    "Controlling for vaccine status, age, sex, ethnicity, asymptomatic status, region and specimen date, Omicron was associated with a 5.4-fold higher risk of reinfection compared with Delta," the study, which was dated Dec. 16, added.

    The protection afforded by past infection against reinfection with Omicron may be as low as 19 per cent, Imperial College (ICL) said in a statement, noting that the study had not yet been peer reviewed.

    The researchers found a significantly increased risk of developing a symptomatic Omicron case compared to Delta for those who were two or more weeks past their second vaccine dose, and two or more weeks past their booster dose.

    The study involved AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines.

    Depending on the estimates used for vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic infection from the Delta variant, this translates into vaccine effectiveness of between 0 per cent and 20 per cent after two doses, and between 55 per cent and 80 per cent after a booster dose.

    "This study provides further evidence of the very substantial extent to which Omicron can evade prior immunity given by both infection or vaccination," study lead Professor Neil Ferguson said in ICL's statement.

    "This level of immune evasion means that Omicron poses a major, imminent threat to public health."

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    2021-12-17 16:56:00Z
    1191888452

    Omicron rewrites the COVID plan for 2022 - Yahoo Singapore News

    By Julie Steenhuysen

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - As the Omicron variant gains momentum in Europe and the United States, scientists are rewriting their expectations for the COVID-19 pandemic next year.

    Just weeks ago, disease experts were predicting that countries would begin to emerge from the pandemic in 2022 after enduring a series of surges driven by the Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta variants. First among them would be populations with a significant amount of exposure to the coronavirus, through a combination of infections and vaccination.

    In those places, COVID was expected to ease into an endemic disease, hopefully with less-severe periodic or seasonal outbreaks. Vaccines, available for much of 2021 only in wealthy nations, could reach the majority of the global population by the end of the year ahead.

    But the rapid spread of the highly-mutated Omicron variant, identified in late November, and its apparent ability to reinfect people at a higher rate than its predecessors, is undermining that hope.

    Already, countries are reverting to measures used earlier in the pandemic: restricting travel, reimposing mask requirements, advising against large gatherings for the winter holidays. While it is not quite back to square one, much more of the world will need to be vaccinated or exposed to COVID to get past the worst of the pandemic, disease experts told Reuters.

    "People are sick of the pandemic and God knows I am, but unless we can get some urgency to compel our leaders to take action, I really see 2022 being a lot of more of the same that we saw in 2021," said Dr. Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada.

    Even after COVID becomes a more endemic disease, new variants will spawn outbreaks and seasonal surges for years to come.

    "There's always going to be a baseline number of COVID cases, hospitalizations and deaths," said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. "A lot of people haven't come to terms with that."

    The hope is that the virus diminishes to the point where it is no longer disruptive. But living with COVID-19 does not mean the virus is no longer a threat.

    Instead, people will need to be ready to adjust when the next variant comes along, said Dr. Tom Frieden, chief executive of Resolve to Save Lives, a global public health initiative, and former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "You need to recognize that at certain times, it's going to be safer to do things than at other times."

    PANDEMIC PHASE ENDING IN 2022?

    Some scientists are not entirely ready to abandon hope that some parts of the world will emerge from the pandemic next year. More than 270 million people have been infected with COVID, according to the World Health Organization, while an estimated 57% of the global population has received at least one vaccine dose, representing potential protection that did not exist two years ago.

    "Even if that immunity is not as good against Omicron, it doesn't mean that it's worthless. And that immunity is more effective against serious illness than it is against getting infected at all," said Dr. David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins.

    So far, most of the studies looking at the effectiveness of vaccines against Omicron have focused on neutralizing antibodies, which latch on to the virus and prevent it from entering and infecting cells. Blood test results from fully vaccinated people show Omicron has learned to escape neutralization; a booster dose might restore that protection.

