Rabu, 20 Mei 2020

Man who 'defiantly flaunted' unlawful dinner gathering on social media among 6 convicted of offences related to Covid-19 - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - A man unlawfully went to a family member's flat for dinner during the circuit breaker period, snapped pictures of the gathering and posted them on social media.

Part-time private-hire car driver Francis Soh Seng Chye, 38, also added a caption to the picture, saying:"After a long long long long super long day... we are having (an) illegal gathering... so what? Enjoy the food to the max."

The act, which the prosecution said showed "defiance of authority and disregard for the law", was posted on April 8, a day after social distancing measures were introduced in Singapore.

On Wednesday (May 20), Soh was fined $4,500 after pleading guilty to an offence under the Covid 19 (Temporary Measures) Act.

The court heard a friend of his had spotted the post on Facebook and told citizen journalism website Stomp, which wrote about it. The report attracted public attention.

The incident happened on the evening of April 8.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Kenneth Chin said Soh had met another part-time private-hire car driver, Ms Lye Bao Ru, around 7pm, to hand her the keys to a car they shared.

He accepted her invitation to dinner at her Circuit Road flat which was attended by seven people in all.

He removed the post of the gathering after she asked him to. Court documents did not state if action will be taken against her.

DPP Chin urged Senior District Judge Ong Hian Sun to impose a fine of at least $5,000, adding: "The accused knowingly broke the law and defiantly flaunted it."

Soh, who was unrepresented, said Ms Lye is his "cousin-in-law" and admitted it was "childish" of him to create the post.

He was one of six people dealt with in court on Wednesday over separate offences related to the Covid-19 outbreak.

The others are: Siti Wan Su'Aidah Samsuri, 25; Foo Ching Guan, 32; Vardireddy Nageswara Reddy, 35; Shake Mohammed Abdul Samad Haji Abduraheem, 44 and Teo Say Leong, 64.

All are Singaporeans, except Vardireddy, who is an Indian national.

USED CRIMINAL FORCE ON PUBLIC SERVANT

Shake, who is jobless, pleaded guilty to one count each of using criminal force on a public servant, failing to wear a face mask over his nose and mouth in public and refusing to give his particulars to a National Environment Agency (NEA) social distancing enforcement officer when approached.

He was sentenced to four weeks' jail and a fine of $1,500.

The 41-year-old NEA officer was patrolling near Block 99 Aljunied Crescent around 9.30am on April 22 when he spotted Shake drinking alcohol at the void deck. He was also not wearing a mask.

When told to put on a mask, Shake took one out of his pocket and wore it, covering only his chin.

He also refused to give the officer his particulars when asked and became upset when the younger man took out his mobile phone to record a video of the incident.

Shake pushed his hand that was holding the device, spat onto the floor and left the scene. He was identified after an investigation.

JAILED AFTER BREACHING STAY-HOME NOTICE

Teo and Foo breached their stay-home notice (SHN) in unrelated incidents. Each was sentenced to four weeks' jail.

Teo arrived at the Singapore Cruise Centre from Batam, Indonesia, on March 20 and was given an SHN. He was required to remain at his Jalan Sultan flat near Beach Road from then until April 3.

He, however, left his home around 1pm on March 29 and went to a nearby coffee shop to buy food which he ate in an open area.

Enforcement officers were at his flat when he returned about 50 minutes later. Investigations found he had unlawfully left his home on four other occasions, between March 23 and 26. He spent nearly five hours in total outdoors on the five occasions, the court heard.

Foo, who is jobless, returned to Singapore from Thailand on March 17. His SHN stated that he had to remain in his Kreta Ayer Road home from then until March 31.

But on March 29, he went out around 4am and took a private-hire vehicle to meet his friend, Mr Lee Quan Hui.

Foo had earlier told investigators he was a guarantor of a $1,000 loan Mr Lee had taken from a loanshark. He claimed the loanshark had contacted him after Mr Lee failed to pay.

He also said he feared for his family's safety and breached his SHN to meet Mr Lee in Sengkang to try and settle the matter.

LEFT FLAT TO BUY SHAVER

Vardireddy, who lived in a rented room in a Compassvale Close flat, had come into close contact with a colleague who was tested positive for Covid-19. Court documents did not disclose details of their jobs.

