Minggu, 17 Mei 2020

Najib is the real protagonist for his ouster as Kedah's chief minister, Mukhriz claims - TODAYonline

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  1. Najib is the real protagonist for his ouster as Kedah's chief minister, Mukhriz claims  TODAYonline
  2. Mukhriz Mahathir resigns as Kedah chief minister  CNA
  3. Mukhriz Mahathir defiant after being forced to quit as Kedah chief minister  South China Morning Post
  4. Analysis: Muhyiddin's political crisis defused by Covid-19  The Star Online
  5. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-05-17 08:16:41Z
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China urges food companies to boost supplies on fears of further COVID-19 disruption - CNA

BEIJING: China has asked trading firms and food processors to boost inventories of grains and oilseeds as a possible second wave of COVID-19 cases and worsening infection rates elsewhere raise concerns about global supply lines.

Both state-run and private grain traders as well as food producers were urged to procure higher volumes of soybeans, soyoil and corn during calls with China's Ministry of Commerce in recent days, three trade sources told Reuters.

"There is a possibility of a breakdown in supply pipelines due to the coronavirus infections. For example, a port of origin or destination might shut down," said a senior trader at one of China's leading food processors, which was on a call last week with authorities to discuss purchases.

"They have advised us to increase stocks, keep supplies higher than we usually have. Things are not looking good in Brazil," he added, referring to China's main supplier of soybeans and a key meat exporter where the number of coronavirus cases has surpassed those in Spain and Italy.

A second source in China who was briefed by a person who attended one of the meetings said China's Ministry of Commerce met with some state companies on Tuesday (May 12) to discuss how to guarantee supplies during the pandemic.

"One of the main concerns is how the epidemic in South America might impact supplies (of beans) to China," the source said.

China's Ministry of Commerce did not respond to a fax seeking comments on plans to increase food stocks.

SOY SHOCK

Brazilian shipments of soybeans were delayed in March and April due to a combination of heavy rains and reduced manpower as coronavirus containment measures took effect, leading to a plunge in Chinese soy inventories to record lows.

Arrivals from Brazil have since rebounded, but authorities remain wary of fresh disruptions.

China's state-owned agriculture conglomerate COFCO and grain stockpiler Sinograin have been stepping up purchases of US soybeans and corn in recent weeks.

Chinese importers bought at least four cargoes, or about 240,000 tonnes, of US soybeans on Monday for shipment beginning in July, two traders familiar with the deals said.

Beijing has also increased its allocations of crop import quotas to major grain buyers, paving the way for further potential purchases.

China is under pressure to buy more US farm products under a trade deal signed between Washington and Beijing in January, and trade sources expect more of China's crops to come from the United States once the South American export season ends and the North American harvests approach in the autumn.

"The effort is to build supplies, not just from Brazil, but from all over," said the senior trader at the food processing company. "US beans are looking attractive from September onwards," he added.

US crop export sales data show that Chinese buyers have accelerated soybean purchases of the upcoming crop, with new crop bookings of 374,000 tonnes already registered, compared with an average of 60,000 tonnes for this period since 2016.

China is also a top meat importer and is facing a large domestic supply shortfall following an outbreak of African swine fever which has decimated its pig herd, the world's largest.

Imports from the United States - the top global pork exporter - had been expected to surge as a result, but widespread COVID-19 outbreaks at US slaughterhouses and processing plants have cut national meat output.

China has booked a record volume of US pork shipments already this year, raising concerns about fresh tensions between the countries if US meat production problems curb domestic supplies at a time when shipments to China remain strong.

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

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2020-05-17 08:06:26Z
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China urges food companies to boost supplies on fears of further COVID-19 disruption - Yahoo Singapore News

FILE PHOTO: A worker inspects soybeans during the soy harvest near the town of Campos Lindos

By Naveen Thukral and Hallie Gu

SINGAPORE/BEIJING (Reuters) - China has asked trading firms and food processors to boost inventories of grains and oilseeds as a possible second wave of coronavirus cases and worsening infection rates elsewhere raise concerns about global supply lines.

Both state-run and private grain traders as well as food producers were urged to procure higher volumes of soybeans, soyoil and corn during calls with China's Ministry of Commerce in recent days, three trade sources told Reuters.