    Immune system T cells, which destroy infected cells, also appear still to be able to recognize the variant. Many experts believe this second line of defense will prevent hospitalizations and deaths.

    "You still have a lot of people who are susceptible" because they are not yet vaccinated, said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at New York University. She said that was among the reasons she believes it will be some time before the world moves from pandemic to endemic COVID-19.

    In the meantime, living with COVID in 2022 will likely mean assessing local risks and protecting oneself through vaccination, masking and social distancing.

    "When I go to the store this afternoon, what helps me is to know how much COVID is in my community," said Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of the Department of Medicine at University of California, San Francisco.

    "There will not be one state of the pandemic. There will be different states for different people and for different regions," he said. "And that's going to be the way it is for the foreseeable future."

    (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

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    2021-12-17 11:09:28Z
    1220052127

    Pubs, parties push Australia's COVID-19 cases to record levels - CNA

    "Case numbers are no longer the metric ... the real measure is what does it mean for serious illness, (intensive care), hospitalisation, pressures on the hospital system," Morrison said during a media briefing on Friday.

    He said initial signs suggest the Omicron variant could be less severe than other variants.

    At least 97 cases, including some potential Omicron ones, have been detected among people who attended the Taylor Swift theme party.

    More than 600 people who checked in at the venue must test and self-isolate but officials flagged there could have been more guests.

    A record 3,820 cases were reported in Australia on Friday, with the bulk in its most populous states of New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria, exceeding the previous high of around 3,400 a day earlier.

    NSW authorities have warned daily cases could hit 25,000 in the state by the end of January with authorities looking to accelerate the rollout of booster vaccine shots to ward off the threat from the Omicron strain.

    Health officials blamed gatherings at pubs and clubs for the "rapid rise" in cases. "Some of these have led to super-spreading events," NSW health official Jeremy McAnulty said.

    Neighbouring Victoria, meanwhile, is on alert after an Omicron-infected person attended a busy pub and hotel in Melbourne.

    Australia has reported around 243,000 cases and 2,134 deaths since the pandemic began.

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    2021-12-17 02:49:32Z
    1218413091

    Kamis, 16 Desember 2021

    France says 110000 fake COVID-19 health passes are in circulation - CNA

    PARIS: About 110,000 fake health passes are in circulation in France, the interior ministry said on Thursday (Dec 16), with hundreds of investigations launched against makers and users of the forged documents.

    The health pass, showing proof of vaccination, COVID-19 recovery or a recent negative test result, is required for access to public transport, restaurants and cultural events.

    As they investigate users and distributors of the fake documents, police have found that medical staff are sometimes complicit in the fraud, said Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin.

    "The problem with the fake health passes is that they often involve the collusion of real doctors or real nurses," he told the France 2 broadcaster. This makes offences "very difficult to prove".

    About 100 people had been arrested as a result of 400 investigations since the health pass became mandatory in parts of public life, Darmanin said.

    They risk up to five years in prison, he said, adding that some have already been sentenced to suspended or actual jail terms.

    Last month, a doctor who allegedly sold at least 220 fake health passes in the Paris region was charged and detained.

    Darmanin said he was in favour of dropping cases against users of fake health passes who agreed to get a real one legally instead.

    The French government has warned that the number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care could reach 4,000 during the Christmas season, compared to 3,000 now.

    It is promoting booster vaccine shots to control the worst of the onslaught of the Omicron variant, and has warned that health passes will no longer be valid from mid-January unless holders get a vaccine top-up.

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    2021-12-16 14:27:00Z
    CBMiTWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vd29ybGQvZnJhbmNlLWNvdmlkMTktZmFrZS1oZWFsdGgtcGFzcy0yMzg0Nzcx0gEA

    Japan adds Moderna shot to COVID-19 vaccine booster arsenal, joining Pfizer - CNA

    TOKYO: Japan on Thursday (Dec 16) officially approved Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine for its booster shot programme, while Novavax filed for first approval of its shot in the country.

