Senin, 31 Agustus 2020

Commentary: Japan's longest serving PM has run out of time on unfinished business - CNA

CANBERRA: Abe’s abrupt resignation on Friday as prime minister of Japan was a surprise to many but not entirely unexpected given his health issues and the precedent he set in 2007 with an equally sudden resignation on health grounds.

Other considerations behind his decision are also important. Most obvious was his unprecedented loss of popularity as prime minister in recent months.

Despite solid support rates for more than seven years, Abe presided over a steady decline in support for his Cabinet as 2020 marched onwards. January’s cherry blossom-viewing scandal that saw the use of public resources for his private political advantage marked an inauspicious start to the year.

Then coronavirus swept in. A Jiji Press opinion poll in August recorded an approval rating of just 32.7 per cent – close to the "red zone" of below 30 per cent, reached only once before during his prime ministership.

Numerous commentators attributed the trend to the public’s poor evaluation of the prime minister’s pandemic leadership, and it is clear that this was an important factor at work undermining his popular support.

READ: Commentary: Will replacing Abe leave Japan in limbo?

READ: Commentary: Japan shows how not to deal with a COVID-19 outbreak

MISSING IN ACTION AMID PANDEMIC

What was unprecedented was the uncharacteristically unresponsive way in which Abe reacted to the slide. 

The particular decisions that Abe made to deal with the pandemic were criticised, such as those reflecting his ill-conceived judgement over where to strike the balance between shutting down to curb the spread of the virus and opening up to boost the economy.

Prefectural governors, such as Tokyo’s Yuriko Koike and Osaka’s Hirofumi Yoshimura, were praised for their clear articulation of the COVID-19 threat and their role in pressuring the dawdling Abe administration into calling a state of emergency.

READ: Commentary: Yuriko Koike, the woman who may be Japan's first female prime minister

Low levels of COVID-19 testing, confusion and slowness around stimulus payments and lagged roll-out of poor-quality face masks, derided as “Abenomasks”, all indicated a government with a weak grip on things.

Another important factor in play was the nature of Abe’s leadership at this crucial time. Abe was increasingly seen as “missing in action”. The headlines of Aug 5, for example, asked, “COVID-19 cases are climbing in Japan. Where is Shinzo Abe?”

Visitors wearing protective face masks are seen at Yasukuni Shrine for the war dead, amid the coron
Visitors wearing protective face masks are seen at Yasukuni Shrine for the war dead, ahead of the anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan, August 14, 2020. REUTERS/Issei Kato

Also noted was Abe’s reluctance to hold official news conferences and convene an extraordinary Diet session to discuss the government’s responses to the pandemic.

It looked as if Abe was deliberately trying to avoid personal accountability as prime minister on a critical issue for the nation while largely handing things over to the relevant ministers, such as Yasutoshi Nishimura, the Minister of State for Economic and Fiscal Policy, who was in charge of the government’s response to the coronavirus and who held an extraordinary number of press conferences to provide information to the public.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga also played a prominent role as de facto prime minister, with Abe openly called a “lame duck” – inconceivable a year ago – developments not helped by rumours that he was in poor health.

READ: Japan's Suga to join race to succeed PM Abe: Reports

READ: Commentary: Pulling off 2021 Olympics is a win Japan needs

LACKLUSTRE PERFORMANCE AS PM

Far from scrambling to make amends with new and called-for government initiatives, Abe’s performance as prime minister remained lacklustre and disengaged.

The prime minister’s decision to step down suggests that helping his nation beat coronavirus did not rate highly as a policy issue for Abe. Rather, it was an unwelcome, energy-sapping, all-consuming diversion and an obstacle to achieving his historic mission as prime minister.

The long-held policy objectives that comprised Abe’s nationalist agenda were slipping ever more steadily and elusively from his grasp: Most importantly, revising the Article 9 “peace clause” of the Constitution to explicitly legitimise the existence of the Japan Self-Defense Forces, restoring Japanese sovereignty over the Russian-held Northern Territories and securing the return of Japanese abductees from North Korea.

Even his signature Abenomics programme was being scuppered by COVID-19 with the government facing difficult decisions in dealing with the economic fallout from the virus.

READ: Abenomics fails to deliver as Japan braces for post-Abe era

FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective face mask, following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outb
FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective face mask, following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks in front of a stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, May 18, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

READ: Commentary: Japan really needs to get cracking on coronavirus testing

These considerations on top of his health were clearly crucial in accounting for Abe’s political unresponsiveness and his increasingly spiritless performance as prime minister. They all weighed into his decision to step down. Dealing with the coronavirus created a clear disjunction between the heavy policy demands being made of Abe and his own personal policy ambitions and goals.

