Jumat, 24 April 2020

Muslims mark Ramadan with unprecedented coronavirus lockdowns, SE Asia News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

JAKARTA (AFP, REUTERS) - Mosques stood empty and fast-breaking feasts were cancelled as Muslims around the world began marking Ramadan under coronavirus lockdown on Friday (April 24), while a pushback in some countries sparked fears of a surge in infections.

In a rare occurrence in Islam’s 1,400 year history, Mecca’s Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site, and the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina – the religion’s two holiest locations – will be closed to the public during the fasting period amid unprecedented bans on family gatherings and mass prayers. 

A stunning emptiness enveloped the sacred Kaaba – a large cube-shaped structure in the Grand Mosque towards which Muslims around the world pray – in the most potent sign of how the daytime fasting month will be a sombre affair across Islamic nations.

Prayers from inside the mosque on the first evening of Ramadan on Thursday were restricted to clerics, security staff and cleaners. The ceremony was broadcast live on television.

At a near-empty Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, an imam called out the first Friday prayers of Ramadan, his voice echoing across a windswept plateau almost devoid of worshippers.

A handful of Muslim clerics in face masks knelt below the pulpit, keeping several feet apart in compliance with coronavirus restrictions. “We ask God to have mercy on us and all of humanity and to save us from this lethal pandemic,” the imam said.

Ramadan is typically a period of both worship and socialising, but this year strict lockdowns limit socialising during iftar meals at dusk when the fast is broken – a centrepiece of Ramadan. 

The restrictions have put a damper on spirits in Indonesia, the world's biggest Muslim majority nation, where national religious organisations have called on the faithful to stay at home.

On the island of Java, Mr Tatan Agustustani, 52, and his family were busy clearing furniture from their lounge room to make way for prayer mats. “For me, no matter where we are, prayers must go on, even though we cannot pray in the mosque,” said Mr Agustustani.

Similar sentiments echoed across the Middle East and North Africa, where multiple towns and cities are under round-the-clock curfew.

Countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Libya, Tunisia and Algeria have partially eased the lockdown but Morocco has announced a night-time curfew for Ramadan as it steps up emergency measures to combat the virus.

The North African nation’s Council of Oulemas, the official religious body, called for confinement to be respected during Ramadan, saying Islamic Syariah law put saving lives above all else – even meeting for prayers. 

Leaders of India’s 160 million Muslims have urged people to heed the nationwide lockdown throughout the month. The All India Islamic Centre of religious teaching will livestream recitation of two chapters of the Quran, the Muslim holy book, from 8pm to 10pm each day.

However, some religious leaders in Asia – home to nearly a billion of the world’s Muslims – have shrugged off fears about the spread of Covid-19.

In Bangladesh, the fundamentalist Hefazat-e-Islam group criticised government moves to restrict access to more than 300,000 nationwide mosques.

“Quotas on prayer attendance are against Islam,” Mojibur Rahman Hamidi, a Hefazat official, told AFP. 

 “A healthy Muslim must join prayers in a mosque. We hope that, if we pray hard, Allah will save us from the coronavirus,” he added. 

‘We must accept it’

In the Syariah-ruled province of Aceh, as worshippers crowded into a mosque for tarawih prayers on the eve of Ramadan. “In our belief, it is God who decides when we will die,” said devotee Taufik Kelana. “But we will stay alert, like wearing a mask.” 

And Pakistan has seen its mosques crammed in the lead up to Ramadan with the faithful sitting shoulder-to-shoulder and paying little heed to social distancing.

Regional Covid-19 death tolls have been lower than in Europe and the United States but are rising steadily, sparking fears the virus may overwhelm often underfunded healthcare systems.

And the World Health Organisation has called for a stop to some Ramadan activities to limit exposure.

Mr Mohamad Shukri Mohamad, the top Islamic cleric in the conservative Malaysian state of Kelantan, planned to skip public prayers and family meals - even if it meant not seeing his six children and 18 grandchildren.

"This is the first time in my life that I've been unable to go the mosque," he told AFP.

"But we must accept it and obey the rules of social distancing to protect our lives."

Muslim-majority Malaysia has extended a strict lockdown until mid-May with mosques, schools and most businesses closed - and police checkpoints set up to catch rulebreakers.

Even popular Ramadan bazaars, where Muslims buy local delicacies before breaking their fast, have been banned.