The Director of Medical Services then ordered Vardireddy to be isolated at home from Feb 16 until noon on Feb 25.

He, however, left the flat around 8.10pm on Feb 24 and went to Compass One shopping mall in Sengkang Square to buy a shaver. DPP Regina Lim told the court he needed to shave as he did not want to appear "untidy" when he returned to work the next day.

When he returned home about 25 minutes later, his landlord told him an auxiliary police officer had come earlier to check on him.

Vardireddy, who said he tested negative for Covid-19, was given a $3,500 fine after pleading guilty to an offence under the Infectious Diseases Act.

WENT OUTSIDE TO BUY GROCERIES AND CIGARETTES

Siti, who works as a flight attendant, was fined $4,000 after breaching her SHN.

She returned to Singapore from Brisbane, Australia, around 6pm on March 25 and was ordered to remain in her Woodlands flat from then until April 8.

But on March 30, she left her home around 2.45pm and walked to the nearby Vista Point shopping mall to buy some groceries at a supermarket. She then went to another store to buy cigarettes.

The court heard that enforcement officers were outside her home when she returned about 20 minutes later.

For each charge, offenders convicted of breaching an SHN can be jailed up to six months and fined a maximum of $10,000.

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2020-05-20 09:44:24Z
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Tsai says China must 'co-exist' with Taiwan, wants talks with Beijing - CNA

TAIPEI: Taiwan wants dialogue with China but cannot accept its proposal for "one country, two systems", President Tsai Ing-wen said on Wednesday (May 20), calling for both sides to find a way to coexist.

In a speech after being sworn in for her second and final term in office, Tsai said relations between Taiwan and China had reached an historic turning point.

"Both sides have a duty to find a way to coexist over the long term and prevent the intensification of antagonism and differences," she said.

Reacting after Tsai's speech, a senior Chinese official was quoted in state media outlet Xinhua as saying Beijing would "never tolerate" the island's separation.

Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party won January's presidential and parliamentary elections by a landslide, vowing to stand up to China, which claims Taiwan as its own and says it would be brought under Beijing's control by force if needed.

President Tsai Ing-wen and Vice President William Lai attending an inauguration ceremony
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen and Vice President William Lai attending an inauguration ceremony at the Presidential Office in Taipei. (Photo: Taiwan Presidential Office/AFP)

"Here, I want to reiterate the words 'peace, parity, democracy, and dialogue'. We will not accept the Beijing authorities' use of 'one country, two systems' to downgrade Taiwan and undermine the cross-strait status quo. We stand fast by this principle," Tsai said.

China uses the "one country, two systems" policy, which is supposed to guarantee a high degree of autonomy, to run the former British colony of Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997. It has offered it to Taiwan, though all major Taiwanese parties have rejected it.

Tsai says Taiwan is an independent state called the Republic of China, and does not want to be part of the People's Republic of China governed by Beijing.

Taiwan has been ruled separately from the mainland since 1949 after the Nationalists lost a civil war to the Communists and fled to the island to set up a rival government.

For decades, Taiwan's leaders - and many voters - saw themselves as the true representatives for all of China, even as the vast majority of nations switched diplomatic recognition to Beijing.

READ: Why is Taiwan excluded from the WHO?

But as the island moved from an autocracy to a democracy from the 1990s, a distinct Taiwanese identity has emerged with many no longer seeking any kind of reunification with China.

That has caused growing alarm in Beijing, which says any formal declaration of independence by Taiwan would cross a red line.

TAIWAN OPEN TO DIALOGUE

China has stepped up its military drills near Taiwan since Tsai's re-election, flying fighter jets into the island's air space and sailing warships around Taiwan.

Tsai said Taiwan has made the greatest effort to maintain peace and stability in the narrow Taiwan Strait that separates the democratic island from its autocratic neighbour China.

"We will continue these efforts, and we are willing to engage in dialogue with China and make more concrete contributions to regional security," she added, speaking in the garden of the old Japanese governor's house in Taipei, in front of a socially-distanced audience of officials and diplomats.

Tsai said that Taiwan will continue its fight to participate in international organisations, and "bolster ties with the United States, Japan, Europe, and other like-minded countries".