Factors beyond Abe’s control – COVID-19 in combination with his personal health problems and a singularly unfavourable policy outlook for the next year – made it extremely unlikely that Abe could achieve his long-cherished goals even if he remained in office until the official end of his tenure in September 2021.

Now, after seven years and eight months, the longest run of any Japanese prime minister in the history of the Diet, his immediate successor is guaranteed office for only one year. This throws an element of uncertainty into what was a long period of Japanese political stability.

The tide of history had turned against Abe; he ran out of time and became a prime minister without a cause he could deliver.

Aurelia George Mulgan is Professor at the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, the University of New South Wales, Canberra. This commentary first appeared on East Asia Forum.

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2020-08-31 22:15:15Z
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Taiwan says China still lacks ability for full assault on island - CNA

TAIPEI: China's armed forces are growing in their prowess but still lack the capability to launch a full assault on Taiwan, the island's defence ministry said on Monday (Aug 31).

Beijing is stepping up military activities around what it views as sovereign territory. It has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control, a message reiterated by President Xi Jinping last year, though Taiwan has shown no interest in being run by Beijing.

Xi is overseeing an impressive military modernisation programme, adding stealth fighters, aircraft carriers and other equipment, and the Chinese air force and navy have undertaken regular exercises or missions close to Taiwan.

READ: China's military budget growth slows to 6.6%

In its annual report on China's military prowess delivered to parliament, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, Taiwan's Defence Ministry laid out scenarios for Chinese actions, including blockades and seizing offshore islands.

It said China's military continues to dedicate itself to strengthening live fire drills, building its strength for new types of battle and developing emerging technology and weapons.

"But on the operation of tactics and strategy toward Taiwan, it is still restricted by the natural geographic environment of the Taiwan Strait, and its landing equipment and logistics abilities are insufficient," it added.

"It still does not have the formal combat capability to fully assault Taiwan."

READ: Amid heightened tensions, Taiwan tells China not to underestimate its resolve

President Tsai Ing-wen has made bolstering Taiwan's own defences a priority, building up its domestic defence industry and buying more equipment from the United States, the island's most important arms supplier and international backer.

READ: Taiwan to raise defence spending as China details combat drills

Tsai says she wants peace with China and will not provoke conflict, but last week voiced concern about accidental hostilities erupting due to increased regional tensions.

Taiwan's defence ministry said it was continuing to pay close attention to Chinese threats, both actual and verbal, and while it did not seek war, it was also not afraid of it.

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2020-08-31 11:56:42Z
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Scientists see downsides to top COVID-19 vaccines from Russia, China - CNA

TORONTO: High-profile COVID-19 vaccines developed in Russia and China share a potential shortcoming: They are based on a common cold virus that many people have been exposed to, potentially limiting their effectiveness, some experts say.

CanSino Biologics' vaccine, approved for military use in China, is a modified form of adenovirus type 5, or Ad5. The company is in talks to get emergency approval in several countries before completing large-scale trials, the Wall Street Journal reported last week.

READ: China grants country's first COVID-19 vaccine patent to CanSino: State media

A vaccine developed by Moscow's Gamaleya Institute, approved in Russia earlier this month despite limited testing, is based on Ad5 and a second less common adenovirus.

"The Ad5 concerns me just because a lot of people have immunity," said Anna Durbin, a vaccine researcher at Johns Hopkins University. "I'm not sure what their strategy is ... maybe it won't have 70 per cent efficacy. It might have 40 per cent efficacy, and that's better than nothing, until something else comes along."

Vaccines are seen as essential to ending the pandemic that has claimed over 845,000 lives worldwide. Gamaleya has said its two-virus approach will address Ad5 immunity issues.

Both developers have years of experience and approved Ebola vaccines based on Ad5. Neither CanSino nor Gamaleya responded to requests for comment.

READ: When can you get a COVID-19 vaccine? Five things you should know

Researchers have experimented with Ad5-based vaccines against a variety of infections for decades, but none are widely used. They employ harmless viruses as "vectors" to ferry genes from the target virus – in this case the coronavirus – into human cells, prompting an immune response to fight the actual virus.

But many people already have antibodies against Ad5, which could cause the immune system to attack the vector instead of responding to the coronavirus, making these vaccines less effective.