Instead, Malaysians can only order from so-called "e-bazaars", where people order goods online and have them delivered to their homes.

‘SINFUL'

In neighbouring Indonesia, Amalia Nur Istigfarin considered skipping Ramadan’s daytime fast over fears it could weaken her immune system.

“But it would be sinful to miss it because fasting is mandatory,” the bank employee said.

“So I’ll try other things to boost my immune system like exercise and taking vitamin C,” she added. 

Fears of a spike in coronavirus cases when millions travel to hometowns and ancestral villages at the end of Ramadan has forced Indonesia – a country of some 270 million – to issue a ban on the annual exodus. 

The government has also announced a clampdown on all air and sea travel across the 17,000-island archipelago. 

Jakarta resident Erik Febrian said he was relying on a computer to allow him to keep in touch with his out-of-town parents until he can see them in person at the end of Ramadan. 

“Thanks to technology I can video-call my parents every day during Ramadan,” he said. “And keep an eye on their health.”

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2020-04-24 14:05:27Z
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Trump's comments on injecting disinfectant to treat COVID-19 'dangerous', doctors say - CNA

LONDON: Doctors and health experts urged people not to drink or inject disinfectant on Friday (Apr 24) after US President Donald Trump suggested scientists should investigate inserting the cleaning agent into the body as a way to cure COVID-19.

"This is one of the most dangerous and idiotic suggestions made so far in how one might actually treat COVID-19," said Paul Hunter, a professor of medicine at Britain's University of East Anglia. 

He said injecting disinfectants would be likely to kill anyone who tried it.

"It is hugely irresponsible because, sadly, there are people around the world who might believe this sort of nonsense and try it out for themselves," he told Reuters.

READ: WHO to launch initiative to share COVID-19 drugs, tests and vaccines

Trump said at his daily media briefing on Thursday that scientists should explore whether inserting light or disinfectant into the bodies of people infected with the new coronavirus might help them clear the disease.

"Is there a way we can do something like that by injection, inside, or almost a cleaning?" he said. "It would be interesting to check that."

While ultraviolet (UV) light is known to kill viruses contained in droplets in the air, doctors say there is no way it could be introduced into the human body to target cells infected with COVID-19.

"Neither sitting in the sun, nor heating will kill a virus replicating in an individual patient's internal organs," said Penny Ward, a professor in pharmaceutical medicine at Kings College London and chair of the Education and Standards Committee of the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Medicine.

"Drinking bleach kills. Injecting bleach kills faster. Don’t do either," she added.

READ: Sunlight, heat and humidity weaken coronavirus, US official says

Reckitt Benckiser, which manufacturers household disinfectants Dettol and Lysol, issued a statement also warning people not to ingest or inject its products.

Parastou Donyai, director of pharmacy practice and a professor of social and cognitive pharmacy at the University of Reading, said Trump's comments were shocking and unscientific.

Donyai said people worried about the novel coronavirus should seek help from a qualified doctor or pharmacist, and "not take unfounded and off-the-cuff comments as actual advice".

Robert Reich, a professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and a former US labour secretary, added on Twitter: "Trump's briefings are actively endangering the public's health. Please don't drink disinfectant."

Reading's Donyai said previous comments by Trump had already been linked to people self-administering medicines or other products in ways that make them poisonous.

"We have already seen people mistakenly poisoning themselves by taking chloroquine when their hopes were raised by unscientific comments," she said.

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

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2020-04-24 12:59:08Z
52780744360850

Muslims mark Ramadan with unprecedented coronavirus lockdowns, SE Asia News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

JAKARTA (AFP, REUTERS) - Mosques stood empty and fast-breaking feasts were cancelled as Muslims around the world began marking Ramadan under coronavirus lockdown on Friday (April 24), while a pushback in some countries sparked fears of a surge in infections.

In a rare occurrence in Islam’s 1,400 year history, Mecca’s Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest site, and the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina – the religion’s two holiest locations – will be closed to the public during the fasting period amid unprecedented bans on family gatherings and mass prayers. 

A stunning emptiness enveloped the sacred Kaaba – a large cube-shaped structure in the Grand Mosque towards which Muslims around the world pray – in the most potent sign of how the daytime fasting month will be a sombre affair across Islamic nations.

Prayers from inside the mosque on the first evening of Ramadan on Thursday were restricted to clerics, security staff and cleaners. The ceremony was broadcast live on television.