READ: Taiwan rejects China's main condition for WHO participation

Taiwan has also accused China of exerting pressure to keep Taiwan out of the World Health Organization (WHO). China says Taiwan is only a Chinese province with no right to the trappings of a state.

CHINA AND US REACT

After Tsai's speech, China's Xinhua news agency published comments from a top official saying Beijing would "never tolerate" the island's separation.

"We have ... sufficient ability to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity," Ma Xiaoguang, from the Taiwan Affairs Office, was quoted as saying.

China cut off a formal talks mechanism with Taiwan in 2016 after Tsai won the election. China views Tsai as a separatist bent on formal independence for Taiwan.

Tsai's position is Taiwan does not need to declare independence because it already controls its own affairs.

Ma also criticised the interference of "external forces", a reference to the US, which diplomatically recognises Beijing but remains a military ally of Taiwan.

The Trump administration has strongly backed Taiwan, becoming another source of tension between Washington and Beijing.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sent his congratulations to Tsai on Tuesday, praising her "courage and vision in leading Taiwan's vibrant democracy", in a rare high-level message from Washington to Taiwan's government.

China's foreign ministry said Pompeo had seriously damaged the peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait and China-US relations by making a congratulatory statement to Tsai.

China will take necessary countermeasures and the US must bear the consequences, the ministry said in a statement.

READ: Taiwan says WHO has 'forgotten' neutrality by barring island

Tsai's inauguration ceremony came as her administration basks in the glow of its successful coronavirus response.

Despite its close proximity and economic links with China, the island has managed to contain its own outbreak to more than 400 infections and seven deaths.

It has been held up as a model by epidemiologists and has used aid shipments of protective equipment to win overseas praise.

Wednesday's ceremony in Taipei was a deliberately stripped-down affair with crowds of supporters asked to stay away and dignitaries sat in chairs kept 1.5m apart.

"Taiwan's name has appeared in headlines around the world, thanks to our successful containment of the coronavirus outbreak," Tsai said.

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2020-05-20 08:26:15Z
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Selasa, 19 Mei 2020

Taiwan president says wants talks with China, but not 'one country, two systems' - CNA

TAIPEI: Taiwan wants dialogue with China but cannot accept its proposal for "one country, two systems", President Tsai Ing-wen said on Wednesday (May 20), calling for both sides to find a way to coexist.

In a speech after being sworn in for her second and final term in office, Tsai said relations between Taiwan and China had reached an historical turning point.

"Both sides have a duty to find a way to coexist over the long term and prevent the intensification of antagonism and differences," she said.

Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party won January's presidential and parliamentary elections by a landslide, vowing to stand up to China, which claims Taiwan as its own and says it would be brought under Beijing's control by force if needed.

President Tsai Ing-wen and Vice President William Lai attending an inauguration ceremony
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen and Vice President William Lai attending an inauguration ceremony at the Presidential Office in Taipei. (Photo: Taiwan Presidential Office/AFP)

"Here, I want to reiterate the words 'peace, parity, democracy, and dialogue'. We will not accept the Beijing authorities' use of 'one country, two systems' to downgrade Taiwan and undermine the cross-strait status quo. We stand fast by this principle," Tsai said.

China uses the "one country, two systems" policy, which is supposed to guarantee a high degree of autonomy, to run the former British colony of Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997. It has offered it to Taiwan, though all major Taiwanese parties have rejected it.

Tsai says Taiwan is an independent state called the Republic of China, and does not want to be part of the People's Republic of China governed by Beijing.

Taiwan has been ruled separately from the mainland since 1949 after the Nationalists lost a civil war to the Communists and fled to the island to set up a rival government.

For decades, Taiwan's leaders - and many voters - saw themselves as the true representatives for all of China, even as the vast majority of nations switched diplomatic recognition to Beijing.

READ: Why is Taiwan excluded from the WHO?

But as the island moved from an autocracy to a democracy from the 1990s, a distinct Taiwanese identity has emerged with many no longer seeking any kind of reunification with China.

That has caused growing alarm in Beijing, which says any formal declaration of independence by Taiwan would cross a red line.

TAIWAN OPEN TO DIALOGUE

China has stepped up its military drills near Taiwan since Tsai's re-election, flying fighter jets into the island's air space and sailing warships around Taiwan.

