Selasa, 25 Januari 2022

Netherlands expected to ease COVID-19 curbs despite record infections - CNA

Foreign studies show hospital admissions with Omicron are between 40 per cent and 60 per cent lower, while intensive care admissions halved, they said.

Government advisers said bars, restaurants and theatres should be allowed to open until 10pm.

Patrons will have to produce a pass that shows when a person is fully vaccinated or has recovered from an infection, or can show a negative recent test. Amusements parks, zoos and sports matches are also expected to be allowed to open for crowds.

On Monday, more than 60,000 new infections were recorded over a 24-hour period.

The Dutch association of regional public health authorities, GGD GHOR, said it had reached maximum capacity and warned that people would have to wait longer to get tested.

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2022-01-25 07:53:00Z
CBMiZ2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vd29ybGQvbmV0aGVybGFuZHMtZWFzZS1jb3ZpZC0xOS1jdXJicy1kZXNwaXRlLXJlY29yZC1pbWZlY3Rpb25zLTI0NTgwNjbSAQA

Senin, 24 Januari 2022

Quick-thinking grandma, 73, outfoxes scammers, helps police nab them - The Independent

Singapore — A 73-year-old woman pulled a fast one on scammers who told her a tall tale about her grandson, which ended up with one man getting arrested and charged.

The woman, who hails from Long Island, New York, received a call from a man who said he was in trouble and needed bail money. The caller pretended to be her grandson.

The woman, who only asked to be known by her first name, Jean, grew suspicious right away.

“I knew he was a real scammer. I just knew he wasn’t going to scam me. He starts calling me ‘grandma,’ and then I’m like, I don’t have a grandson that drives, so I knew it was a scam.”

Jean, who used to work for US emergency hotline 911, received the call from the man last Thursday (Jan 20).

And although she immediately recognised that a group of people were trying to scam her, she pretended to go along with the scheme.

Later, she got another call from a man who said he was a lawyer, who told her $8,000 was needed as bail money for Jean’s alleged grandson.

Jean said she had the money with her, but did not really believe the scammers would come over and get it. 

“I told him I had the money in the house, and I figured, he’s not going to fall for that. Well, he fell for that hook, line and sinker,” she said.

And then a third man who claimed to be a bail bondsman said he would collect the money for the “grandson” from Jean’s home.

She called the police and told them about the phone calls, and they came to her residence.

When a man posing as the bail bondsman came to her door, Jean gave him an envelope full of paper towels.

The policemen, who had been lying in wait at Jean’s home, then tackled the man, 28-year-old Joshua Estrella Gomez, as he turned to leave.

He has been charged by officers of the Nassau County Police Department with attempted grand larceny in the third degree. 

“I feel like gotcha, and I feel like, like you say, so many people fall for this, and you only hear about it on the other end after they’ve lost $8,000,” added Jean in an interview. 

While Jean was successful in nabbing the scammer, Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder asked the community to do their part in protecting vulnerable members, especially the elderly.

“Speak to your families. Speak to your neighbours. Visit those that are vulnerable. Let them know, don’t listen to these scams.

These individuals sit at home and have nothing else to do but think of a way to take advantage of our elderly.”

/TISG

Read also: Public concerned how elderly can tell difference between genuine SMS and messages from scammers

Public concerned how elderly can tell difference between genuine SMS and messages from scammers

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2022-01-24 09:00:26Z
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Some Hong Kong civil servants to work from home as COVID-19 spreads - CNA

HONG KONG: Hong Kong will take steps from Tuesday (Jan 25) to cut the number of civil servants working in their offices, as it battles a spate of COVID-19 infections in the run-up to the busy Chinese New Year holiday.

Daily cases hit an 18-month high of 140 on Sunday, as a weekend surge in infections linked to a congested public housing estate sent authorities in the Asian financial hub scrambling to rein in the virus.

Some employees would "work from home as much as possible", the government said in a statement on Monday, adding that individual departments might temporarily cut back on some public services as a result.

Ahead of next week's Chinese New Year holiday, Hong Kong has locked down thousands of people in the Kwai Chung estate for five days. About 35,000 face some curbs and must have daily tests, leader Carrie Lam said over the weekend after a visit.