At a near-empty Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, an imam called out the first Friday prayers of Ramadan, his voice echoing across a windswept plateau almost devoid of worshippers.

A handful of Muslim clerics in face masks knelt below the pulpit, keeping several feet apart in compliance with coronavirus restrictions. “We ask God to have mercy on us and all of humanity and to save us from this lethal pandemic,” the imam said.

Ramadan is typically a period of both worship and socialising, but this year strict lockdowns limit socialising during iftar meals at dusk when the fast is broken – a centrepiece of Ramadan. 

The restrictions have put a damper on spirits in Indonesia, the world's biggest Muslim majority nation, where national religious organisations have called on the faithful to stay at home.

On the island of Java, Mr Tatan Agustustani, 52, and his family were busy clearing furniture from their lounge room to make way for prayer mats. “For me, no matter where we are, prayers must go on, even though we cannot pray in the mosque,” said Mr Agustustani.

Similar sentiments echoed across the Middle East and North Africa, where multiple towns and cities are under round-the-clock curfew.

Countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Libya, Tunisia and Algeria have partially eased the lockdown but Morocco has announced a night-time curfew for Ramadan as it steps up emergency measures to combat the virus.

The North African nation’s Council of Oulemas, the official religious body, called for confinement to be respected during Ramadan, saying Islamic Syariah law put saving lives above all else – even meeting for prayers. 

Leaders of India’s 160 million Muslims have urged people to heed the nationwide lockdown throughout the month. The All India Islamic Centre of religious teaching will livestream recitation of two chapters of the Quran, the Muslim holy book, from 8pm to 10pm each day.

However, some religious leaders in Asia – home to nearly a billion of the world’s Muslims – have shrugged off fears about the spread of Covid-19.

In Bangladesh, the fundamentalist Hefazat-e-Islam group criticised government moves to restrict access to more than 300,000 nationwide mosques.

“Quotas on prayer attendance are against Islam,” Mojibur Rahman Hamidi, a Hefazat official, told AFP. 

 “A healthy Muslim must join prayers in a mosque. We hope that, if we pray hard, Allah will save us from the coronavirus,” he added. 

‘We must accept it’

In the Syariah-ruled province of Aceh, as worshippers crowded into a mosque for tarawih prayers on the eve of Ramadan. “In our belief, it is God who decides when we will die,” said devotee Taufik Kelana. “But we will stay alert, like wearing a mask.” 

And Pakistan has seen its mosques crammed in the lead up to Ramadan with the faithful sitting shoulder-to-shoulder and paying little heed to social distancing.

Regional Covid-19 death tolls have been lower than in Europe and the United States but are rising steadily, sparking fears the virus may overwhelm often underfunded healthcare systems.

And the World Health Organisation has called for a stop to some Ramadan activities to limit exposure.

Mr Mohamad Shukri Mohamad, the top Islamic cleric in the conservative Malaysian state of Kelantan, planned to skip public prayers and family meals - even if it meant not seeing his six children and 18 grandchildren.

"This is the first time in my life that I've been unable to go the mosque," he told AFP.

"But we must accept it and obey the rules of social distancing to protect our lives."

Muslim-majority Malaysia has extended a strict lockdown until mid-May with mosques, schools and most businesses closed - and police checkpoints set up to catch rulebreakers.

Even popular Ramadan bazaars, where Muslims buy local delicacies before breaking their fast, have been banned.

Instead, Malaysians can only order from so-called "e-bazaars", where people order goods online and have them delivered to their homes.

‘SINFUL'

In neighbouring Indonesia, Amalia Nur Istigfarin considered skipping Ramadan’s daytime fast over fears it could weaken her immune system.

“But it would be sinful to miss it because fasting is mandatory,” the bank employee said.

“So I’ll try other things to boost my immune system like exercise and taking vitamin C,” she added. 

Fears of a spike in coronavirus cases when millions travel to hometowns and ancestral villages at the end of Ramadan has forced Indonesia – a country of some 270 million – to issue a ban on the annual exodus. 

The government has also announced a clampdown on all air and sea travel across the 17,000-island archipelago. 

Jakarta resident Erik Febrian said he was relying on a computer to allow him to keep in touch with his out-of-town parents until he can see them in person at the end of Ramadan. 

“Thanks to technology I can video-call my parents every day during Ramadan,” he said. “And keep an eye on their health.”

