Rabu, 06 Mei 2020

Number of Covid-19 cases in Singapore crosses 20000 mark, with 788 new infections - TODAYonline

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  1. Number of Covid-19 cases in Singapore crosses 20000 mark, with 788 new infections  TODAYonline
  2. Number of coronavirus cases crosses 20000 in Singapore with 788 new infections  The Straits Times
  3. 13 cases of COVID-19 detected through 'random testing' at GPs and polyclinics under MOH surveillance programme  CNA
  4. Coronavirus: Singapore houses migrant construction workers on-site after dormitory outbreaks  South China Morning Post
  5. COVID-19: Cases in Singapore crosses 20,000 mark with 788 new infections  Yahoo Singapore News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-05-06 07:26:26Z
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Number of coronavirus cases crosses 20000 in Singapore with 788 new infections - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The Ministry of Health (MOH) has preliminarily confirmed 788 new Covid-19 cases in Singapore as of Wednesday noon (May 6), taking the total count in the country past 20,000.

Among the new cases are 11 Singaporeans and permanent residents, while migrant workers living in dormitories form the majority of the remaining cases.

More details will be released later on Wednesday, the ministry added.

With Wednesday's cases, Singapore has now reported 20,198 coronavirus cases, the most in South-east Asia.

From the first coronavirus case on Jan 23, Singapore took about 13 weeks to cross the 10,000 mark on April 22.

But this figure doubled in a much shorter time in the last two weeks to hit just over 20,000 on Wednesday.

MOH has said the recent spike in patient numbers is largely driven by the increase in cases in dormitories and active testing of workers staying there.

The ministry also reported recently that the average daily number of  cases outside dormitories in the past week has generally been falling.

To date, 16,998 - or about 5.3 per cent - of the 323,000 migrant workers living in dormitories have tested positive for Covid-19 - comprising nearly nine in 10 of Singapore's total.

Of the 632 new cases announced on Tuesday, 27 were cases outside dormitories. Eight were Singaporeans or permanent residents, four were work pass holders, and another 15 were migrant workers not living in dormitories.

Cases among Singaporeans, PRs and pass holders have dropped to an average of 10 a day in the past week from 17 two weeks ago.

The average daily number of such unlinked cases has also fallen to five from 10 in the same period.

As of Tuesday, 1,513 patients in Singapore have fully recovered from the virus and been discharged.

Eighteen have died from Covid-19 complications and six who tested positive have died from other causes.

Globally, the outbreak, which began in December last year, has infected more than 3.6 million people. Some 257,000 patients have died.

The United States is the worst affected country in the world with more than 1.2 million cases and 71,000 deaths from Covid-19 as of Wednesday.

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2020-05-06 07:19:38Z
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Selasa, 05 Mei 2020

China says Hong Kong will never be calm unless violent protesters removed - CNA

BEIJING: China's Hong Kong affairs office on Wednesday (May 6) condemned Hong Kong protesters as a "political virus" who seek independence, warning that the city will never be calm unless "black-clad violent protesters" were all removed.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs office warned that China's central government will not sit idly by "with this recklessly demented force in place" and that China's central government has the greatest responsibility in maintaining order and safeguarding national security.

"The scorched-earth action of the black-clad violent protesters is a political virus in Hong Kong society and a big enemy to 'one-country-two-systems'," the office said in a statement on Wednesday.

"As long as the protesters are not removed, Hong Kong will never be calm," it said.

READ: Police fan out but Hong Kongers eschew May Day rallies

The Asian financial hub was rocked in 2019 by months of massive, and sometimes violent, political protests after an attempt to introduce an extradition bill to mainland China.

Many young protesters dressed in black fought running battles with Hong Kong police.

Protesters said Beijing was seeking to erode the “one country, two systems” style of governance that guarantees broad freedoms for Hong Kong since its return to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing rejects criticism that it is seeking to encroach on the city’s much-cherished freedoms.

Hong Kong riot police dispersed a crowd of 300 pro-democracy activists, some wearing black, late last month - the first sizeable protest since the government imposed a ban on public meetings at the end of March to curb coronavirus infections.