"There is a possibility of a breakdown in supply pipelines due to the coronavirus infections. For example, a port of origin or destination might shut down," said a senior trader at one of China's leading food processors, which was on a call last week with authorities to discuss purchases.

"They have advised us to increase stocks, keep supplies higher than we usually have. Things are not looking good in Brazil," he added, referring to China's main supplier of soybeans and a key meat exporter where the number of coronavirus cases has surpassed those in Spain and Italy.

A second source in China who was briefed by a person who attended one of the meetings said China's Ministry of Commerce met with some state companies on Tuesday to discuss how to guarantee supplies during the pandemic.

"One of the main concerns is how the epidemic in South America might impact supplies (of beans) to China," the source said.

China's Ministry of Commerce did not respond to a fax seeking comments on plans to increase food stocks.

SOY SHOCK

Brazilian shipments of soybeans were delayed in March and April due to a combination of heavy rains and reduced manpower as coronavirus containment measures took effect, leading to a plunge in Chinese soy inventories to record lows.

Arrivals from Brazil have since rebounded, but authorities remain wary of fresh disruptions.

China's state-owned agriculture conglomerate COFCO and grain stockpiler Sinograin have been stepping up purchases of U.S. soybeans and corn in recent weeks.

Chinese importers bought at least four cargoes, or about 240,000 tonnes, of U.S. soybeans on Monday for shipment beginning in July, two traders familiar with the deals said.

Beijing has also increased its allocations of crop import quotas to major grain buyers, paving the way for further potential purchases.

China is under pressure to buy more U.S. farm products under a trade deal signed between Washington and Beijing in January, and trade sources expect more of China's crops to come from the United States once the South American export season ends and the North American harvests approach in the autumn.

"The effort is to build supplies, not just from Brazil, but from all over," said the senior trader at the food processing company. "U.S. beans are looking attractive from September onwards," he added.

U.S. crop export sales data show that Chinese buyers have accelerated soybean purchases of the upcoming crop, with new crop bookings of 374,000 tonnes already registered, compared with an average of 60,000 tonnes for this period since 2016.

China is also a top meat importer and is facing a large domestic supply shortfall following an outbreak of African swine fever which has decimated its pig herd, the world's largest.

Imports from the United States - the top global pork exporter - had been expected to surge as a result, but widespread COVID-19 outbreaks at U.S. slaughterhouses and processing plants have cut national meat output.

China has booked a record volume of U.S. pork shipments already this year, raising concerns about fresh tensions between the countries if U.S. meat production problems curb domestic supplies at a time when shipments to China remain strong.

(Reporting by Naveen Thukral in SINGAPORE and Hallie Gu in BEIJING. Editing by Gavin Maguire and Richard Pullin)

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2020-05-17 06:18:33Z
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Mukhriz Mahathir resigns as Kedah chief minister - CNA

ALOR SETAR: Mukhriz Mahathir on Sunday (May 17) announced his resignation as Kedah's chief minister with immediate effect. 

Mukhriz said this was after he had lost the majority support in the state legislative assembly. 

“This morning I had informed Sultan of Kedah Sultan Sallehuddin Sultan Badlishah that I have lost majority support among the state assemblymen, and therefore I am relinquishing my position as chief minister of Kedah with immediate effect," he said in a media conference at Wisma Darul Aman in the state capital Alor Setar on Sunday.

Mukhriz also thanked all state and federal government staff whom he said had cooperated well in the efforts to realise the state’s approach and policies throughout his leadership. 

READ: Mukhriz Mahathir loses grip on Kedah state government after defection of 2 PKR assemblymen

Mukhriz, who is currently Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) deputy president, said with his resignation, the positions of all state executive council members are automatically relinquished as well. 

Speaking further, Mukhriz said political upheaval that saw two Parti Keadilan Rakyat  (PKR) assemblymen quitting their party led to the Bersatu and Pakatan Harapan (PH) alliance losing its majority hold in the Kedah state assembly. 

Following this, Mukhriz said four more assemblymen from Bersatu then pledged their support for Perikatan Nasional (PN), which left the PH-Bersatu alliance with only 13 state seats as opposed to PN’s 23. 