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2020-04-24 14:02:27Z
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As Indonesia's Idul Fitri travel curbs kick in, some relieved to reach hometown while others are stranded - CNA

JAKARTA: The moment Permana set foot in the Kalideres bus terminal on Thursday (Apr 23) afternoon, he knew his chances of getting to his village in Banten province’s Serang regency was slim. 

There were already 300 people at the West Jakarta terminal when he arrived and tickets were selling out.

The only bus available would leave at 9pm and its ticket cost more than three times its normal fare.

“I decided to gamble,” Permana, who refused to give his full name, told CNA.

The 23-year-old janitor said his heart was racing all night. He was nervous that his bus might not be able to depart as scheduled, as Indonesia's travel ban to stop the spread of COVID-19 would come into effect three hours later at midnight. 

Under the ban, borders would be closed and all private vehicles and buses cannot leave Jakarta and its surrounding suburbs. This has effectively prevented Indonesians from travelling home for the Muslim holiday Idul Fitri.

READ: Indonesia to ban air, sea travel to early June over COVID-19

Permana said he was sweating and feeling restless while he was waiting at the terminal’s lounge room. “I kept checking my watch. I kept asking (officials) if it was possible to leave ahead of schedule,” he said.

Permana said his family back home insisted that he should return to his village for Ramadan.

“They said it would be better to spend the fasting month at my village together as a family. We can pray together and break fast together. They said Idul Fitri wouldn’t feel complete if one of their sons are not home,” he said. “As a son, I cannot go against my parents’ wishes.”

Spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Jakarta
Muslim men perform evening prayers on the roof of Al Musariin mosque after they tried to look for the new moon to mark the first day of Ramadan, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 23, 2020. Picture taken April 23, 2020. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan

Adding to his anxiety was the fact that public transportation in Indonesia is usually unreliable. Indeed, his bus eventually hit the road 20 minutes behind schedule.

Police had erected a checkpoint on the major toll road connecting Jakarta and Banten province. The checkpoint was located about an hour away from the terminal, but traffic had reduced to a crawl. 

“When I saw how congested the toll road was, my heart sank. The road was jam packed with cars and buses. Everyone was trying to beat the clock and pass the checkpoint before midnight,” he recalled.  

As the bus moved closer to the checkpoint, Permana saw police officers and traffic police cars with their red and blue lights flashing.

With loudspeakers, the police alerted travellers that the ban would soon be imposed. Permana checked his watch. It was 11.40 pm.

“When we passed the checkpoint, everybody gasped in relief, like we had been holding our breath all this time. We made it. We passed the checkpoint in time,” he said.

BAN ON AIR, SEA, LAND AND TRAIN TRAVEL 

The Indonesian government was initially reluctant to restrict people from travelling to their hometowns and villages during Ramadan, despite warnings from health experts who said that allowing millions in the world's biggest Muslim-majority country to travel could hasten the spread of COVID-19.

Coordinating Minister for Maritime and Investment Luhut Pandjaitan said the government was thinking about the thousands of people who were laid-off or lost their income because of the pandemic.

READ: Jokowi's reskilling initiative for the unemployed raises questions over effectiveness

Mr Pandjaitan, who is also the interim Transportation Minister, said until government aids and benefits were distributed, it would be hard for the unemployed and lower income families to survive in big cities like Jakarta.

“The government’s strategy is like a military strategy, a strategy which are enforced in stages, carefully prepared and thought through,” the retired army general told a press conference on Tuesday when announcing the homecoming ban.

“Now that the social aid is ready and benefit programmes implemented we decided to go ahead with the full ban on homecoming exodus.”

Indonesian National Armed Force personnel wears a face mask during large-scale social restrictions
An Indonesian National Armed Force personnel wears a face mask during large-scale social restrictions in Depok, on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, Apr 15, 2020. (Photo: Reuters/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana)

Transportation Ministry spokeswoman Adita Irawati told a press conference on Thursday evening that under the ban, all vehicles are not permitted to leave or enter Jakarta and its eight suburbs as well as the so-called red zone areas where local transmissions had occurred.

But the ban does not extend to trucks carrying logistics, ambulances and essential services workers.          

Across Indonesia, inter-provincial travel is not permitted for all areas which have imposed social restrictions and considered as red zones. 

A temporary ban has also been placed on domestic and international air and sea travel until early June. Inter-city passenger train services were halted as well. 

