Sabtu, 26 Desember 2020

Nashville blast investigation leads US agents to suburban home - CNA

NASHVILLE, Tennessee: Federal agents investigating an explosion in Nashville were searching a two-story suburban house on Saturday (Dec 26) for clues to explain why a motor home blew up and injured three people in the heart of America's country music capital on Christmas Day.

The motor home, parked on a downtown street of Tennessee's largest city, exploded at dawn on Friday moments after police responding to reports of gunfire noticed it and heard an automated message emanating from it warning of a bomb.

The thunderous, fiery blast destroyed several vehicles, damaged more than 40 businesses and left a trail of shards from shattered windows.

Following up on what they said were more than 500 leads, local police and agents from the FBI and US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were searching a two-storey red brick house on Bakertown Road in Antioch, Tennessee, 18km southeast of Nashville, paying particular attention to its basement, according to a Reuters witness.

Officials declined to name a person of interest in connection with the explosion on Saturday, but CBS News reported that the investigation has honed in on 63-year-old Anthony Quinn Warner, who recently lived at the Bakertown address, according to public records.

READ: Motor home explodes in Nashville after 'evacuate now' warning; three hurt

Google Street View images of the house from 2019 show what appears to be a white motor home in the driveway. Neighbours told local TV station WKRN that the recreational vehicle had been parked there for years and is now gone.

"Once we have processed the scene, we will look at the evidence and anything that we have recovered from this residence and see how that fits into this investigation," FBI spokesman Darrell Debusk, who was at the house on Saturday, told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"At this point we're not prepared to identify any single individual," FBI Special Agent in Charge Doug Korneski said at a news conference on Saturday.

Korneski told reporters that investigators were "vigorously working on" identifying what appeared to be human remains found in the wreckage. He declined to say whether investigators believe the remains belong to the person behind what officials say was "an intentional act".

Korneski said the FBI's Quantico, Virginia-based Behavioral Analysis Unit was helping determine the motivation of the person responsible.

The vehicle was parked outside an AT&T Inc office, and the blast caused widespread telephone, Internet and TV service outages in central Tennessee and parts of several neighbouring states, including Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama and Georgia.

A RECORDING, THEN A BLAST

Adding to the cryptic nature of Friday's incident was the eerie preamble described by police and witnesses - a crackle of gunfire followed by an apparently computer-generated female voice from the RV reciting a minute-by-minute countdown to an impending bombing.

Police scrambled to evacuate nearby homes and buildings and called for a bomb squad, which was en route to the scene when the RV blew up.

Police later posted a photo of the motor home, which they said had arrived in the area about five hours prior to the explosion.

Officials said 41 businesses were damaged and three people were hospitalised with relatively minor injuries. City authorities hailed police officers who they said likely prevented more casualties by acting quickly to clear the area.

Dozens of agents from the FBI and the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were surveying the scene on Saturday. Parked cars and trees were blackened and an exploded water pipe that had been spraying overnight had covered trees in a layer of ice.

"All the windows came in from the living room into the bedroom. The front door became unhinged," Buck McCoy, who lives on the block where the blast occurred, told WKRN. "I had blood coming from my face and on my side and on my legs and a little bit on my feet."

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee visited the scene on Saturday and said in a Twitter post it was a "miracle" that no one was killed. In a letter to President Donald Trump, Lee requested a federal emergency declaration to aid relief efforts. 

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2020-12-26 23:37:30Z
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'Window of hope': Europe begins to launch COVID-19 vaccinations - CNA

PARIS: Hungary and Slovakia stole a march on their fellow EU nations as they began vaccinating people against COVID-19 on Saturday (Dec 26), a day ahead of rollouts in several other countries including France and Spain as the pandemic surges across the continent.

In Germany, a small number of people at a care home for the elderly were inoculated on Saturday, a day before the country's official start of its vaccination campaign.

Mass vaccination across the European Union, home to almost 450 million people, would be a crucial step towards ending a pandemic that has killed more than 1.7 million around the world, crippled economies and destroyed businesses and jobs.

Hungary administered the vaccine, jointly developed by Pfizer and BioNTech, to frontline workers at hospitals in Budapest, the capital, after receiving its first shipment of enough doses to inoculate 4,875 people. The first worker to receive the shot was Adrienne Kertesz, a doctor at Del-Pest Central Hospital.

Hungary has reported 315,362 COVID-19 cases with 8,951 deaths. More than 6,000 people are still in hospital with COVID-19, straining the central European country's care system.