Several researchers have chosen alternative adenoviruses or delivery mechanisms. Oxford University and AstraZeneca based their COVID-19 vaccine on a chimpanzee adenovirus, avoiding the Ad5 issue. Johnson & Johnson's candidate uses Ad26, a comparatively rare strain.

READ: Commentary: Making, distributing COVID-19 vaccine in good time may depend on India's manufacturing might

Dr Zhou Xing, from Canada's McMaster University, worked with CanSino on its first Ad5-based vaccine, for tuberculosis, in 2011. His team is developing an inhaled Ad5 COVID-19 vaccine, theorising it could circumvent pre-existing immunity issues.

"The Oxford vaccine candidate has quite an advantage" over the injected CanSino vaccine, he said.

Xing also worries that high doses of the Ad5 vector in the CanSino vaccine could induce fever, fuelling vaccine scepticism.

"I think they will get good immunity in people that don't have antibodies to the vaccine, but a lot of people do," said Dr Hildegund Ertl, director of the Wistar Institute Vaccine Center in Philadelphia.

In China and the United States, about 40 per cent of people have high levels of antibodies from prior Ad5 exposure. In Africa, it could be has high as 80 per cent, experts said.

READ: Factbox: China's coronavirus vaccine development efforts

HIV RISK

Some scientists also worry an Ad5-based vaccine could increase chances of contracting HIV.

In a 2004 trial of a Merck Ad5-based HIV vaccine, people with pre-existing immunity became more, not less, susceptible to the virus that causes AIDS.

Researchers, including top US infectious diseases expert Dr Anthony Fauci, in a 2015 paper said the side effect was likely unique to HIV vaccines. But they cautioned that HIV incidence should be monitored during and after trials of all Ad5-based vaccines in at-risk populations.

READ: US floats idea of early approval for eventual COVID-19 vaccine

"I would be worried about the use of those vaccines in any country or any population that was at risk of HIV, and I put our country as one of them," said Dr Larry Corey, co-leader of the US Coronavirus Vaccine Prevention Network, who was a lead researcher on the Merck trial.

Gamaleya's vaccine will be administered in two doses: The first based on Ad26, similar to Johnson & Johnson's candidate, and the second on Ad5.

Alexander Gintsburg, Gamaleya's director, has said the two-vector approach addresses the immunity issue. Ertl said it might work well enough in individuals who have been exposed to one of the two adenoviruses.

Many experts expressed scepticism about the Russian vaccine after the government declared its intention to give it to high-risk groups in October without data from large pivotal trials.

"Demonstrating safety and efficacy of a vaccine is very important," said Dr Dan Barouch, a Harvard vaccine researcher who helped design Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine. Often, he noted, large-scale trials "do not give the result that is expected or required".

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

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2020-08-31 10:58:51Z
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Japan's ruling party to hold leadership vote; 4 possible candidates for PM - CNA

TOKYO: Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) plans to hold a leadership vote on Sep 14 to replace Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is stepping down due to ill health, local media reported on Monday (Aug 31).

The new party leader will become the country's next prime minister, due to the party's parliamentary majority, with four possible candidates vying for the position.

READ: Who could lead Japan after Shinzo Abe?

Abe, Japan's longest-serving premier, told US President Donald Trump earlier on Monday that the strengthening of their two nations' alliance would be maintained even after he leaves office, a Japanese government spokesman said.

But Abe's successor will face a daunting list of economic, diplomatic and security issues, ranging from a stagnant economy hit by the coronavirus pandemic to China-US tensions.

READ: Commentary: Will replacing Abe leave Japan in limbo?

In the race to succeed Abe as the next prime minister, former defence minister Shigeru Ishiba is the most popular choice among the public, media opinion polls showed.

But Ishiba, a vocal Abe critic, could face an uphill battle if he does declare his candidacy, with local media reporting Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga was set to receive the backing of several major factions within the ruling LDP.

Ishiba has about 34 per cent of the public's support, more than double the 14 per cent for Suga, the second-most popular choice, a weekend Kyodo News survey showed.

A Nikkei-TV Tokyo poll showed Ishiba with 28 per cent support, followed by current Defence Minister Taro Kono with 15 per cent. Suga came in fourth place with 11 per cent, the poll showed.

The surveys highlight a split between public opinion and internal LDP politics.

Suga - a longtime lieutenant of Abe's in a key supporting role - will join the race to replace his boss with support expected from the faction led by LDP Secretary-General Toshihiro Nikai and other major factions, putting him in a favourable position.

Suga declined to comment on Monday when asked about the LDP leadership race at his regular news conference as the government's top spokesman.