On Friday, massive gridlocks were observed on toll roads connecting Jakarta and other provinces to the east and west as vehicles were being scrutinised and some redirected at the checkpoints.

Mr Budi Setiyadi, Transportation Ministry’s director-general of land transportation, noted that while some people were trying their luck and tried to head to their hometowns and villages.

But there are also people who live in Jakarta and work in factories located just outside of Jakarta.

“Police in the field will scrutinise every vehicles. We will let them through if they can produce documents showing that they are working in essential services,”Mr Setiyadi told the Thursday press conference. 

STUCK IN JAKARTA

Not every traveller managed to leave Jakarta in time, before the travel ban kicked in.  

Gumilang, who wanted to drive home to Majalengka, West Java, missed the deadline by just 15 minutes. 

“I tried to talk my way out of the situation. I told the officers, please let me pass. I had been stuck in traffic for two hours and I was only late for a few minutes. But they wouldn’t let me through,” he told CNA.

READ: Muslims mark Ramadan with unprecedented COVID-19 lockdowns       

Gumilang, who also refused to provide his full name, said police instructed him to exit the toll road. Along the way, only roads leading back into the city were open.   

“I tried to find smaller roads hoping they wouldn’t be blockaded by the police. All the roads were congested and I was already tired of being stuck in traffic for hours, so I decided to head home.”

Man wearing a protective mask stands inside a commuter train during the imposition of large-scale r
Man wearing a protective mask stands inside a commuter train during the imposition of large-scale restrictions by the government to prevent the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan

Amalia said she had booked three return tickets for her family to fly to West Sumatra in mid May.

“We bought the tickets back in February when there were no confirmed coronavirus cases in Indonesia,” she told CNA.

“We were really looking forward to spending time with my father-in-law. This year would be the first Ramadan since my mother-in-law passed away, so we felt it was important for him not to be alone.”

As the cases spread across the country and the number of infection grew, she became increasingly worried that her family would not be able to go to her husband’s home village.

“But at least now I can cancel my flight and ask for a refund, which I hadn’t been able to do until the government officially forbid people to travel,” she said.

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

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2020-04-24 10:38:52Z
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Time for Singapore to address some uncomfortable questions on its migrant workers - TODAYonline

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  1. Time for Singapore to address some uncomfortable questions on its migrant workers  TODAYonline
  2. 897 new Covid-19 cases in Singapore, taking total to 12075  The Straits Times
  3. COVID-19: Community groups in Singapore race to help foreign workers  CNA
  4. What happened to the enforcement of the Foreign Employee Dormitories Act? Wasn't the dorms supposed to have quarantine plans?  The Online Citizen
  5. New dorm cases to remain high as authorities focus on weak link  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-04-24 09:09:33Z
52780742711431

Science offers sunlight as way to tame coronavirus, and Trump rushes toward it - The Straits Times

NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - President Donald Trump has long pinned his hopes on the powers of sunlight to defeat the Covid-19 virus. 

On Thursday (April 23), he returned to that theme at the daily White House coronavirus briefing, bringing in a top administration scientist to back up his assertions and eagerly theorising – dangerously, in the view of some experts – about the powers of sunlight, ultraviolet light and household disinfectants to kill the coronavirus.

After the scientist, William Bryan, the head of science at the Department of Homeland Security, told the briefing that the government had tested how sunlight and disinfectants – including bleach and alcohol – can kill the coronavirus on surfaces in as little as 30 seconds, an excited Trump returned to the lectern.

“Supposing we hit the body with a tremendous – whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light,” Trump said. “And I think you said that hasn’t been checked, but we’re going to test it?” he added, turning to Bryan, who had returned to his seat. “And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside the body, either through the skin or some other way.”

Apparently reassured that the tests he was proposing would take place, Trump then theorised about the possible medical benefits of disinfectants in the fight against the virus.

“And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute – one minute – and is there a way we can do something like that by injection inside, or almost a cleaning?” he asked. “Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs, so it would be interesting to check that.” 

Experts have long warned that ultraviolet lamps can harm humans if used improperly – when the exposure is outside the body, much less inside. But bottles of bleach and other disinfectants carry sharp warnings of ingestion dangers. The disinfectants can kill not only microbes but humans.

Yet despite a lack of scientific evidence, Trump has long pinned his hopes on an array of possible cures for the coronavirus, from sunlight and warmer temperatures to an array of drugs, including the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, which he has promoted as a “what have you got to lose” remedy.

