Sabtu, 25 April 2020

Dozens of anti-lockdown protesters arrested in Berlin - CNA

BERLIN: German police arrested dozens of protesters in Berlin on Saturday (Apr 25) for flouting the coronavirus lockdown measures they were demonstrating against.

About 1,000 people turned out for the rally, which has become a weekly event in the German capital.

Saturday's protest attracted mainly far-left activists but there were also right-wing supporters and members of other fringe groups.

Police put up barriers around Rosa Luxemburg square, where the protesters were headed, leaving the participants to gather in nearby roads.

The protest "is not in line with the rules" in place to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 virus, police said on Twitter, telling those taking part to disperse.

Police remove a demonstrator during he anti-confinement protest in Berlin
Police remove a demonstrator during he anti-confinement protest in Berlin. (Photo: AFP/Tobias Schwarz)

Some of the demonstrators wore T-shirts accusing Chancellor Angela Merkel of "banning life" while others simply called for "freedom".

Others brandished placards bearing slogans such as "Stop the pharmaceutical lobby".

The protest was unauthorised as a result of emergency rules in Berlin banning gatherings of more than 20 people.

The protest organisers' website called for "an end to the state of emergency" and played down the threat posed by the virus.

Public discontent with the confinement rules has been growing gradually in Germany, as in other countries, though Merkel's popularity remains high.

Various masks were on display
Various masks were on display. (Photo: AFP/Tobias Sschwarz)

She has received plaudits for her management of the health crisis which has seen Germany's COVID-19 toll - 5,500 according to an AFP tally - remain significantly lower than in Italy, Spain, France and Britain where the death tolls have all risen above 20,000.

Opposition to the lockdown measures is being led by the far-right, the main opposition force in the German parliament.

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party accuses the government of exaggerating the risk posed by the virus and has called for the immediate reopening of all businesses.

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2020-04-25 20:48:06Z
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Circulating WhatsApp message lists events that suggest how PAP fails Singapore and its migrant workers - The Online Citizen

With 618 new COVID-19 cases reported on 25 April, which then brought the total to 12,693 cases in Singapore, Singapore citizens could not help but to further question the government’s decision on handling the issue revolving migrant workers here.

A WhatsApp message had been circulating among locals, stated the events that suggested why the People’s Action Party (PAP) had failed Singapore and the migrant workers who contributed to the nation.

The message listed events that dated back to mid-February, saying how the entire exponential boom in Singapore’s COVID-19 cases among migrant workers was related to the inadequate decisions made by the Ministry of Manpower.

The timeline is off though. The foreign worker mentioned in the message should be Case 69,  a 26 year-old Bangladesh national who is a Singapore Work Pass holder and was warded in an isolation room at NCID. He is linked to the cluster at Seletar Aerospace Heights construction site.

He had been identified as a close contact of Cases 42, 47, 52 and 56, and had been quarantined at a government quarantine facility from 11 February. He reported onset of symptoms that night and was conveyed by ambulance to NCID on 14 February. Subsequent test results confirmed COVID-19 infection on 15 February morning.

There was no foreign national who has been confirmed as infected on between 17 and 18 Feb.

As for the cluster, Case 69 is the last migrant worker who was linked to the Seletar Aerospace Heights construction site. The next cluster that involved migrant workers was identified as S11 dormitory @ Punggol on 29 March, case 826 and case 829.

However, the point of the message is about how majority of the infected patients in Singapore are migrant workers who live in dormitories. The first two migrant workers who were tested COVID-19 positive was reported as early as 12 February.

According to the Straits Times, following the confirmation of the first migrant worker’s infection, several of his roommates at The Leo Dormitory at Kaki Bukit had been served quarantine.

As news continued to unfold the severity of transmission among migrant workers, employers rushed to send their migrant workers who were unwell to the hospital for a COVID-19 swab test.

On 19 February, the divisional director of the Ministry of Manpower’s management division, Kevin Teoh, warned employers to not send their employees to hospitals, unless there was a medical emergency. This statement was made after he received feedback from hospitals that workers were being sent to be tested for COVID-19.

Apart from preventing migrant workers from receiving medical attention, Mr Teoh had also warned that “employers who act irresponsibly by misusing medical facilities may have their work pass privileges suspended”.

Seeing how the warning posed a threat to their livelihood in Singapore, everyone kept quiet until the massive outbreak erupted.

This issue alone had led to criticisms by local netizens as well as international outlets like BBC News.

A migrant worker in the interview with the BBC host revealed that the isolation should have been done sooner and that they are living in fear knowing that they are at high risk of contracting the coronavirus.

Since there had been reports of asymptomatic transmissions of COVID-19, in retrospect, it could mean that “healthy” people could be the carriers of the coronavirus back when MOM barred anyone “healthy” from being tested.