"We are very happy that the vaccine is here," Zsuzsa and Antal Takacs, a couple aged 68 and 75, said while playing table tennis in a Budapest park.

"We will get the vaccination because our daughter had a baby in France last month and we want to go see them. We do not dare travel before we get the vaccine," Zsuzsa said.

READ: No cafes, no tourists: COVID-19 empties streets of old Athens

READ: COVID-19 pandemic will not be the last: WHO chief

In Slovakia, Vladimir Krcmery, an infectious disease specialist and member of the government's Pandemic Commission, was the first person to receive the vaccine, followed by colleagues.

Countries including France, Germany, Italy, Austria, Portugal and Spain on Sunday are to begin mass vaccinations, starting with health workers.

The distribution of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which was first rolled out in Britain earlier this month, presents tough challenges. The vaccine uses new mRNA genetic technology, which means it must be stored at ultra-low temperatures of around -80 degrees Celsius.

NEW VARIANT IN FRANCE, SPAIN

France, which received its first shipment of the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on Saturday, will start administering it on Sunday in the greater Paris area and in the Burgundy-Franche-Comte region.

"We have 19,500 doses in total, which amounts to 3,900 vials. These doses will be stored in our freezer at minus 80 degrees (Celsius) and will be then distributed to different nursing homes and hospitals," said Franck Huet, head of pharmaceutical products for the Paris public hospital system.

READ: In Christmas message curbed by COVID-19, Pope Francis calls on nations to share vaccines

READ: Breakfast, freezers, Lego - The BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine trail in Germany

The French government is hoping to get around 1 million people vaccinated in nursing homes during January and February, and then a further 14 million-15 million in the wider population between March and June.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was approved by the French medical regulator on Thursday.

France reported just 3,093 new coronavirus infections over the past 24 hours on Saturday, sharply down from the more than 20,000 cases on each of the previous two days, figures not seen since Nov 20. But the seven-day moving average of daily new cases, which evens out reporting irregularities, is at around a one-month high.

France has a total of 2,550,864 confirmed COVID-19 cases, the fifth-highest tally in the world, while its COVID-19 death toll stands at 62,573, the seventh-highest.

In a concerning development, the Health Ministry said on Friday that a man who recently arrived from London had tested positive for a new variant of the virus that has been spreading rapidly in southern England and is thought to be more infectious. Sweden on Saturday also confirmed that it has detected the first case of the new variant in a traveller from the United Kingdom.

In Spain, Madrid health authorities said on Saturday they had confirmed four cases of the new variant of the virus, as the country received its first deliveries of the vaccine.

"Vaccination will start tomorrow in Spain, coordinated with the rest of Europe," Health Minister Salvador Illa wrote on Twitter. "This is the beginning of the end of the pandemic."

Doses will be taken by air to the Spanish islands and the North African enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla, and by road to other regions of the country, where a total of about 50,000 people have died from the disease.

READ: Millions face new UK COVID-19 restrictions; border chaos eases

'WINDOW OF HOPE HAS OPENED'

Germany, meanwhile, said trucks were on their way to deliver the vaccine to care homes for the elderly, which are first in line to receive the vaccine with the official start of the vaccination campaign on Sunday.

A small number of people in Germany, however, received the vaccine on Saturday, with the first a 101-year-old woman in a nursing home in Halberstadt in the Harz hill range.

The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country rose by 14,455 to 1,627,103, data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases showed on Saturday. More than 29,000 people have died, in total.

The federal government is planning to distribute more than 1.3 million vaccine doses to local health authorities by the end of this year and about 700,000 per week from January.

"There may be a few hiccups at one point or another in the beginning, but that is quite normal when such a logistically complex process begins," said Health Minister Jensen Spahn.

READ: Breakfast, freezers, Lego: The BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine trail in Germany

In Portugal, a truck escorted by police dropped off the first batch of COVID-19 jabs at a warehouse in the country's central region. From there, the nearly 10,000 shots will be delivered to five big hospitals.

"It is a historic milestone for all of us, an important day after such a difficult year," Health Minister Marta Temido told reporters outside the warehouse.

"A window of hope has now opened, without forgetting that there is a very difficult fight ahead."

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

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2020-12-26 21:11:15Z
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COVID-19 pandemic will not be the last: WHO chief - CNA

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COVID-19 pandemic will not be the last: WHO chief  CNA
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2020-12-26 21:04:14Z
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Malaysia records highest daily Covid-19 case count; KL most affected - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Malaysia on Saturday (Dec 26) recorded the highest number of new coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, with 2,335 infections.