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2022-01-24 06:23:00Z
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Minggu, 23 Januari 2022

Hong Kong's financial sector faces talent crunch as expats head for the exit - CNA

HONG KONG: Late last year, Tania Sibree quit her well-paid job as a financial services lawyer in Hong Kong and returned to Australia rather than live a moment longer with the city's strict coronavirus restrictions.

Sibree, who said she had enjoyed the previous five years in Hong Kong, is one of hundreds – possibly thousands – of foreign expatriate professionals who have left or are planning to leave, threatening to dent the city's standing as one of the world's financial hubs.

"The hotel quarantine made it just so tough for people to travel and that was the big incentive to being in Hong Kong, it was close to home and my parents. But you cannot do that long in hotel quarantine with kids," she said.

"Everyone had been thinking the restrictions would be lifted, it would get better and it would not go on for so long."

Hong Kong has only had about 13,000 coronavirus infections out of a population of 7.4 million, much lower than most places in the world. But the Chinese territory is following Beijing's "zero-COVID" policy rather than adapting to life with the virus.

It has had stiff quarantines in place for two years, and last year introduced some of the strictest entry rules in the world, allowing only residents to return to the city and mandatory hotel quarantine of up to three weeks for arrivals from most countries, regardless of vaccination status, paid for by the travellers themselves.

However, "zero COVID" is no closer – 140 new infections were reported in Hong Kong on Sunday – and there are no signs of the government easing those restrictions.

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2022-01-23 22:52:10Z
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Former Malaysian PM Mahathir in stable condition in hospital - Reuters

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Malaysia's former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad is in a stable condition after undergoing treatment at the National Heart Institute, his daughter said in a statement on Saturday.

Marina Mahathir said her 96-year-old father had been readmitted to hospital and has undergone two days of treatment following an elective medical procedure in early January.

"Siti Hasmah Mohd Ali (his wife) and family ask for the people to pray for his speedy and full recovery," Marina said.

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A spokesperson for Mahathir earlier said he was admitted to the cardiac care unit at the hospital but gave no details.

Mahathir, who is still an active lawmaker, had been discharged from hospital after what was described as an successful elective medical procedure on Jan.8.

The National Heart Institute did not say at the time what procedure Mahathir, who has a history of heart problems, had undergone.

In December, he was admitted and discharged after his doctors said they were satisfied with the results of necessary investigations.

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Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing William Mallard and Ros Russell

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2022-01-22 11:38:00Z
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Sabtu, 22 Januari 2022

Meat Loaf, singer of I'd Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That), dies aged 74 - CNA

Meat Loaf, the singer best known for the Bat Out Of Hell album and the hit song I’d Do Anything For Love (But I Won’t Do That), has died at the age of 74, a statement on his official Facebook page said on Friday (Jan 21).

No cause of death was revealed.

The American singer and actor, otherwise known as Michael Lee Aday, had a career spanning six decades, and sold more than 100 million albums worldwide.

His family said in a statement: “We know how much he meant to so many of you and we truly appreciate all of the love and support as we move through this time of grief in losing such an inspiring artist and beautiful man. From his heart to your souls…don’t ever stop rocking!”

The singer was known for the bestselling album trilogy, Bat Out Of Hell. The second album, Bat Out Of Hell II: Back Into Hell yielded the hit song, I’d Do Anything For Love (But I Won’t Do That).

Aday died on Thursday (Jan 20) night with his wife by his side, according to Deadline, citing his longtime agent Michael Greene.

Greene also told the publication that the singer’s daughters, Pearl and Amanda, as well as close friends had a chance to spend time with him and say their goodbyes.

BAT OUT OF HELL

His first Bat Out Of Hell album came out in 1977, a mega-selling collaboration with songwriter Jim Steinman and producer Todd Rundgren that made him one of the most recognisable performers in rock.

Fans fell hard for the roaring vocals of the long-haired, 250-plus pound singer and for the comic non-romance of the title track, You Took The Words Right Out Of My Mouth, Two Out Of Three Ain’t Bad and Paradise By The Dashboard Light, an operatic cautionary tale about going all the way.

After a slow start and mixed reviews, Bat Out Of Hell became one of the top-selling albums in history, with worldwide sales of more than 40 million copies.