Ishiba - who unsuccessfully challenged the outgoing premier in the last LDP leadership race in 2018 and is considered less popular within the party - has yet to declare whether he will run.

LDP policy chief Fumio Kishida, who has announced his intention to stand, came in last place in both of the public opinion surveys.

Kishida voiced caution on Monday over the idea of cutting the sales tax rate to help the economy weather the hit from the coronavirus pandemic.

Brad Glosserman, deputy director of the Centre for Rule-Making Strategies at Tama University, said Suga was the safe bet in terms of internal LDP dynamics, but might not be ideal come election time. A general election must be held by late October 2021.

"He doesn't seem to have either the charisma or the vision to push Japan in a new direction. He seems to be the eternal Number Two - he delivers on promises made by his boss," said Glosserman.

Abe announced on Friday he was resigning because of poor health, his long-running battle with ulcerative colitis ending his tenure as Japan's longest-serving prime minister.

READ: PM Lee wishes Japanese PM Abe a 'good recovery'

Japan does not elect its leader by direct popular vote. Under the country's parliamentary political system, lawmakers elect a prime minister.

That means the LDP president is virtually guaranteed of being prime minister because of the party's majority in the lower house of parliament.

The LDP is set to hold on Tuesday a party meeting where it can formally adopt the Sep 14 date for the leadership election, broadcaster FNN said, adding that the vote would be held at a Tokyo hotel instead of its party headquarters to reduce the risk of coronavirus infection.

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2020-08-31 07:56:23Z
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COMMENT: China Just Called Trump's Bluff on TikTok - Yahoo Singapore News

FILE PHOTO: US President Donald Trump. (Photo: zz/KGC-375/STAR MAX/IPx)

By Tim Culpan

Imagine a bidder wanting to buy KFC, but being told the deal might not include the Colonel’s 11 secret herbs and spices. That’s effectively what Beijing has told the list of U.S. companies keen to purchase short-video app TikTok: The key ingredients may be out of reach.

At first it looked like the Trump administration had it all figured out.

ByteDance Inc., it decided, was a risk to national security and the Chinese company’s main product for international markets had to be sold. For reasons that remain confounding, Satya Nadella entered the fray and Microsoft Corp. put in a bid. Soon, suitors were apparently lining up to buy the hip new product that claims 100 million U.S. downloads. A short deadline – Sept. 15 – helped build a sense of urgency. TikTok is essentially going through a forced sale.

Then Beijing stepped in. China’s Commerce Ministry added new items to its list of export controls late Friday. Now, artificial intelligence interface technologies such as speech and text recognition, as well as methods to analyze data and make personalized content recommendations, are matters of national security.

That means ByteDance will need Chinese government approval to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations, Bloomberg News reported Sunday; a person familiar with the matter said the new rule is aimed at delaying the sale, not an outright ban. But with AI and its content recommendation engine among the key ingredients of the company’s success, Beijing becomes the arbiter of TikTok’s fate. Not the U.S. administration.

As much as critics – including U.S. senators and the secretary of state – express concern about the data TikTok collects, it’s really the algorithms that matter most to the company, and anyone who buys it. These are the magic formulae that tell the app which data points will predict future behavior, and keep you staring at the phone longer. If you linger on hip-hop videos and swipe past cooking tips, then chances are you’ll be seeing more lip-synced DJ Khalid and fewer turkey-stuffing recipes. Speech and text recognition allow TikTok to peer deeper into content to extract a better sense of what’s being said and written.

Facebook Inc., Snap Inc. and Alphabet Inc. are among those pouring billions of dollars into better predicting user behavior. This is the bread and butter of search-engine results and timeline feeds, helping them sell more-targeted ads at higher prices. Notice that Google tends to return better results than Bing, despite having access to the same pool of data (the entire internet!), and you get a sense of why algorithms matter.*

TikTok’s algos are gold. At least, that’s what bidders seem to think.

And it looks like Beijing agrees. Effectively, the Chinese government is saying, “You wanna buy TikTok? Go ahead, but that doesn’t mean you’ll get your hands on the secret sauce.”

This development will surely send Microsoft, Oracle Corp. and everyone else back to their bankers, and lawyers, trying to figure out what TikTok would be worth without those algorithms. ByteDance, for its part, will need to work out what it can and cannot throw into the package it’s being forced to sell. That’s not easy.

At worst, this may require trawling through millions of lines of code to sort out whether content is allowable or forbidden. It’s not black and white. What one person considers AI may be viewed by another as mundane software technology.