Of the more than 11,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases currently in Singapore, some 80% are migrant workers living in the numerous dormitories across Singapore, with incidents of local transmission within the rest of the community still occurring despite government telling Singaporeans to stay home.

In a media interview, Manpower Minister Josephine Teo responded feebly to the massive coronavirus outbreak among migrant workers saying Singapore only has a fraction of them working here.

“There are in Southeast Asia alone about 10 million migrant workers. A fraction of them in Singapore. We’re not perfect but we do what we can,” she said.

“Yes, we took some safe distancing measures within the dormitories and if we were to be able to rewind the clock, one could say that these safe distancing measures needed to go much further.”

Should the government had known that the migrant workers’ dormitories are a gigantic breeding ground for COVID-19, would they have done more to contain the spread in the earlier stages?

Not only that the government did not apologise for the mishandling of the outbreak in dormitories, but they also refused to own up to their mishaps in containing the coronavirus.

There are also hundreds of cases among Work Permit holders unrelated to the dormitory clusters as they are residing outside dormitories.

If the outbreak did not occur among migrant workers’ dormitories, would the outbreak in Singapore be as enormous as it is today?

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2020-04-25 17:26:15Z
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Singapore reports 618 new cases of COVID-19; new cluster at Northpoint City - CNA

SINGAPORE: Singapore reported 618 new cases of COVID-19 on Saturday (Apr 25), bringing the national total to 12,693. 

Seven new clusters were also identified, including shopping mall Northpoint City at Yishun. 

A total of 597 of Saturday's cases were work permit holders residing in dormitories, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said. Another 12 were work permit holders living outside of dormitories. 

Seven of the cases are Singaporeans or permanent residents, with two on work passes or long-term visit passes.

Of the new cases, 81 per cent are linked to known clusters, while the rest are pending contact tracing.​​​​​​​

COVID-19 total cases, discharged

NORTHPOINT CITY AMONG 7 NEW CLUSTERS

Between Apr 18 and Apr 24, MOH uncovered links for 1,226 previously unlinked cases.

Seven new clusters have been identified, including Northpoint City in Yishun.

The Northpoint City cluster is made up of seven previously identified cases.

Eleven previously confirmed cases have now been linked to a new cluster at ASPRI Westlite Papan (5 Jalan Papan).

Of the newly confirmed cases, one was linked to 13 previously identified cases to form a new cluster at Kian Teck Hostel, (30 Kian Teck Avenue).

Fourteen of the earlier confirmed cases have now been linked to a new cluster at SCM Tuas Lodge (80 Tuas South Boulevard).

Another new cluster was found at 21 Defu South Street 1, made up of 32 previously identified cases.

Four of the newly confirmed cases are linked to seven previous cases to form a new cluster at the construction site at 8 Martin Place.

Twelve of the newly confirmed cases are linked to a new cluster at a construction site at 107 West Coast Vale.

A total of 25 dormitories have been gazetted as isolation areas.

On Friday, the Ministry of Manpower issued a "stern warning" to the operator of the Joylicious workers dormitory in Tuas for locking 20 migrant workers in their room after a close contact of theirs contracted COVID-19. 

INTERACTIVE: All the COVID-19 clusters at dorms and construction sites

Singapore is going through a "circuit breaker" period to stem the spread of COVID-19. The period was at first scheduled to end on May 4 but will now last until Jun 1. 

All non-essential workplaces have been ordered closed and residents are barred from leaving the house except to buy food and groceries or to exercise alone in the neighbourhood. 

Twelve people in Singapore have died due to COVID-19. The latest fatality was announced on Wednesday night - an 84-year-old Singaporean woman identified as case 1071. 

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

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-04-25 15:33:45Z
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China sent team including medical experts to advise on North Korean leader Kim Jong Un: Sources - AsiaOne

BEIJING/SEOUL - China has dispatched a team to North Korea including medical experts to advise on North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, according to three people familiar with the situation.

The trip by the Chinese doctors and officials comes amid conflicting reports about the health of the North Korean leader.

Reuters was unable to immediately determine what the trip by the Chinese team signalled in terms of Kim's health.

A delegation led by a senior member of the Chinese Communist Party's International Liaison Department left Beijing for North Korea on Thursday, two of the people said.

The department is the main Chinese body dealing with neighbouring North Korea.

The sources declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the matter. The Liaison Department could not be reached by Reuters for comment late on Friday.

China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment late on Friday.

Daily NK, a Seoul-based website, reported earlier this week that Kim was recovering after undergoing a cardiovascular procedure on April 12. It cited one unnamed source in North Korea.