Political tensions have risen after 15 pro-democracy activists were arrested in April.

READ: China says 'resolutely' supports Hong Kong's arrest of activists

Hong Kong’s economy recorded in the first quarter its deepest annual contraction since at least 1974, as the coronavirus pandemic dealt a heavy blow to business activity, already in decline following the anti-government protests.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs said that while there were many factors contributing to Hong Kong's economic woes, the main problem was anti-government protests.

"Hong Kong's biggest trouble comes from within, that is the violent forces openly calling for and engaging in 'lanchao'," said the office, referring to a tactic of dragging all of society in a scorched-earth manner.

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2020-05-06 05:48:23Z
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Man on stay-home notice allegedly brought friend to hotel room, met others in a carpark - TODAYonline

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  1. Man on stay-home notice allegedly brought friend to hotel room, met others in a carpark  TODAYonline
  2. Man charged for leaving hotel room, inviting friends over while on stay-home notice  CNA
  3. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-05-06 04:11:44Z
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Man charged for leaving hotel room, inviting friends over while on stay-home notice - CNA

SINGAPORE: A manwas charged on Wednesday (May 6) for breaching his stay-home notice three times to meet his friends, and inviting them over to the hotel where he was serving his notice.

Chng Tianxi, 37, returned to Singapore from Thailand on Mar 26. He was issued a stay-home notice to remain in a hotel room at Pan Pacific Service Suites Orchard between Mar 26 and Apr 9, the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) said.

However, the Singaporean allegedly left his hotel room on three occasions to meet his friends, even inviting a friend over to his room twice.

Chng will return to court on May 20 to plead guilty.

On Apr 1, Chng left his room at about 1.25am and took a lift to bring a friend from the basement car park to his room, ICA said. The friend left at about 5am. 

READ: Jail for man who breached stay-home notice to eat bak kut teh at hawker centre, run errands

READ: Man charged with breaching stay-home notice to go to ICA and hospital

He is said to have left his room again on Apr 4 to bring the same friend over at about 12.35am. The friend left at about 2am. 

An ICA officer visited Chng the next day to advise him that it was mandatory to remain in his room. 

However, ICA said Chng left his room again on Apr 6 to meet three friends in the basement car park, and took the lift with them to the 16th floor. He then returned to his room.

Chng was charged in court for offences under Section 21A of the Infectious Diseases Act and the Infectious Diseases (Measures to Prevent Spread of COVID-19) Regulations 2020.

If convicted, he faces up to six months' jail and a fine of up to S$10,000.

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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2020-05-06 03:22:30Z
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Man to be charged for leaving hotel room, inviting friends over while on stay-home notice - CNA

SINGAPORE: A man will be charged on Wednesday (May 6) for breaching his stay-home notice three times to meet his friends, and inviting them over to the hotel where he was serving his notice.

Chng Tianxi, 37, returned to Singapore from Thailand on Mar 26. He was issued a stay-home notice to remain in a hotel room at Pan Pacific Service Suites Orchard between Mar 26 and Apr 9, the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) said.

However, the Singaporean allegedly left his hotel room on three occasions to meet his friends, even inviting a friend over to his room twice.

On Apr 1, Chng left his room at about 1.25am and took a lift to bring a friend from the basement car park to his room, ICA said. The friend left at about 5am. 

READ: Jail for man who breached stay-home notice to eat bak kut teh at hawker centre, run errands

READ: Man charged with breaching stay-home notice to go to ICA and hospital

He is said to have left his room again on Apr 4 to bring the same friend over at about 12.35am. The friend left at about 2am. 

An ICA officer visited Chng the next day to advise him that it was mandatory to remain in his room. 

However, ICA said Chng left his room again on Apr 6 to meet three friends in the basement car park, and took the lift with them to the 16th floor. He then returned to his room.

Chng will be charged in court for offences under Section 21A of the Infectious Diseases Act and the Infectious Diseases (Measures to Prevent Spread of COVID-19) Regulations 2020. 

If convicted, he faces up to six months' jail and a fine of up to S$10,000.