    Moderna's mRNA-type vaccine, used mostly in Japan to date at workplace inoculation sites, was approved for used as a third booster shot for those aged 18 or older, following a recommendation from health ministry experts on Wednesday.

    That is the same age range applied to the shot developed by Pfizer and BioNTech, which has been given out about 93,000 times as a booster through Wednesday, taking in about 0.1 per cent of the population.

    Novavax's protein-based vaccine was submitted to regulators by its Japanese distributor Takeda Pharmaceutical, the company said in a statement. Pending approval, Takeda plans to make the vaccine in Japan and distribute it in early 2022.

    After a relatively late start, Japan has fully inoculated almost 80 per cent of its population, the highest among Group of Seven economies. The country has about 31 million doses left between the Pfizer and Moderna shots, with deals in place to get 170 million more in 2022.

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    2021-12-16 03:34:00Z
    1190711005

    Rabu, 15 Desember 2021

    Sinovac vaccine offers lower protection against severe disease from COVID-19: MOH, NCID study - CNA

    The study, which was conducted from Oct 1 to Nov 21, involved people aged 40 and above who received two doses of the vaccines under the national vaccination programme.

    Of the 1.25 million people covered in the study, 62,900 had COVID-19 and 1,710 were considered severe cases. 

    Most of them - 73.7 per cent - took the Pfizer-BioNTech/Comirnaty vaccine, while 23.9 per cent received the Moderna shots and 2.4 per cent received the Sinovac vaccine.

    "The analysis accounted for differences in age, gender, race, housing type and the daily differences in infection rate," said NCID and MOH.

    They recommended that those who have already received two doses of the Sinovac vaccine get a dose of an authorised mRNA vaccine as the third dose of their primary vaccination series. 

    "Otherwise, they should complete their primary series with a third dose of the Sinovac-CoronaVac."

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    2021-12-15 13:32:07Z
    1200440287

    Philippines scales down mass COVID-19 vaccinations as typhoon approaches - CNA

    MANILA: An incoming typhoon has forced the Philippines to delay COVID-19 vaccinations for millions of people living in the path of the storm, as authorities hastened preparations in anticipation of its arrival this week.

    Typhoon Rai is expected to hit land on Thursday (Dec 16), bringing strong winds and rain in the central Philippines in what would be the 15th typhoon, and one of the strongest, to hit the Southeast Asian archipelago this year. Thousands have been preemptively evacuated.

    The Philippines kicked off its second three-day vaccination drive on Wednesday, targeting 7 million people in 17 regions. That will be cut to six regions this week.

    Half of the country's 110 million population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, but coverage remains uneven and the rate of full vaccinations is still low.

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    2021-12-15 06:22:00Z
    CBMicmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vYXNpYS9waGlsaXBwaW5lcy1zY2FsZXMtZG93bi1tYXNzLWNvdmlkLTE5LXZhY2NpbmF0aW9ucy10eXBob29uLWFwcHJvYWNoZXMtMjM4MDg0NtIBAA

    Hong Kong's Property Tycoons Sacrifice Profit to Appease Beijing - Bloomberg

    One Hong Kong developer is offering half-price flats in the world’s most expensive residential market. Others have donated sprawling farmlands for public housing. And the scion of a property empire says it’s time to put the city’s betterment above profits.

    Two years after street demonstrations rocked Hong Kong and Chinese authorities pointed a finger of blame at sky-high home prices, the city’s tycoon developers are under pressure to help ease its housing crisis. Asia’s pre-eminent financial hub isn’t just expensive, it’s also one of the world’s most densely populated, squeezing most of its 7.5 million dwellers into tiny flats, or worse into smaller “cage” or “coffin” homes. 