South Korean government officials and a Chinese official with the Liaison Department challenged subsequent reports suggesting that Kim was in grave danger after surgery.

South Korean officials said they had detected no signs of unusual activity in North Korea.

[[nid:485340]]

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump also downplayed earlier reports that Kim was gravely ill. "I think the report was incorrect," Trump told reporters, but he declined to say if he had been in touch with North Korean officials.

On Friday, a South Korean source told Reuters their intelligence was that Kim was alive and would likely make an appearance soon.

The person said he did not have any comment on Kim's current condition or any Chinese involvement. An official familiar with US intelligence said that Kim was known to have health problems but they had no reason to conclude he was seriously ill or unable eventually to reappear in public.

A US State department spokeswoman had no comment.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo when asked about Kim's health on Fox News after Trump spoke said, "I don't have anything I can share with you tonight, but the American people should know we're watching the situation very keenly."

North Korea is one of the world's most isolated and secretive countries, and the health of its leaders is treated as a matter of state security.

Reuters has not been able to independently confirm any details on Kim's whereabouts or condition.

North Korea's state media last reported on Kim's whereabouts when he presided over a meeting on April 11. State media did not report that he was in attendance at an event to mark the birthday of his grandfather, Kim Il Sung, on April 15, an important anniversary in North Korea.

Kim, believed to be 36, has disappeared from coverage in North Korean state media before. In 2014, he vanished for more than a month and North Korean state TV later showed him walking with a limp.

Speculation about his health has been fanned by his heavy smoking, apparent weight gain since taking power and family history of cardiovascular problems.

When Kim Jong Un's father, Kim Jong Il, suffered a stroke in 2008, South Korean media reported at the time that Chinese doctors were involved in his treatment along with French physicians.

Last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping made the first state visit in 14 years by a Chinese leader to North Korea, an impoverished state that depends on Beijing for economic and diplomatic support.

China is North Korea's chief ally and the economic lifeline for a country hard-hit by UN sanctions, and has a keen interest in the stability of the country with which it shares a long, porous border.

Kim is a third-generation hereditary leader who came to power after his father Kim Jong Il died in 2011 from a heart attack. He has visited China four times since 2018.

Trump held unprecedented summits with Kim in 2018 and 2019 as part of a bid to persuade him to give up North Korea's nuclear arsenal.

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2020-04-25 16:29:42Z
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7 new Covid-19 clusters in S'pore, including Northpoint City in Yishun; 597 of 618 new cases are workers in dormitories - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Foreign workers living in dormitories made up 597 of the 618 new coronavirus cases on Saturday (April 25), according to an evening update from the Ministry of Health (MOH).

Foreign workers not living in dorms made up 12 of the new cases.

There were also nine new cases in the community, including seven Singaporeans and permanent residents.

There were no imported cases reported.

MOH also announced seven new coronavirus clusters, including some dormitories.

They are: Northpoint City, domitories ASPRI-Westlite Papan, Kian Teck Hostel and SCM Tuas Lodge, construction sites at  8 Martin Place and 107 West Coast Vale; and 21 Defu South Street 1.

Singapore's largest active cluster remains S11 Dormitory@ Punggol, which has confirmed over 2,000 cases.

With Saturday's figures, the total number of Covid-19 cases in Singapore stands at 12,693.

About 3 per cent of the 323,000 foreign workers living in dormitories have tested positive, putting the spotlight on their living conditions in these dormitories.

The MOH had said that it picked up many more cases in dormitories because of extensive testing. Most of these cases have a mild illness and are being monitored in community isolation facilities or the general wards of hospitals.

Related Stories: 

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2020-04-25 15:33:21Z
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Malaysia reports 51 new COVID-19 cases, 2 deaths - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia reported 51 new COVID-19 infections and two deaths on Saturday (Apr 25).

The total number of recorded cases in the country is now 5,742, with 98 fatalities, the health ministry said in a news conference.

READ: With due dates looming and COVID-19 curbs, Malaysian expectant mums in Singapore faced with hard choices

READ: Undaunted by COVID-19 and border controls, Malaysian mums in Singapore send around 3,000kg of breast milk to babies back home

One of the fatalities was a 62-year-old Malaysian man with a history of heart disease, said health director-general Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah. 

He was treated at the Sungai Buloh Hospital on Mar 28 and died on Saturday. 

The other fatality is a 62-year-old Malaysian woman with a history of high blood pressure. She was in close contact with another COVID-19 patient, who is her next-of-kin, and was treated at the Kuala Lumpur Hospital on Mar 22. 

She subsequently died on Apr 24. 

Dr Noor Hisham said that 99 cases have also recovered on Saturday and have been discharged, bringing the number of fully recovered cases to 3,762. 

