Rabu, 26 Januari 2022

Xi says China's low carbon push must guarantee energy, food security - CNA

SHANGHAI: China's ambitious low-carbon goals should not come at the expense of energy and food security or the "normal life" of ordinary people, President Xi Jinping said, signalling a more cautious approach to climate change as the economy slows.

China, the world's biggest source of climate-warming greenhouse gas emissions, has been under pressure to "enhance ambition" and take more drastic action to tackle global warming.

But amid mounting economic challenges, China is worried about the risk to jobs and growth, especially as it prepares to hold a key Communist Party conclave that is expected to extend Xi's rule.  

Xi told senior Communist Party leaders in a speech published late on Monday (Jan 24) that China needed to "overcome the notion of rapid success" and proceed gradually.

"Reducing emissions is not about reducing productivity, and it is not about not emitting at all," Xi was quoted by state news agency Xinhua as saying.

"We must stick to the overall planning and ensure energy security, industrial supply chain security and food security at the same time as cutting carbon emissions," he said.

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2022-01-26 04:29:40Z
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Selasa, 25 Januari 2022

Hong Kong faces domestic worker shortage in push for COVID-zero - CNA

The constantly changing system has left some like Mimi Rios Ysulat, who worked in the city as a helper for a decade, stuck overseas without a job. 

She went back to the Philippines early last year after her husband died of cancer in March.

Ysulat was due to return to Hong Kong the following month, but the city enacted a flight ban and then her entry visa expired in June.

She pleaded with her employers to renew it, but a new visa didn’t arrive until mid-October, by which point her bosses had terminated her contract. 

It was the second time she’d been caught by restrictions, after being blocked from returning in early 2020 before eventually making her way to Hong Kong via Singapore.

To return again, she’ll need to use an employment agency. 

“I can’t find work here and I have to take care of three kids,” she said from Quezon City.

“But if I apply to go to Hong Kong again, I’d have to pay almost HK$10,000 to the agency. Where can I find the money?”

It’s a substantial sum when the minimum wage for foreign domestic helpers is roughly a quarter of the Hong Kong median salary of HK$18,400.

The lack of income reverberates through families that rely on money sent back home, total remittances to the Philippines are about US$30 billion a year, according to the government, and account for roughly 8 per cent of its gross domestic product.

It’s also a hit to the typically thriving industry in Hong Kong that matches workers with bosses, with one agency saying the business had dropped to just half of the normal levels.

Karishma Sakhrani, a 41-year-old interior designer seeking someone to take care of her teenage children, says everyone she’s spoken to recently has requested a monthly salary of at least HK$6,000.

She’s been surprised that some have a list of requirements, including not sharing a room with others, and said she’s troubled by stories of workers ending their contracts early to take better-paid jobs in other households.

“I can’t judge people for wanting more money, but I think there should be a system,” she said.

“Even if you’re in a company, you have to work a few years before a raise. You can’t just demand higher pay in the middle of the contract.”

Domestic workers say they’re being singled out for doing what’s accepted in other professions. 

“Everybody else in Hong Kong can freely switch jobs, why not us?” said Eni Lestari, a helper, advocate and chair of the International Migrants Alliance.

“The Hong Kong government is promoting modern-day slavery.”

The Immigration Department declined to comment beyond referencing a Jan 19 response from Secretary for Security Chris Tang that the department has been “proactively” combatting job-hopping, workers deliberately underperforming so they’re fired.

It refers suspicious cases to a special team that considers factors such as the conduct of foreign domestic helpers, records from workers and their former employers and the reasons behind the premature termination of a contract, he said. 

In Hong Kong, both helpers and bosses can end a contract early. 

Authorities rejected 2,833 visa applications last year due to job-hopping, meaning workers can’t legally enter or work in the city, up from 319 in 2020.

Even as the growing labour crunch offers a potential rebalancing of power, fear of being labelled a job hopper and having a visa revoked, or of getting stuck outside Hong Kong when fulfilling a requirement to exit and re-enter between contracts, is one of the biggest barriers to seeking out higher salaries.

“They stay because they have no better alternative,” said Lestari.

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2022-01-25 08:37:00Z
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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
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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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