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    2021-12-14 21:00:00Z
    CAIiEC_6YWCQ_PtabrS8da7luIIqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow4uzwCjCF3bsCMKrOrwM

    Omicron spreading at unprecedented rate: WHO, Europe News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

    GENEVA (AFP) - The new coronavirus variant Omicron is spreading at an unprecedented rate, the WHO said on Tuesday (Dec 14), urging countries to act swiftly to rein in transmission and protect their health systems.

    Since the new, heavily-mutated variant was first detected in southern Africa last month, it has been reported in 77 countries, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

    But, he stressed, “the reality is that Omicron is probably in most countries, even if it hasn’t been detected yet.”

    “Omicron is spreading at a rate we have not seen with any previous variant,” he said.

    WHO expert Abdi Mahamud, meanwhile, told the press conference that modelling indicated that some countries in Europe – already battling a fierce fifth pandemic wave – could see Omicron become the dominant variant within days.

    The warnings came amid growing evidence that the new variant might be better at skirting vaccine protections than previous ones.

    A study published by Pfizer Tuesday showed that two doses of its Covid jabs offer around 70 per cent protection against severe disease from Omicron, compared to 93 per cent against earlier variants.

    Data has also, meanwhile, indicated that the new variant might cause milder symptoms.

    ‘Very dangerous situation’

    But WHO expert Bruce Aylward strenuously warned against “jumping to a conclusion that this is a mild disease.”

    “If we go into a season like we’re going into now when a lot of people want to get together for the holiday season, and we have a more transmissible virus,” that we don’t actually know is milder, “we could be setting ourselves up for a very dangerous situation,” he warned.

    Tedros also cautioned against “dismissing Omicron as mild,” pointing out that even if the variant does cause less severe disease, the sheer number of cases could once again overwhelm unprepared health systems.”

    He called on countries to use all possible measures to rein in the spread, including scaling up vaccination, encouraging mask-wearing and physical distancing.

    “Do it all. Do it consistently. Do it well.”

    WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan also stressed that more data was needed to determine the severity of Omicron, urging countries to prepare to “deal with what is likely to happen, which is a large wave of cases.”

    Those cases “may or may not be less severe, but... will in themselves generate pressure on the health system,” he said, insisting on the need to “reduce that pressure.”

    ‘Vaccine hoarding’

    As countries scramble to deal with Omicron, Tedros voiced concern that many were rolling out booster vaccine doses to the general population, warning that this could deepen inequity in vaccine access between wealthy and poorer countries.

    “WHO is concerned that such programmes will repeat the Covid-19 vaccine hoarding” seen previously this year, he said.

    He said there was not yet enough data to show a third dose is needed to effectively protect healthy adults against the variant, although he said that “as we move forward, boosters could play an important role.”

    At the same time, many vulnerable people in poorer countries have not yet received a single dose.

    But Tedros pointed out on Tuesday that 41 countries have yet to vaccinate even 10 per cent of their populations.

    “Let me be very clear: WHO is not against boosters. We’re against inequity. Our main concern is to save lives everywhere,” Tedros said.

    “It’s a question of prioritisation,” he said.

    “The order matters. Giving boosters to groups at low risk of severe disease or death simply endangers the lives of those at high risk who are still waiting for their primary doses because of supply constraints.”

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    2021-12-14 17:33:40Z
    1191888452

    Selasa, 14 Desember 2021

    Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine protecting against hospitalisation during Omicron wave: Study - CNA

    JOHANNESBURG: Two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine appear to have given 70 per cent protection against hospitalisation in South Africa in recent weeks, a major real-world study on the potential impact of Omicron showed on Tuesday (Dec 14), as the country battles a spike in infections linked to the new variant.

    The study released by South Africa's largest private health insurance administrator, Discovery Health, was based on more than 211,000 positive COVID-19 test results from Nov 15 to Dec 7, around 78,000 of which were attributed to Omicron.

    The 78,000 results are not confirmed Omicron cases, meaning the study is not able to draw conclusive findings about the variant labelled "of concern" by the World Health Organization.