Meat Loaf wasn’t a consistent hit maker, especially after falling out for years with Steinman. But he maintained close ties with his fans through his manic live shows, social media and his many television, radio and film appearances, including Fight Club and cameos on Glee and South Park.

His biggest musical success after Bat Out Of Hell was Bat Out Of Hell II: Back Into Hell, a 1993 reunion with Steinman that sold more than 15 million copies and featured the Grammy-winning single I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That).

ORIGINS OF ‘MEAT LOAF’

A native of Dallas, Aday was the son of a school teacher who raised him on her own after divorcing his alcoholic father, a police officer. Aday was singing and acting in high school (Mick Jagger was an early favorite, so was Ethel Merman) and attended Lubbock Christian College and what is now the University of North Texas. Among his more notable childhood memories: Seeing John F. Kennedy arrive at Love Field in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, then learning the president had been assassinated and driving to Parkland Hospital and watching a bloodied Jackie Kennedy step out of a car.

He was still a teenager when his mother died and when he acquired the nickname Meat Loaf, the alleged origins of which range from his weight to a favorite recipe of his mother’s. He left for Los Angeles after college and was soon fronting the band Meat Loaf Soul. For years, he alternated between music and the stage, recording briefly for Motown, opening for such acts as the Who and the Grateful Dead and appearing in the Broadway production of Hair.

By the mid-1970s, he was playing the lobotomised biker Eddie in the theater and film versions of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, had served as an understudy for his friend John Belushi for the stage production of National Lampoon and had begun working with Steinman on Bat Out Of Hell.

The album took more than two years to find a taker as numerous record executives turned it down, including RCA’s Clive Davis, who disparaged Steinman’s songs and acknowledged that he had misjudged the singer: “The songs were coming over as very theatrical, and Meat Loaf, despite a powerful voice, just didn’t look like a star,” Davis wrote in his memoir, “The Soundtrack of My Life.”

‘THESE PEOPLE THINK WE’RE SERVING DINNER’

With the help of another Springsteen sideman, Steve Van Zandt, Bat Out Of Hell was acquired by Cleveland International, a subsidiary of Epic Records. The album made little impact until months after its release, when a concert video of the title track was aired on the British program the Old Grey Whistle Test. In the US, his connection to Rocky Horror helped when he convinced producer Lou Adler to use a video for Paradise By The Dashboard Light as a trailer for the cult movie. But Meat Loaf was so little known at first that he began his Bat Out Of Hell tour in Chicago as the opening act for Cheap Track, then one of the world’s hottest groups.

“I remember pulling up at the theater and it says, ‘TONIGHT: CHEAP TRICK, WITH MEAT LOAF.’ And I said to myself, ‘These people think we’re serving dinner,’” Meat Loaf explained in 2013 on the syndicated radio show In the Studio.

“And we walk out on stage and these people were such Cheap Trick fans they booed us from the start. They were getting up and giving us the finger. The first six rows stood up and screamed. ... When we finished, most of the boos had stopped and we were almost getting applause.”

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2022-01-21 08:23:00Z
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China's Harbin to conduct city-wide COVID-19 tests ahead of Chinese New Year holiday - CNA

Many cities have advised residents to stay put or requiring travellers to report their trips days before their arrival.

Still, some state media outlets are warning against being too harsh, after a county-level government official in Henan province was quoted as saying that some people had ignored the advice to "maliciously return" to their hometown and that they would quarantine and detain such cases.

"It is human nature to return home during the Spring Festival for reunions, so why is it malicious?," the official People's Daily newspaper said on its Weibo account.

"Preventing and controlling the epidemic is a big task, but we cannot take a one size fits all approach...(it) must be done in a scientific and legal way, and every desire to return home must be treated compassionately."

Mainland China reported 63 new COVID-19 cases on Jan 21, down from 73 cases a day earlier, the country's national health authority said on Saturday.

The National Health Commission said in a statement that 23 of the new cases were locally transmitted, the same as a day earlier, and the rest imported.

The number of new asymptomatic cases, which China does not classify as confirmed cases, rose to 43 from 31 a day earlier.

There were no new deaths, leaving the death toll at 4,636.

As of Jan 21, mainland China had 105,547 confirmed cases.

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2022-01-22 05:19:00Z
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