“I have accepted this situation and I am relinquishing the chief minister post with an open heart," he said.

"Whatever happens politically at the federal level, my friends in PH and I are ready to soldier on as the opposition in Kedah until the state legislative assembly is dissolved.” 

Last Tuesday, two PKR assemblymen – Azman Nasrudin (Lunas) and Dr Robert Ling Kui Ee (Sidam) –  announced that they had quit the party

On the same day, Kedah opposition leader Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor said 19 out of 36 Kedah state assemblymen had lost confidence in Mukhriz’s leadership. 

In a separate media conference here on Sunday, Kedah state secretary Ammar Shaikh Mahmood Naim announced that the Sultan of Kedah had consented to the appointment of Muhammad Sanusi as the 14th chief minister. 

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2020-05-17 05:54:59Z
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Sabtu, 16 Mei 2020

My body was a wreck, says Singaporean Covid-19 patient - AsiaOne

On his 15th day at Changi General Hospital (CGH) battling the coronavirus, Mr Andrew Phay woke up to news that he had low oxygen levels in his blood.

All he could do was pray for a miracle.

X-ray checks showed his lungs were in bad shape and he needed breathing tubes to direct oxygen into them.

Mr Phay, 56, had tested positive for Covid-19 on March 17, after a 25-day trip to the United States and Mexico. His wife Anna Yeo, 57, and their two friends who were on that trip also contracted the virus.

"The fear of the unknown hit hard," said the retiree of the possibility that he would have to be moved to the intensive care unit.

"I prayed, I cried and despaired."

Doctors resorted to using hydroxychloroquine, typically used to treat malaria, to improve his lung function after his body responded poorly to an earlier related drug.

Mr Phay, Singapore's case 277, was earlier given chloroquine, also used to treat malaria, for three days. But those were the "worst three days" of his hospital stay, he said, as his body "reacted very badly" to it.

"Every breath I took made me nauseated. I couldn't sit, couldn't sleep, couldn't stand," he said.

"I was taken off the medication but my body was a wreck."

His body accepted the second drug better than the first and, gradually, he felt less breathless.

TERRIBLE STATE

Every breath I took made me nauseated. I couldn't sit, couldn't sleep, couldn't stand... I was taken off the medication, but my body was a wreck.

MR ANDREW PHAY, Singapore's case 277, who was earlier given chloroquine, which is used to treat malaria, for three days. The retiree says those were the "worst three days" of his hospital stay, as his body "reacted very badly" to it.

GRADUAL HEALING

It gets better with each day, but I still get a bit breathless when I try to exercise.

MR PHAY, who says the healing of his lungs is a long process.

MAIN WORRY

The first thought was whether our son was infected by us.

MADAM ANNA YEO, wife of Mr Andrew Phay and Singapore's case 422, on their only child.

Mr Phay has since recovered and was discharged on April 8. He said: "I believe I was given a second chance in life."

The former Asia-Pacific vice-president of an American information technology firm believes he and his travel companions had contracted the virus on their return to Singapore.

They had travelled overseas to attend his niece's wedding in Cancun, Mexico, and had taken a few connecting flights before arriving home on March 15.

"We were possibly infected during the time when we left the family," said Mr Phay, adding that the relatives and friends they had met there did not contract the disease.

On March 16, a day after arriving home in Singapore, he had throat irritation.

[[nid:488540]]

He woke up with a fever the next day and went to a general practitioner, where he was urged to go to the nearest hospital, CGH.

There, he had an X-ray and swab tests done and was told to go home and wait. That afternoon, the hospital staff rang to tell him he was down with Covid-19.

Mr Phay's first thoughts were "feelings of guilt and concern" for those he had come in contact with. He had met his parents and two relatives the day before.

His family, including his 28-year-old son and elderly parents, were issued quarantine orders. His wife and travel companions later tested positive for Covid-19 and were warded at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID).

Madam Yeo, who is case 422, had throat irritation on March 19. She developed a fever the next day and was taken to the NCID for X-ray checks and swab tests.

On March 21, her test results returned positive. "The first thought was whether our son was infected by us," said the housewife of their only child.