Capital city Kuala Lumpur made up the largest share – 31.2 per cent – of the new infections, with 728 cases, followed by Selangor with 710 cases and Johor with 412 cases.

The previous record was 2,234 cases on Dec 10.

The Ministry of Health also revealed 11 more new Covid-19 clusters throughout the country, taking the total number of active clusters to 215.

Of these active clusters, 59 contributed to Saturday’s cases.

Only 11 of the total new cases were imported, health director-general Noor Hisham Abdullah said in a statement. 

More than 300 of them came from the prisons and immigration depots involving nine clusters.

One of the new clusters was detected at a construction site in Kuala Lumpur on Friday through targeted screening. 

Dubbed the Jalan Seng cluster, the site now has the country’s largest outbreak, with 232 positive cases. 

There were two fatalities reported yesterday. They involved a 44-year-old woman from Sabah and a 70-year-old man from Melaka, both with a history of health conditions. The total number of confirmed cases now stands at 103,900, with 451 deaths.

Tan Sri Noor Hisham said there are currently 108 Covid-19 patients under intensive care, with 50 requiring ventilator support.

Meanwhile, the director of the Sungai Buloh Hospital in Selangor has threatened his staff with disciplinary action if they are found to be flouting Covid-19 rules, Malaysiakini quoted its sources as saying yesterday. 

The warning was said to have been issued after the Health Ministry reported as at Dec 18 that a total of 1,771 hospital staff had tested positive for the disease, the majority of whom were nurses. 

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2020-12-26 15:47:08Z
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COVID-19: Japan halts new entry of foreigners over new virus variant - CNA

TOKYO: Japan on Saturday (Dec 26) said it would temporarily ban non-resident foreign nationals from entering the country as it tightens its borders following the detection of a new, highly infectious variant of the coronavirus.

The ban will take effect on Monday and will run through January, the government said in an emailed statement.

Japanese citizens and foreign residents will be allowed to enter but must show proof of a negative coronavirus test 72 hours before departing for Japan and must quarantine for two weeks after arrival, the statement said.

Japan on Friday reported its first cases of a fast-spreading variant in passengers arriving from Britain. The new variant has also been detected in a man who visited the UK and a family member - the first cases of infected people found outside airport checks - Nippon TV reported on Saturday.

READ: Japan's Suga urges citizens to have a quiet and distanced New Year

The new strain adds to worries about a surge in cases as Tokyo reported another record rise on Saturday.

Infections of the virus that causes COVID-19 hit a record 949 in the capital just as Japan heads into New Year holidays that normally see people stream from the capital into the provinces.

Serious cases were unchanged from a day earlier at 81.

READ: Japan panel says people 65 or older should get COVID-19 vaccine priority

Tokyo transport hubs were subdued, local media said, a day after Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, under pressure as cases continue to climb, urged the nation to stay home and avoid social mixing.

With New Year celebrations centred around family gatherings and mass visits to temples and shrines, experts have warned public restraint will be essential to prevent infection rates from rising further amid concerns of pandemic fatigue.

Suga's initial political honeymoon after taking his post in September has ended, with his popularity sliding after criticism he was slow to react to rising infections in Tokyo and for attending a group steak dinner in defiance of his own calls for caution. 

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

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2020-12-26 14:55:17Z
52781263510168

Malaysia records highest daily Covid-19 case count; KL most affected - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Malaysia on Saturday (Dec 26) recorded the highest number of new coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, with 2,335 infections.

The capital city Kuala Lumpur made up the largest share of the new infections with 728 cases (31.2 per cent), followed by Selangor and Johor with 710 and 412 cases, respectively.

The Ministry of Health also revealed 11 more new Covid-19 clusters throughout the country, taking the total number of active clusters to 215.

Of these active clusters, 59 contributed to Saturday's cases, The Malay Mail reported.

Of the total new cases, only 11 were imported, while the rest were local transmissions, health director-general Noor Hisham Abdullah said in a statement. More than 300 of them came from the prisons and immigration depots involving nine clusters.

There were two fatalities on Saturday. The first one is a 44-year-old woman from Sabah with a history of obesity and dyspepsia (indigestion), while the other is a 70-year-old man from Melaka with a history of diabetes, high blood pressure and benign prostatic hypertrophy.

The country's total number of confirmed cases now stands at 103,900 with 451 deaths.

Tan Sri Dr Noor Hisham said there are currently 108 Covid-19 patients under intensive care, with 50 requiring ventilator support.