As bidders rush to guess what Beijing may allow them to buy, and reassess whether they want to make an offer, some may simply conclude that it’s too fraught with uncertainty. Any final transaction will surely be couched with provisions about what they’ll be able to obtain — management’s fiduciary duty to shareholders requires no less.

This move puts the ball back in Donald Trump’s court. The U.S. president may need to contend with the real possibility that TikTok doesn’t find a buyer, and he’ll have to decide whether one of the nation’s most popular products should be removed from the app store of its most valuable company.

Trump may think that strong-arming China will boost his re-election chances, but being outplayed could backfire. It’s also possible that if TikTok ends up being banned altogether, there will be a backlash by the app’s fans.

With U.S.-China trade talks inching slowly forward, Beijing has found itself a bargaining chip. Whether or not Trump is found to be bluffing, both sides now think they have the stronger hand.

Tim Culpan is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology. He previously covered technology for Bloomberg News.

*It's important to remember that the two search engines also create, and use, their own data based on user behavior. This data collection is driven by their proprietary algorithms, creating a virtuous circle of algorithm and data.

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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2020-08-31 07:09:50Z
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3-year-old girl in Taiwan survives wild skyride after being caught in tail of giant kite - The Straits Times

TAIPEI (REUTERS) - A three-year-old girl entangled in the tail of a giant kite survived a terrifying ride after being swept more than 30m into the air during a kite festival in Taiwan, video footage posted on social media on Sunday (Aug 30) showed.

Horrified spectators screamed as the girl was catapulted high above them, where she was spun helplessly at the end of the kite's long orange streamer as it soared and swooped in the high wind.

It took some 30 seconds before the girl's nightmare ended and she was pulled back to the ground by members of the crowd as the kite was brought back under control.

Identifying the girl solely by the surname Lin, local news reports said she amazingly suffered only minor cuts.

The distress caused by the sight of the near disaster prompted organisers to cut short the festival in Hsinchu city in north-western Taiwan.

A Hsinchu city government official told media that a sudden gust of wind at the site, which is know for its strong winds, caused the kite's tail to wrap around the child's waist.

Video of the incident was shared by festival-goers on social media and quickly racked up millions of views.

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2020-08-31 06:56:12Z
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Minggu, 30 Agustus 2020

Czech senate speaker will pay 'heavy price' for Taiwan visit: China - CNA

BEIJING: Czech Senate speaker Milos Vystrcil will "pay a heavy price" for making an official trip to Taiwan, the Chinese government's top diplomat said on Monday (Aug 31), in a warning brushed off by Vystrcil who said he was not seeking political confrontation.

Vystrcil arrived in Taipei on Sunday on a visit to promote business links with Taiwan, saying the Czech Republic would not bow to Beijing's objections. 

Speaking while in Germany, Chinese State Councillor Wang Yi said there would be retribution.

"The Chinese government and Chinese people won't take a laissez-faire attitude or sit idly by, and will make him pay a heavy price for his short-sighted behaviour and political opportunism," China's Foreign Ministry cited Wang as saying.

Wang said challenging the One China principle is tantamount to "making oneself the enemy of 1.4 billion Chinese people", and the Chinese government and people will not tolerate such "open provocation" by Vystrcil and the anti-China forces behind him.

He gave no details of how exactly Beijing would react.

READ: China warns US against 'playing with fire' over Taiwan visit

READ: US 'won't cede an inch' in Pacific, Esper says in swipe at China

The One China principle refers to China and Taiwan both belonging to “one China”, a position which Beijing requires all countries it has diplomatic relations with to abide.

China considers Taiwan a breakaway province ineligible for state-to-state relations.

Vystrcil said in a statement that Wang's comments were an interference in the Czech Republic's internal affairs.

"We are a free country seeking to have good relationships with all countries and I believe this will be the case in the future irrespective of the statement of the Minister. And let me repeat again – this visit is by no means meant to politically confront anyone," he said.

Taiwan Economics Minister Wang Mei-hua declined direct comment on China's attack on Vystrcil, but said the two had much in common.

"The Czech Republic and Taiwan are free and democratic countries which put great store on human rights. We have the same values as the Czechs," she told reporters, speaking before a joint business forum with Vystrcil.

He is due to meet Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen later and will address Taiwan's parliament before leaving on Friday.

Czech President Milos Zeman has sought closer business and political ties with China since taking office in 2013, but his efforts have been hit by failed investment plans and Czech wavering about allowing China's Huawei Technologies to play a role in developing next-generation telecoms networks.

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2020-08-31 04:11:54Z
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