“The total number of COVID-19 infectivity cases stands at 1,882 cases. They have been isolated and given treatment,” Dr Noor Hisham said in the press conference. 

CLUSTER LINKED TO BALI

A cluster in a medical centre in Kuantan, Pahang that has been linked to Bali has had 43 people tested positive for COVID-19. 

Of the cases, 10 are health personnel from the centre itself. 

READ: Critical illness patients in Malaysia face anxious wait as hospital resources diverted to COVID-19

READ: ‘It doesn’t feel like Hari Raya’ - Malaysia’s Ramadan vendors fret over slow sales amid COVID-19

Thirty of the cases in the cluster that tested positive for COVID-19 are being treated at the Tengku Ampuan Afzan Hospital (HTAA) in Kuantan.

Nine have since recovered, with another case undergoing treatment at the intensive care unit, said Dr Noor Hisham. 

Three cases from the cluster have died.

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

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-04-25 11:03:29Z
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Singapore falls heavily on COVID-19 pandemic due to three flaws, says M'sia Sinchew Daily's Tay Tian Yan - The Online Citizen

There are three flaws in the measures taken by Singapore government when dealing with the COVID-19 crisis, including government’s overconfidence, a lack of crisis awareness and the citizens’ overdependence on government, says Tay Tian Yan, the deputy executive editor-in-chief of Malaysia’s Sinchew Daily.

In an article published by Malaysia’s Sinchew Daily on Friday (24 April), Mr Tay shared his opinion on the reason of Singapore falling heavily on COVID-19 pandemic though Singapore has been recognised as the most efficient and safest country with the top public health system around the world.

As the countries worldwide are dealing with the spread of COVID-19 since March, the Singapore government had encouraged the people to go about their lives, such as working, studying, travelling as normally as possible while asking people not to wear mask if they are not sick, says Mr Tay.

He remarked, “It is good to have self-confidence. But, overconfidence indicates the start of failure.”

Noting Singapore announced its “circuit breaker” measured three weeks after Malaysia imposed Movement Control Order (MCO), Mr Tay however, pointed out that the ministers had chosen to use the rigid “elite language” during the announcement, which in fact reflects the disconnection between government and general society.

He said, “Just by this ‘circuit breaker’, shows the degree of disconnection between the elite government and general public.”

“Despite Singaporeans having adequate knowledge with a good command in English, I believe that the common people would not understand what ‘circuit breaker’ means. They might know the electrical ‘circuit breaker’, but what does it has to do with COVID-19?” he added.

Even the Chinese media had trouble in finding the appropriate words to describe the “circuit breaker”, said Mr Tay.

Citing the word “lockdown”, “movement control order” or “stay-at-home orders” which clearly stated its meaning and purpose, Mr Tay stressed that the important government policies should be conveyed in a way that is easy to be understood for the people.

On top of this, Singapore also has overlooked its large population of migrant workers due to their overconfidence and not being “grounded”.

He noted that the leaders of Singapore government are the “outstanding individuals” who are “carefully selected” from academic elites, adding, “However, they are not ‘grounded’ because they ‘came from the sky, not from the land’.”

Speaking on the second flaws, Mr Tay mentioned that Singaporeans are too dependent on “Cheng Hu” (government in Hokkien language) as they always believe what the government says is right.

“When the Government says that there is no need to be worry, everyone goes on with their life as usual. Similarly, when it asked Singaporeans not to wear masks, the people also heeded its “advice” and furthermore, mocked Taiwanese and Hong Kong citizens for wearing masks,” he said.

He then said that it would be “dangerous” in the case of unforeseen circumstances if the citizens merely obey the government and are deprived of independent thinking and judgment skills.

Singaporeans tend to take for granted as they feel prosperous and safe in the country with the highest GDP in the world, says Mr Tay, adding that this mentality has consequently caused a lack of crisis awareness among the society.

Hence, he said, Singaporeans assumed that the virus is only linked to other countries and has nothing to do with them though the world struggles against COVID-19.

With that in mind, some nightclubs even extended its operation hours the night before circuit breaker started, while the long queues have been seen at bubble tea shops after the food and beverage outlets were asked to temporarily close under the elevated circuit breaker measures.

Mr Tay expressed that there will be blind spots and failures regardless of how successful the country and how capable the government is, noting, “Overconfidence and success are traps on the way forward.”

However, he believed the country would ride out this crisis and learn the lesson from it.

Singapore has reported an additional 618 cases of COVID-19 infection on Saturday (25 April), bringing the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases to 12,693 in the country.

Of the new cases, seven are Singaporeans and permanent residents, while the rest comprises migrant workers living in dormitories.

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2020-04-25 09:33:45Z
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