Senin, 20 September 2021

US to relax travel restrictions for COVID-19 vaccinated foreign air travellers in November - CNA

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Monday the policy was not timed for diplomacy. "If we were going to make things much easier for ourselves, we would have done it prior to June, when the president had his first foreign trip, or earlier this summer. This is when the process concluded," she said. "We're basing it on science."

US COVID-19 infections and deaths have skyrocketed since June as the Delta variant spreads, particularly among the unvaccinated. Nearly 29,000 new US cases were reported on Sunday.

British Airways Chief Executive Sean Doyle said the US announcement "marks a historic moment and one which will provide a huge boost to Global Britain as it emerges from this pandemic".

Shares in US airlines were little changed, while some European carriers gained. British Airways parent IAG SA rose 11.2 per cent, while Air France-KLM and Deutsche Lufthansa AG closed up more than 5 per cent.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the announcement "a fantastic boost for business and trade, and great that family and friends on both sides of the pond can be reunited once again." Germany's US ambassador, Emily Haber, said on Twitter it was "hugely important to promote people-to-people contacts and transatlantic business".

It will have less impact on travel from China, which requires its residents to quarantine for at least two weeks on return home. International flights from China are capped and running at around 2 per cent of 2019 levels, a situation expected to last until the second half of next year.

CDC HAS FINAL WORD ON VACCINES ACCEPTED

Foreign nationals will need to present proof of vaccination before travel and will not be required to quarantine on arrival.

The White House said the final decision on what vaccines would be accepted is up to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The CDC on Monday pointed to its prior guidance when asked what vaccines it will accept.

"The CDC considers someone fully vaccinated with any FDA-authorised or approved vaccines and any vaccines that (the World Health Organization) has authorised," said spokesperson Kristen Nordlund. That list could change pending additions by either agency, she said.

Exceptions include children not yet eligible for shots. Airlines heavily lobbied the White House to lift the restrictions, and it has been working since August on the new plan.

The US Travel Association trade group previously estimated that the US restrictions, if they ran to the end of the year, would cost the American economy US$325 billion.

Zients said last Wednesday that given the rise of the Delta variant, it was not the right time to lift travel restrictions. Asked on Monday what had changed since then, Zients cited rising global vaccinations, adding: "The new system allows us to implement strict protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19."

Zients said the new system would include collecting contact tracing data from passengers travelling into the United States to enable the CDC to contact travellers exposed to COVID-19.

The administration has been considering imposing vaccine requirements for foreign nationals since May, officials said, but the White House only decided on Friday to move forward.

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2021-09-20 20:32:00Z
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US told India it couldn’t share nuclear submarine tech. ‘And now this ...’ - South China Morning Post

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  1. US told India it couldn’t share nuclear submarine tech. ‘And now this ...’  South China Morning Post
  2. Biden asks for early talks with Macron amid submarine row  CNA
  3. France vents over submarines but alone on world stage  Yahoo Singapore News
  4. Why is Southeast Asia so concerned about Aukus?  South China Morning Post
  5. Aukus alliance raises awkward questions for China – and US allies  South China Morning Post
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-09-20 12:30:15Z
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Australian teen forces quokka to vape, to face five years in prison - Yahoo Singapore News

Australian teen forces quokka to vape

Australian teen forces quokka to vape

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) in Australia has issued a severe penalty to an Australian teen as she forced a quokka to vape.

Quokka, a marsupial is a short-tailed scrub wallaby. The quokka is standing on its back legs and furiously licking the e-cigarette gadget. Perhaps, it mistook it for food in a video. Later, the adolescent Australian teen put the gadget down the quokka’s throat, forces quokka to vape

When the authorities got hold of the video, they immediately started an investigation into this matter. They were calling it “completely and utterly irresponsible and unacceptable for this poor defenseless, vulnerable animal to be subjected to that kind of cruelty,” RSPCA WA executive manager Hannah Dreaver told 9News.

If and when cops capture the offender, she will face a maximum sentence of five years in prison. Also, monetary penalties of AUD 50,000 for animal cruelty.

Animal cruelty

Animal cruelty

Animal cruelty

Quokkas are in the category of vulnerable to extinction. “Those animals are really, really vulnerable,” Dreaver said. “They’ve become used to human interaction so they’re not running away from us” but are instead “actually seeking it out”.

The RSPCA has issued a warning to individuals not to engage in such acts of cruelty. Thereby, emphasizing that not every food or liquid is a part of their natural diet. Foods and liquids apart from their natural diet are extremely damaging to them.

Authorities caution that alcohol can “potentially kill an animal as small as this”. It was after a young teenager was feeding alcohol to a quokka. The authorities fined the teenager too.