Thankfully, none of their family members was infected. During that period, relatives and friends spurred them on, while the neighbours helped by cooking meals for their son.

During his first few days at CGH, Mr Phay experienced mild symptoms. His fever was intermittent and his throat felt better on the third day.

On March 25, doctors started him on chloroquine.

"I couldn't rest at all. I tried throwing up but had only dry heaves," he said.

On March 31, the doctors used another drug, hydroxychloroquine, after X-ray checks found his lungs to be in bad shape.

Mr Phay said: "I was told that if my lungs got worse, I might need to be on ventilator support."

Fortunately, his lungs recovered and the oxygen support was later removed.

Mr Phay was well enough on April 5 to be moved next door to St Andrew's Community Hospital, a step-down facility. He was discharged three days later.

"The wait for two negative swabs was excruciating," said Mr Phay, who was relieved when a doctor told him he could go home.

He said the healing of the lungs is a long process. "It gets better with each day but I still get a bit breathless when I try to exercise."

His wife spent 20 days at the NCID before she was moved to Concord International Hospital on April 9. She was discharged on April 14.

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To celebrate their reunion, the couple and their son had an Italian meal at their condominium in Flora Drive the next day.

"I felt happy and blessed that we were able to have a meal together," said Madam Yeo, stressing that time spent with the family cannot be taken for granted.

The Phays are thankful to the front-line healthcare workers for risking their lives to care for them.

Mr Phay said: "It takes a lot from them to go to work in such uncertain times and put on a brave front for their patients.

"I am sure they experience more intensely the same emotions that we have, including the anxiety and fear of being exposed to the virus and whether they would infect their loved ones."

This article was first published in The Straits Times. Permission required for reproduction.

For the latest updates on the coronavirus, visit here.

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2020-05-17 01:30:52Z
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Caught in the middle of a new US-China cold war - The Straits Times

In South-east Asia, the Covid-19 pandemic has accentuated the strategic rivalry of China and the United States. Straits Times correspondents look at how this rivalry is playing out, and the response of countries in the region. We also look at US-China tensions and how Indo-Pacific powers are responding.


How region views growing US-China power play

(Right) A mask factory in China's Jiangsu province. China and the US seem to be in a contest to provide Covid-19 help, including medical supplies and technical support, to South-east Asia. Malaysian healthcare workers in Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia is amo

Vietnam has tried to balance China’s influence by engaging the United States. PHOTO: AFP

As the coronavirus outbreak in China worsened early in the year, many countries in South-east Asia sent medical supplies to their giant neighbour as a gesture of goodwill and solidarity.

Malaysia sent 18 million gloves in January. The Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and Singapore donated medical equipment such as masks, hazmat suits, goggles and test kits in February, some dropping off the supplies before picking up their citizens from the epicentre of the outbreak in Wuhan.

A Thai artist composed a song, Wuhan Press On, while similar words of encouragement were displayed on Thai social media and public places like shopping malls.

READ MORE HERE

Singapore-Beijing ties keep a steady course at 30-year milestone

They may have been in countries thousands of kilometres apart, but that did not stop 30 musicians from Singapore and China earlier this month launching into a sprightly performance together to mark 30 years of bilateral relations.

Clasping their erhu, they harmonised on Facebook as a virtual ensemble, showing the "deep friendship between the peoples of both countries", Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said when he shared a video clip of the song in a post.

If not for the Covid-19 pandemic, the musicians could have been performing in a grand theatre, for the year 2020 marks a significant milestone in the relationship between Singapore and China - it was 30 years ago that both sides established diplomatic relations.

READ MORE HERE

China signalling it is 'done giving face' to US

Anyone wanting to know what the official position of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is need only tune in to the 7pm daily news broadcast, Xinwen Lianbo.

Last Wednesday, viewers had a bit of a treat when the regular newscaster artfully used these and other four-word Chinese phrases to describe what China thinks of certain American politicians: "distorted in thinking", "derelict in duty", "like monkeys wearing hats", "lies-spreading rumour-mongers".

"For those who exude perverse, evil influence, history will come after them to settle the score, as will the world," he said in his smooth baritone voice.