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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2020-05-06 02:05:17Z
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Trump says US must reopen even if more Americans get sick, die from Covid-19 - The Straits Times

PHOENIX (BLOOMBERG) - US President Donald Trump launched headlong into his push to reopen the country on Tuesday (May 4), saying Americans should begin returning to their everyday lives even if it leads to more sickness and death from the pandemic.

Trump, speaking in Phoenix during his first trip outside Washington in more than a month, said he's preparing for "phase two" of the US response to the coronavirus.

That will include disbanding the White House task force of public health experts, including Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx, that have steered the government response to the outbreak so far.

Trump acknowledged that reopening the economy would likely lead to more suffering.

"Will some people be affected? Yes. Will some people be affected badly? Yes," Trump said. "But we have to get our country open and we have to get it open soon."

On his visit to a Phoenix-based Honeywell International Inc. factory producing medical masks, Trump made his most forceful case yet that the economic damage to the country has become too great to sustain an extended shutdown.

He encouraged Americans to think of themselves as "warriors" as they consider leaving their homes, a tacit acknowledgment of deep public reservations about re-opening the country too soon.

The president has expressed increasing frustration with the coronavirus-sparked recession that has put more than 30 million Americans out of work and hurt his case for a second term. The US continues to sport the largest coronavirus outbreak in the world, with about 1.2 million people infected and more than 70,000 killed so far.

Speaking separately in an ABC News interview that aired on Tuesday evening, Trump said closing down the nation was "the biggest decision I've ever had to make".

And he was resolute about the decision to reopen the nation, despite the certainty of suffering it will cause until a vaccine is developed.

"There'll be more death," he said. "The virus will pass, with or without a vaccine. And I think we're doing very well on the vaccines but, with or without a vaccine, it's going to pass, and we're going to be back to normal."

"But it's been a rough process. There is no question about it," Trump said. "I think our economy is going to be raging" next year, he added.

NO FACE MASK

While in Phoenix, Trump encouraged states to ease social-distancing measures and allow businesses to reopen, though he cautioned that it should be done "safely".

Yet, the president declined to set an example for the nation by engaging in one government-recommended safety protocol himself: wearing a face mask.

As he toured the Honeywell plant, Trump wore only safety goggles. Music from his standard campaign rally soundtrack played over loudspeakers, including Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the USA" and Guns N' Roses's "Live and Let Die".

Senior White House officials also did not don the masks, which the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention recommend when social distancing isn't possible. Factory workers, members of the press and other support staff did.

Trump also lamented that he had to stand six feet apart from two supporters during his speech, including one who was wearing a sequined denim vest with his campaign slogan.

Trump said that "doctors" he didn't name had advised him to close the economy "for a couple of years".

"I created, with a lot of other very talented people and the people of our country, the greatest economy in the history of the world. The greatest that we've ever had," Trump said.

"And then one day they said, 'we have to close our country.' Well, now it's time to open up."

Public-health experts have repeatedly warned the country risks a second wave of infections if restrictions are lifted too early, which could lead to another round of shutdowns and economic damage.

MODELS 'SO WRONG'

But even as Trump said a full-scale re-opening could lead to more deaths, he expressed optimism the virus would go away. And he added that if cases do rebound, it would be like a "fire" that could be extinguished "fast".

He also dismissed two new projections that painted a gruesome picture of what could happen if the country lifts shutdown orders too quickly: a Johns Hopkins University model showing deaths could reach 3,000 per day by June 1 and a University of Washington analysis showing the US death toll could reach 135,000 by the beginning of August.

"These models have been so wrong from day one. Both on the low side and the upside. They've been so wrong, they've been so out of whack. And they keep making new models, new models and they're wrong," the president said.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said earlier on Tuesday the Johns Hopkins model, included in a government document obtained Monday by the New York Times, relied on "faulty assumptions" about mitigation efforts and didn't represent federal government projections.

"The people of our country are warriors," Trump said of Americans, some 69 per cent of whom are "somewhat" or "very" worried about contracting Covid-19, according to an analysis of polls by fivethirtyeight.com.

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2020-05-05 23:58:47Z
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