“What concerns us is that people do this and post it on social media thinking it’s funny when it is actually intentional cruelty that can have severe or fatal effect on the animal,” authorities said.

This article Australian teen forces quokka to vape, to face five years in prison appeared first on BreezyScroll.

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2021-09-20 06:20:33Z
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Minggu, 19 September 2021

Xi Jinping's celebrity crackdown no match for Universal Studios in China - The Straits Times

BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) - As President Xi Jinping's government looks to tame China's celebrities, the popularity of a new Universal Studios theme park in Beijing shows Hollywood's enduring soft power among the nation's 1.4 billion people.

Tickets for the grand opening on Monday (Sept 20), priced at 638 yuan (S$133), sold out within 30 minutes of going online last week - as did rooms costing as much as 20,000 yuan at the resort's two hotels, according to state-run media.

Fliggy, an online travel site operated by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, last week apologised for overselling the 500 yuan Universal Express Pass that lets visitor skip lines.

The surging demand underscores the challenge Mr Xi faces in dampening the appetite for celebrities among the general public, as the Communist Party looks to curtail foreign influences and promote the concept of "common prosperity".

A commentary published widely in state-run media last month warned against "fan culture" and "worshiping Western culture". Earlier this month the National Radio and Television Administration - China's broadcast regulator - ordered television companies and internet platforms to ban film stars with "incorrect politics", cap salaries and do away with idol worship.

One of China's most popular film stars, Zhao Wei, was blacklisted from China's internet while another actress was ordered to pay 299 million yuan in overdue taxes, late fees and fines last month.

The popularity of the Universal Studios theme park shows resistance to the Communist Party's tightening of cultural standards after decades of allowing Western influences, according to Adam Ni, co-editor of China Neican, a newsletter on Chinese public policy issues.

"As powerful as the party is, it will have to contend with countless everyday decisions by the Chinese, which would together make up the moral fabric of the People's Republic," he said.

In the lead-up to the park's public opening, dozens of Chinese celebrities - including "Crouching Tiger" actress Zhang Ziyi and supermodel Liu Wen - visited attractions related to "Jurassic Park", "Transformers" and "Harry Potter". Photos of other guests dressed in Hogwarts cloaks, and posing with "Minions" and "Megatron" characters, became trending topics on China's Twitter-like Weibo.

"Universal Beijing Resort is popular with the Chinese because there is part of the global culture that the Chinese thirst for," Mr Ni added.

"Beijing is trying to reinforce this dichotomy between 'Chinese' and 'foreign,' but there is still much admiration and curiosity for foreign cultures in China. So the public attitude towards Western culture is two-faced."

The project, which is expected to attract 30 million visitors a year, is a joint venture between the state-owned Beijing Shouhuan Cultural Tourism Investment Co. and Comcast NBCUniversal. It has been in the works since 2001.

China's newly appointed ambassador to the US last week compared one of the attraction's roller coasters to bumpy diplomatic ties between Washington and Beijing.

"After all tumbling and shakes, the roller coaster came to a soft landing in the end," Mr Qin Gang, who visited the park before moving to the US in July, wrote on his official Twitter account, signalling a note of optimism.

That positive spin was shared by state-run newspaper Global Times, which last week said the popularity displayed China's "cultural confidence".

But there were other signs the attraction would face challenges from the government.

Beijing party chief Cai Qi on Thursday urged the US side to add more "Chinese elements" to the park in a video call with Brian Roberts, chief executive of Comcast Corp, according to a report by the state-run Beijing Daily. Universal Beijing Resort didn't respond to a question on how it would deal with China's requests.

Harrison Wang, a 39-year-old Beijing resident who works in film industry, heaped praise on the theme park after he attended the soft launch.

"People are here for the famed scenes and characters of these well-liked movies, as well as the world-class entertaining experience," he said. "As the country's borders are closed now, it offers a taste of the authentic Western culture."

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2021-09-19 22:15:57Z
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Covid-19: 1009 new locally transmitted cases; clusters found at Toa Payoh Market & Food Centre, 2 nursing homes and a preschool - TODAYonline

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  1. Covid-19: 1009 new locally transmitted cases; clusters found at Toa Payoh Market & Food Centre, 2 nursing homes and a preschool  TODAYonline
  2. Singapore Pools Toa Payoh outlet shuts after employee tests positive for Covid-19  The Straits Times
  3. 1012 new Covid-19 cases in Singapore; 4 new clusters in Woodlands, Pasir Panjang, Yishun and Toa Payoh  AsiaOne
  4. Singapore Pools' Toa Payoh outlet shut after employee tested positive for Covid-19  The Star Online
  5. S'pore's new Covid-19 cases cross 1000 mark; unvaccinated man, 90, dies from complications  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-09-19 16:44:44Z
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Biden asks for early talks with Macron amid submarine row - CNA

PARIS: US President Joe Biden has requested early talks with French President Emmanuel Macron, France said on Sunday (Sep 19), in an apparent effort to mend fences after a row over a submarines contract sparked rare tensions between the allies.