Some of his recommendations, however, have had disastrous effects.

Last month, an Arizona man died and his wife was hospitalised after the couple ingested a chemical found in hydroxychloroquine.

Shortly after Trump made his latest comments on Thursday, emergency management officials in Washington state posted a warning on Twitter against following the president’s suggestions.

“Please don’t eat Tide pods or inject yourself with any kind of disinfectant,” they wrote before urging the public to rely only on official medical advice about Covid-19. “Just don’t make a bad situation worse.” 

When a reporter suggested that Trump’s proposed treatments might be dangerous, letting “people think they would be safe by going outside in the heat considering that so many people are dying in Florida,” Trump pivoted to another of his regular briefing themes: attacking the news media.

“Yeah, here – here we go,” he began, clearly irritated. “The new headline is, ‘Trump asks people to go outside, that’s dangerous.’ Here we go, same old group. Are you ready? I hope people enjoy the sun, and if it has an impact, that’s great.”

Seeking affirmation of his opinion, Trump turned to Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator. He asked if she had heard of the success of sunlight as an effective tool against viruses, and more specifically the coronavirus.

“Not as a treatment,” Birx replied. “I mean, certainly fever is a good thing when you have a fever. It helps your body respond. But not as – I have not seen heat or ....” Trump cut short her answer. “I think that’s a great thing to look at,” he said. “I mean you know, OK?” 

As the pandemic has spread to countries experiencing hot weather, including Australia and Iran, some groups have investigated whether the warmer summer season would slow the virus. Early this month, a committee of the National Academy of Sciences looked exclusively at humidity and temperature and found that they would have a minimal impact on the virus.

In his remarks, Bryan told the briefing that the novel coronavirus dies rapidly when exposed to sunlight, high temperatures and humidity. He cited experiments the agency had conducted at a high-security laboratory in Frederick, Maryland.

“Our most striking observation to date is the powerful effect that solar light appears to have on killing the virus – both surfaces and in the air,” Bryan said.

“We’ve seen a similar effect with both temperature and humidity as well, where increasing the temperature and humidity, or both, is generally less favourable to the virus.” 

The sunlight finding was no surprise to life scientists who, for many decades, have reported that ultraviolet light – an invisible but energetic part of the sun’s electromagnetic spectrum – can damage DNA, kill viruses and turn human skin cells from healthy to cancerous.

For public health, the big challenge is widening such narrow laboratory findings so they take into account how the global environment and its changing weather and endless nuances can impact the overall result – most especially on the question of whether the virus that causes Covid-19 will diminish in the summer.

This week, a pair of ecological modellers at the University of Connecticut reported evidence that balmy weather may indeed slow the coronavirus but not enough to do away with the social-distancing measures advised by public health officials.

The inherent limitations of lab studies were driven home April 7 in a letter to the White House from a National Academy of Sciences panel looking into research on the coronavirus. “With experimental studies,” the panel said, “environmental conditions can be controlled, but almost always the conditions fail to adequately mimic those of the natural setting.” 

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2020-04-24 08:58:07Z
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Coronavirus dies quickest in sunlight and humidity, US scientists say - South China Morning Post

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Coronavirus dies quickest in sunlight and humidity, US scientists say  South China Morning Post
  2. Sunlight, heat and humidity weaken coronavirus, US official says  CNA
  3. Coronavirus dies fastest under light, warm and humid conditions: US government study  The Straits Times
  4. Coronavirus: Outcry after Trump suggests injecting disinfectant as treatment  BBC News
  5. Medical experts denounce Trump's latest 'dangerous' suggestion to treat Covid-19  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMid2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNjbXAuY29tL25ld3Mvd29ybGQvdW5pdGVkLXN0YXRlcy1jYW5hZGEvYXJ0aWNsZS8zMDgxMzQ0L2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWRpZXMtcXVpY2tlc3Qtc3VubGlnaHQtYW5kLWh1bWlkaXR5LXVz0gF3aHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAuc2NtcC5jb20vbmV3cy93b3JsZC91bml0ZWQtc3RhdGVzLWNhbmFkYS9hcnRpY2xlLzMwODEzNDQvY29yb25hdmlydXMtZGllcy1xdWlja2VzdC1zdW5saWdodC1hbmQtaHVtaWRpdHktdXM?oc=5

2020-04-24 05:06:26Z
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