So far, a total of 83,414 people have recovered from the disease, according to Dr Noor Hisham.

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2020-12-26 13:13:44Z
CAIiEFT0qs6MFfOJY0f0Wb_cdjcqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow_7X3CjCh49YCMMa2pwU

EU begins vaccine roll out as new coronavirus variant spreads - CNA

PARIS: The European Union teed up a vaccine roll out Saturday (Dec 26), even as countries in the bloc were forced back into lockdown by a new strain of the virus, that has spread from Britain to France and Spain and even as far as Japan.

The pandemic has claimed more than 1.7 million lives and is still running rampant in much of the world, but the recent launching of innoculation campaigns has boosted hopes that 2021 could bring a respite.

First doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine arrived in hard-hit Italy, Spain and France on Saturday morning ready for distribution to elderly care facilities and hospital staff.

"We'll get our freedom back, we'll be able to embrace again," Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said as he urged Italians to get the shot.

Vaccinations in all 27 European Union countries will begin on Sunday, after regulators approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on Dec 21.

Several countries including France, Spain, Japan, Denmark, Lebanon, Germany, Australia and the Netherlands have reported cases of the new strain, which has sent jitters through already overstretched health services.

More than 25 million total infections have been recorded in Europe, according to an AFP tally on Friday, and Russia on Saturday said it had topped three million.

The UK itself passed 70,000 coronavirus deaths on Friday and is confronted with surging infections from the new strain.

Six million people in the south and east were locked down from Saturday, making for a total of 24 million nationwide.

Decr 26 also brought a third national lockdown in Austria, with all non-essential stores shut - but ski stations remaining open.

The lockdown and curfew is slated to last until Jan 24.

READ: No cafes, no tourists: COVID-19 empties streets of old Athens

NEW VARIANT

The first French case of the new coronavirus variant was found in a citizen resident in Britain who arrived from London on Dec 19, the French health ministry said late Friday.

They are asymptomatic and self-isolating at home in Tours in central France, and contact-tracing has taken place for the health professionals who treated him.

In Spain, four cases were confirmed in Madrid on Saturday.

The patients were "not seriously ill", the Madrid regional government's deputy health chief Antonio Zapatero said, adding that "there is no need for alarm".

The new strain of the virus, which experts fear is more contagious, prompted more than 50 countries to impose travel restrictions on the UK, where it first emerged.

Bottlenecks of thousands of trucks in southern England were ebbing Saturday, after France lifted a 48-hour entry ban for drivers with a negative coronavirus test and kept its Calais port open on Christmas Day.

South Africa has detected a similar mutation in some infected people, but on Friday denied British claims its strain was more infectious or dangerous than the one originating in the UK.

READ: In Christmas message curbed by COVID-19, Pope Francis calls on nations to share vaccines

EXTREMELY EXTRAORDINARY GLORY

In Asia, China's communist leadership issued a statement hailing the "extremely extraordinary glory" of its handling of the virus that emerged in the country's Hubei province last year, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Tokyo reported a record 949 new daily cases, with the figure for Japan as a whole recently topping 3,000 per day.

Thailand has also seen a new outbreak linked to a seafood market near Bangkok infect almost 1,500 people.

In Australia Saturday there was little sign of the usual Boxing Day sale rush on the streets of Sydney.

Residents largely heeded the state premier's request they stay home faced with a new virus cluster.

"Even when we entered the store there were less than 10 people," shopper Lia Gunawan told The Sydney Morning Herald after queueing up for the sales.

Across the world, people are being urged to respect social distancing guidelines, as the World Health Organization urged people not to "squander" the "great, heart-wrenching sacrifices" people had made to save lives.

"Vaccines are offering the world a way out of this tragedy. But it will take time for the whole world to be vaccinated," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned on Friday.

READ: Breakfast, freezers, Lego - The BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine trail in Germany

VACCINES FOR ALL

In the Vatican Friday, Pope Francis had pleaded for "vaccines for all" in his traditional Christmas message.

"I call on everyone, on leaders of states, on businesses, on international organisations, to promote cooperation and not competition, to find a solution for everyone... especially the most vulnerable and most in need in all regions of the planet," Pope Francis said.

In authoritarian post-Soviet Turkmenistan, where the government claims no coronavirus cases have been detected, President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov claimed that licorice root could cure Covid-19.

Without citing any scientific evidence, former dentist Berdymukhamedov claimed that "licorice stops the coronavirus from developing".

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2020-12-26 11:37:30Z
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