The announcement came after Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison rejected French accusations that Canberra had lied about plans to cancel the contract to buy French submarines, saying he had raised concerns over the deal "some months ago".

Australia's decision to tear up the French deal in favour of American nuclear-powered vessels sparked outrage in Paris, with Macron recalling France's ambassadors to Canberra and Washington in an unprecedented move.

But French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said Sunday that there would be a telephone conversation between Biden and Macron "in the coming days" at the request of the US president.

Macron will ask the US president for "clarification" after the announcement of a US-Australian-British defence pact that prompted Canberra's cancellation of the huge contract for diesel-electric French vessels.

"We want explanations," Attal said. The US had to answer for "what looks a lot like a major breach of trust".

Morrison meanwhile insisted that he and his ministers had made no secret of their issues with the French vessels.

"I think they would have had every reason to know that we had deep and grave concerns," he told reporters in Sydney. "We made very clear that we would be making a decision based on our strategic national interest."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian had on Saturday used distinctly undiplomatic language towards Australia, the US and Britain which is also part of a new three-way security pact announced Wednesday that led to the rupture.

"There has been lying, duplicity, a major breach of trust and contempt," Le Drian told France 2 television.

The recall of the ambassadors for the first time in the history of relations with the countries was "to show how unhappy we are and that there is a serious crisis between us".

The French contract to supply conventional submarines to Australia was worth A$50 billion (US$36.5 billion, €31 billion) when signed in 2016.

Morrison said he understood France's disappointment, but added: "I don't regret the decision to put Australia's national interest first. Never will."

Defence Minister Peter Dutton also insisted Canberra had been "upfront, open and honest" with Paris about its concerns over the deal - a claim quickly rejected by French Defence Minister Florence Parly.

"His statement is inaccurate," she said during a visit to Niger. "We were never informed of Australia's intentions".

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2021-09-19 12:15:00Z
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Led by the nose: Meet the UAE's COVID-19 sniffer dogs - CNA

DUBAI: Police in Dubai have built up a special unit of 38 sniffer dogs that can detect COVID-19 from human sweat samples with 92 per cent accuracy, the supervisor of the training programme told Reuters.

Dubai Police trained the cohort, which includes German Shepherds, Labradors, Cocker Spaniels and Border Collies, to recognise the scent of COVID-19 using samples of sweat from people with confirmed infections, collected by holding a swab in an armpit for a few minutes.

"A very small amount of that is then put into a jar - it has the scent of the patient - then we put the sample out for the dog to sniff ... When he gives us a sign, we give him a treat," said First Lieutenant Nasser al-Falasi of Dubai Police, supervisor of the programme at the K9 training centre in Dubai's Awir region.

In the centre's large training hall, police handlers walk the dogs along a row of metal boxes, of which only one contains a positive sample. The dogs sniff the samples and within seconds sit down to signal that they have found something.

Police trainer Fatima al-Jasmi, who is on the COVID-19 detection team, guides an excited-looking black and white Border Collie through the exercises, getting it right every time.

"The training was a bit of a challenge, learning a new skill at an international standard, and then training the dog in that," she said.

Airports in the United Arab Emirates were one the first in the world to trial canine COVID-19 detection in 2020. The dogs are no longer used in UAE's airports, but they are ready to be deployed wherever required.

A study of dogs ability to detect COVID-19 infections carried out by the UAE's Higher Colleges of Technology and Abu Dhabi's Federal Customs Authority published in June in Communications Biology, part of the British scientific journal Nature, concluded with a 98.2 per cent detection success rate.

The study used sweat samples and PCR tests from 3,290 people to compare the dogs detection abilities.

The 92 per cent detection rate Falasi referred to came from a study under the UAE's Ministry of Interior in the first half of 2020, as reported by state news agency WAM.

Several other countries, including Finland, the United States and France have been running their own dog training and trials of canine detection of COVID-19. ​

Falasi said the dogs currently carry out around 30 to 40 tests a day. Bolt, a black and tan Belgian Malinois, was the first COVID-19 detection dog that he trained.

"He goes on assignments often. He has maybe done more than 1,000 COVID-19 tests," Falasi said proudly.

Dubai has received requests from around the world to share knowledge about how to train dogs to sniff out COVID-19, Dubai Police's Major Salah Khalifa al-Mazroui said.

Dubai Police also has dogs trained to sniff out drugs and explosives, skills put to use as the emirate of Dubai prepares to open the Dubai Expo2020 world fair exhibition site next month.

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2021-09-19 12:07:36Z
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