Tsai said Taiwan has made the greatest effort to maintain peace and stability in the narrow Taiwan Strait that separates the democratic island from its autocratic neighbour China.

"We will continue these efforts, and we are willing to engage in dialogue with China and make more concrete contributions to regional security," she added, speaking in the garden of the old Japanese governor's house in Taipei, in front of a socially-distanced audience of officials and diplomats.

Tsai said that Taiwan will continue its fight to participate in international organisations, and "bolster ties with the United States, Japan, Europe, and other like-minded countries".

READ: Taiwan rejects China's main condition for WHO participation

Taiwan has accused China of exerting pressure to keep Taiwan out of the World Health Organization (WHO). China says Taiwan is only a Chinese province with no right to the trappings of a state.

The Trump administration has strongly backed Taiwan, even though the United States recognises only China's government, becoming another source of tension between Washington and Beijing.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sent his congratulations to Tsai on Tuesday, praising her "courage and vision in leading Taiwan's vibrant democracy", in a rare high-level message from Washington direct to Taiwan's government.

China cut off a formal talks mechanism with Taiwan in 2016 after Tsai first won election. China views Tsai as a separatist bent on formal independence for Taiwan.

There was no immediate reaction from Beijing to Tsai's speech.

READ: Taiwan says WHO has 'forgotten' neutrality by barring island

Tsai's inauguration ceremony came as her administration basks in the glow of its successful coronavirus response.

Despite its close proximity and economic links with China, the island has managed to contain its own outbreak to just over 400 infections and seven deaths.

It has been held up as a model by epidemiologists and has used aid shipments of protective equipment to win overseas praise.

Wednesday's ceremony in Taipei was a deliberately stripped-down affair with crowds of supporters asked to stay away and dignitaries sat in chairs kept 1.5m apart.

"Taiwan's name has appeared in headlines around the world, thanks to our successful containment of the coronavirus outbreak," Tsai said.

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2020-05-20 04:22:32Z
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Schools reopen in South Korea as COVID-19 fears ease - CNA

SEOUL: Hundreds of thousands of South Korean students returned to school on Wednesday (May 20) as educational establishments started reopening after a coronavirus delay of more than two months.

Students lined up for temperature checks and were given sanitisers to wash their hands as they entered school premises, while teachers greeted them with smiles and occasional elbow bumps.

"It's really exciting to meet my friends and teachers face to face, but we have to strictly follow the disinfection guidelines," said Oh Chang-hwa, student president of Kyungbock High School in Seoul.

"I am very worried but it's still nice to see them again," Oh told AFP.

South Korea endured one of the worst early outbreaks of the virus – at one point the second-worst hit nation after mainland China – prompting officials to delay the reopening of schools in early March.

But it appears to have brought its outbreak under control thanks to an extensive "trace, test and treat" programme.

Around 440,000 final-year students, who will in December take the university entrance exam that is crucial in the education-obsessed country, are the first to return to schools, with other years following in stages over the next several weeks.

READ: COVID-19: Graduating primary, secondary students to attend school on weekdays after circuit breaker ends; others to rotate weekly

READ: Managers of BTS and other K-pop boybands apologise over members’ Seoul bar visit

Inside the school buildings, students are asked to wipe their desks and sit apart according to social distancing guidelines, with some classes setting up partitions between desks.

"Concerns over small infection clusters still remain and no one can predict what kind of situation will arise at schools," education minister Yoo Eun-hae said.

The education ministry began operating a 24-hour emergency situation room this week, Yoo said, adding that any schools that report fresh infections will be shut immediately.

While final-year students are required to come to school every day, younger pupils will shift between online and offline classes to ensure school buildings are not overcrowded.

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

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2020-05-20 02:13:49Z
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Trump says US coronavirus cases are 'badge of honour' as deaths projected to top 113000 by mid-June - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (BLOOMBERG, AFP) - US President Donald Trump on Tuesday (May 19) said it’s "a badge of honour" that the US has more than 1.5 million cases of coronavirus - the highest number of infections globally - as coronavirus-related deaths among Americans are projected to surpass 113,000 by mid-June.