    South African scientists have so far confirmed around 550 Omicron sequences, with the variant accounting for 78 per cent of sequences from November, more than the previously dominant Delta variant.

    South Africa alerted the world to Omicron late last month, triggering alarm that it could cause another surge in global infections, and leading to the imposition of travel restrictions on southern Africa. South Africa's daily infections have since risen to around 20,000 in recent days.

    Based on analysis by Discovery's clinical research and actuarial teams, and in collaboration with South Africa's Medical Research Council (SAMRC), the real-world study calculated that two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech offered 70per cent protection against hospitalisation during the recent surge in cases and 33 per cent protection against infection.

    South Africa is using the Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson vaccines in its COVID-19 immunisation campaign, with more than 20 million Pfizer doses administered so far.
     

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    2021-12-14 09:34:00Z
    1202955929

    Firms in Chinese manufacturing hub suspend operations amid COVID-19 outbreak - CNA

    SHANGHAI: Multiple companies have suspended operations in one of China's biggest manufacturing hubs as local authorities try to contain a COVID-19 outbreak, halting production of goods from batteries to textile dyes and plastics.
     
    At least 20 listed companies have shut operations in virus-hit areas in Zhejiang, an eastern province with a large industrial sector that accounts for around 6 per cent of China's GDP and where many goods are manufactured for export.
     
    Tens of thousands of Zhejiang residents are in quarantine and some domestic flights have been suspended as a national health official said the outbreak in three cities - Ningbo, Shaoxing and Hangzhou - was developing at a "relatively rapid" speed.
     
    The three cities accounted for more than 50 per cent of the province's economic output of around 6.46 trillion yuan (US$1.02 trillion) last year.
     
    Zhejiang reported 44 locally transmitted cases with confirmed symptoms on Dec 13, official data showed on Tuesday, taking the total to 217 just over a week since the first case was reported on Dec 6. Prior to the current outbreak, the province had reported just one local case this year.
     
    Companies reporting suspended production on Tuesday included Zhejiang Mustang Battery, Guobang Pharma and textile dyes maker Zhejiang Runtu.

    Ningo-based Mustang Battery said it expected the outbreak to be brought under control very soon, and the production suspension was a temporary measure that "will not have a long-term negative impact on the company's growth."
     
    Zhejiang Runtu said all its units in the Zhejiang Shangyu Economic Development Zone (SEDZ), which accounts for 95 per cent of its revenue, had been halted since Dec 9 and it expected a negative impact on its fourth quarter results.
     
    There are more than 350 industrial enterprises in the zone, which is located near the cities of Ningbo, Hangzhou, Shanghai, Suzhou and Wenzhou.
     
    Ningbo Homelink Eco-Itech, Zhejiang Zhongxin Fluoride Materials, Zhejiang Jingsheng Mechanical & Electrical and Zhejiang Fenglong Electric have also suspended work in affected areas.

    The companies said they halted operations in line with local government orders in Zhenhai district in Ningbo and Shangyu district in Shaoxing, which curtailed all production bar essential manufacturing.
     
    The orders cover all companies in the affected areas, but only listed firms are required to disclose any impact on their business.
     
    Major industries in Zhenhai, which has a port, include manufacturing of precision machinery and chemicals. The district also hosts factories with investments by more than 700 foreign companies including LG Electronics and Toshiba, according to the Zhenhai government's website.

    Sinopec's Zhenhai Refining and Chemicals, the biggest oil refinery in China, said on Tuesday it was maintaining a high operational rate despite tightened COVID measures. The refinery, which has annual crude oil refining capacity of 460,000 barrels-per-day, is currently processing 60,000 tonnes of crude oil each day, the company said in statement.
     
    More than 50,000 people have been quarantined at centralised facilities across the coastal province of 64.4 million, while a further nearly half a million people were being monitored.

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    2021-12-14 08:06:13Z
    1207673875