READ MORE HERE

US keen for Asean to stand up to China moves

Amid deepening tactical and strategic competition with China, the United States wants Asean to stand up to what it calls "outside coercion" in the regional bloc's own backyard.

The US is moving across a broad front, from technology to tariffs to visas, in what some analysts call "full-spectrum competition" with China.

As relations reach a low point, the question of where it leaves South-east Asia re-emerges. Seeing the two global powers at loggerheads makes the South-east Asian region nervous. The region needs both - but not at each other's throats.

READ MORE HERE

Moves to mend Sino-Japan ties hit by Covid-19

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaking to the media on Covid-19 last month. He has noted the fragility of Japan's supply chain due to over-reliance on China, which has crippled key industries during the pandemic.
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaking to the media on Covid-19 in April 2020. PHOTO: REUTERS

Far from turning the tide in long-frayed Sino-Japan relations, the Covid-19 pandemic and China's regional moves are threatening a fragile trust that had begun to emerge between Asia's two largest economic giants.

Chinese President Xi Jinping's first state visit to Japan, which was scheduled for last month, has been indefinitely postponed.

Experts note that Japan's security ally, the United States, has been taking an increasingly hardline stance against China. Domestically, Japan has begun to question Chinese reciprocity, while accusing Beijing of reckless aggression in regional waters at a time when global cooperation is needed to fight Covid-19.

READ MORE HERE

Australia in a bind after calls to probe origins of coronavirus outbreak

Australian residents being helped by military staff after arriving at the Sydney airport during the pandemic. The Morrison government has called for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus.
Australian residents being helped by military staff after arriving at the Sydney airport during the pandemic. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

Australia has struggled in recent years to balance its relations with the United States, its closest ally, and China, its largest trading partner - but the Covid-19 pandemic is making this delicate task even harder.

As tensions increased between Beijing and Washington over the origins of the outbreak, Canberra has struggled to find a position that satisfied both.

Instead, the Morrison government appeared to side with Washington and called for an international inquiry into the origins of the coronavirus. But this has led to a damaging slide in relations with Beijing.

READ MORE HERE

India aims for even keel with China as ties with US grow

A billboard showing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump in Ahmedabad. India's ties with the US have strengthened even as it tries not to escalate tensions with China.
A billboard showing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump in Ahmedabad. PHOTO: AFP

India has avoided being drawn into the US and China power rivalry even as it seeks to keep ties with Beijing stable amid border skirmishes and other run-ins.

Ties with the United States, on the other hand, have been less complicated, remaining on an upward trajectory amid the pandemic.

China and India have an undemarcated border with disputes along several parts. The two countries decided to delink border problems from the rest of the relationship, but skirmishes often erupt, straining ties. Indian and Chinese soldiers have been involved in incidents in Ladakh and Sikkim.

READ MORE HERE

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2020-05-16 23:08:43Z
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Take heart and reflect during Ramadan, amid coronavirus outbreak: PM Lee - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - With Hari Raya Puasa approaching, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong acknowledged that this year's muted festivities amid the Covid-19 outbreak would be difficult.

In a Facebook post on Saturday (May 16), the PM said that he had held a virtual dialogue with Malay-Muslim and community leaders to discuss how families are coping with the circuit breaker restrictions.

Muslims in Singapore will celebrate Hari Raya Puasa, or Hari Raya Aidilfitri, which marks the end of the Ramadan fast, on May 24, ahead of the circuit breaker ending on June 1.

The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) had announced on Friday (May 15) that there should not be Hari Raya visits or gatherings during the circuit breaker period, and that Singaporean pilgrims will have to defer the annual haj pilgrimage to Mecca to 2021.

PM Lee, who partook in an "e-buka puasa", or a virtual breaking of fast, observed: "It has been an unusual Ramadan, with families breaking fast with immediate family only and no jalan jalans to the Geylang Serai bazaar."

He added: "To all who have sacrificed to keep loved ones safe during this period, take heart. We are facing this together, and our collective efforts are showing results.

"We may be celebrating differently this year, but the significance of the holy month remains constant - a time of reflection, prayer, and good deeds. No pandemic can change this. May your Ramadan continue to be blessed and bright, and your family healthy."

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2020-05-16 14:52:50Z
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