"I view it as a badge of honour, really, it’s a badge of honour," Mr Trump told reporters during a cabinet meeting at the White House on Tuesday. "It’s a great tribute to the testing and all of the work that a lot of professionals have done."

The United States has recorded more than 1.5 million confirmed Covid-19 infections and 91,600 fatalities as of Tuesday, but a projection compiled from nine models from separate institutions predicted roughly 22,000 more Americans would succumb to the disease over the next 25 days.

"The new forecast for cumulative US deaths by June 13 is about 113,000, with a 10 per cent chance of seeing fewer than about 107,000 and a 10 per cent chance of seeing more than 121,000," the Covid-19 Forecast Hub at the University of Massachusetts said on its website.

The specific ensemble forecast average is 113,364 deaths by that date.

The US has also performed more than 11.8 million tests for infection by the virus, according to the Covid Tracking Project, after the government experienced delays in getting tests developed and manufactured.

The country continues to face testing shortages and sets priorities for who gets one. However, contrary to Mr Trump’s claim, US testing levels aren’t extraordinary.

The US trails countries like the UK, Italy and Germany in tests conducted per 1,000 people, Bloomberg data show.

And it is finding a case for every 7.8 tests, far behind other countries like New Zealand, Australia and South Korea, who have to test far higher numbers of people to find a case, according to figures compiled by Our World In Data.

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said the US has conducted a reported 11.3 million tests, though Mr Trump said he believed the number was closer to 14 million.

"If you’re testing 14 million people, you’re going to find many more cases," Mr Trump said. "Many of these people aren’t very sick but they still go down as a case, so, actually, the number of cases – and we’re also a much bigger country than most. So when we have a lot of cases, I don’t look at that as a bad thing, I look at that as, in a certain respect, as being a good thing because it means our testing is much better."&

Mr Trump's remarks come as most US states take steps - some minor, some more substantial - to re-open their shuttered economies and communities while facing the challenge of instilling confidence among Americans that it is safe to begin returning to normal.

The US government in April released guidelines on phased re-openings that included criteria which individual states were expected to meet before they began returning to normal, including a downward trajectory of new cases over a 14-day period.

Several states have been accused of re-opening despite failing to meet the specific criteria.

Hopes of curtailing the pandemic have proven elusive.

Two weeks ago, Mr Trump said the US will lose "anywhere from 75, 80 to 100,000 people."

On April 10 he predicted US virus deaths would be "substantially below the 100,000" figure, and perhaps even as low as half that.

The novel coronavirus has killed more than 322,000 people worldwide since it was detected in Wuhan, China late last year.

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2020-05-20 00:27:53Z
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Home-based learning: Odds stacked against teachers in Malaysia's public primary schools, while private counterparts are more prepared - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: The odds are stacked against public primary schools in Malaysia, with teachers having to grapple with connectivity issues and drawing up online classes overnight for home-based learning during the movement control order (MCO). 

Private schools, on the other hand, have a head start over their peers as they have some prior experience in e-learning that they can draw on. 

Students in public primary schools who are used to face-to-face interactions with teachers and using textbooks as their main study materials are struggling to adapt to home-based learning, said K Tamilarasi, who teachers at a national school in Klang, Selangor. 

“You see all these students are so accustomed to using textbooks and having teachers guide them through homework, then now suddenly you’re expecting them to manoeuvre through online learning like experts, it’s unfair,” she said.

The mathematics teacher, 34, added that most of her students could not seek guidance from their parents as the adults also do not have any prior experience in using electronic devices to study. 

(kd)e-learning 2
Some students in Malaysia have no prior experience in online learning. (File photo: Bernama)

Schools nationwide have been closed for two months since MCO kicked in on Mar 18 to control the spread of COVID-19, with two national level examinations for Year 6 students in the primary schools and Form 3 students in secondary schools called off this year. 

The other public examinations for the Malaysian equivalent of O-Level and A-Level qualifications have been postponed. 

While there has been no announcement so far on when schools will reopen, Education Minister Mohd Radzi Md Jidin had said that the government would inform parents two week prior to the reopening. Form 5 and Upper 6 students, who are set to complete their secondary school and pre-university education, would be allowed to return to schools first. 

Goh Sui Hui, a 40-year old science teacher in a Chinese primary school in Johor, told CNA that most of her students "feel abandoned" with distance learning, something that they have no prior experience of. 

“With my students devices isn’t a problem. Internet connectivity is spotty sometimes. But even all that we can manage. The issue here is being able to guide them to learn on an e-platform. It’s like starting them back from kindergarten all over again,” she said. 

VARIOUS HURDLES IN DISTANCE LEARNING 

The first hurdle encountered by many public school teachers is that not every children own electronic devices, especially those from families that are less well-to-do. Dr Mohd Radzi had earlier noted that 36.9 per cent of about 900,000 students surveyed do not own electronic devices to study at home. 

Tamilarasi said some of her students in elite classes also have the same problem. 

“I teach two different primary levels and have three classes in each level. Of the six classes two classes are students who need a lot of hands-on coaching and constant monitoring. Now with the MCO, I have completely lost them," she said. 

Admitting that this is one of the hardest things she has experienced after eight years of teaching, Tamilarasi said MCO had led to her losing her momentum of teaching. 

READ: Home-based learning is strange, new ground but we can conquer that too, a commentary

The lack of training and experience in handling online lessons have left the teachers overwhelmed and frustrated. They have to individually figure out a method that works for each class if not each student.

Goh said that with her students she was used to giving each of them lessons differently. Their science syllabus is in English, she added. 

“Mine being a Chinese school, some of the students are not fluent in Malay or English, so when they come to me, I explain in Mandarin. But I cannot write homework separately in Mandarin for these children and neither can I have two separate lessons in different languages.

Malaysia schools
There has been no announcement so far on when schools in Malaysia will reopen. (File photo: Bernama) 

“It’s extremely frustrating. Not to mention that we have to formulate all this classwork on our own because the education department doesn’t have anything for us to use,” she said adding that it would have been helpful if teachers were given training before on conducting classes online.

Marlina Azhar, a 29-year-old Malay language teacher at a national primary school in Kuala Lumpur also said some training would have been useful. 

“You see as much as it is challenging for the students, we as teachers are also struggling. We need to put together our own homework and figure out how best to convey it to students. 

“Then we have to worry about whether the students get it, if they understand it, if they submit it on time, all this without any prior experience of doing this,” she said. 

HARD TO MAINTAIN CLASSROOM DISCIPLINE VIA ZOOM

With the distance, it appears that many students are using the newfound freedom to evade teachers and homework, the teachers shared.

Goh said it was extremely difficult to maintain classroom discipline during her Zoom classes. 

“I use Google classroom for homework and Zoom for tutoring. I found out that some of my students actually just mute their audio and mute me and play games with each other," she said. 

Similarly, Marlina also shared that a lot of her students despite having devices, make up excuses to sit out of classes. 

“Everything from Internet connection to unclear audio to not knowing how to charge their devices and all of that. If we keep going like this, it will undo all the work I’ve put in so far,” she said.  

Malaysia e-learning
Students in Malaysia have to resort to online learning when schools are closed to control the spread of COVID-19. (File photo: Bernama) 

READ: E-learning sees no smooth sailing in Malaysia and Indonesia, a commentary

With many teachers and students complaining about lack of devices and a steady Internet connection, the Ministry of Education had introduced television-based learning in the second phase of the MCO. 

Asked on whether any of the resources given by the government was helpful in conducting her classes, Marlina said: “The lessons on television, I asked my students to watch them and they all said okay, but only a handful tuned in.”

“All this is too new for them,” she said. 

PRIOR EXPERIENCE AN ADDED ADVANTAGE FOR INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL TEACHERS

The situation appears to be different for international school teachers and students, as many of them have had experience teaching and learning online.

Shri Thivya Kanagendran, 27, who teaches science to upper primary students said that though fully teaching online has been challenging, her students have been exposed to online learning before this. 

She explained that her school in Selangor has online homework modules for students to work on during school holidays or weekends.  

“In fact, a few other teachers and I used to even schedule Zoom sessions with students for them to clarify doubts.

“So when the government announced the MCO, we knew what we had to do,” she said. 

Similarly, Zoe Ng, a mathematics teacher in an international school in Negeri Sembilan told CNA that she was able to get by this MCO period without much challenges.

“Maybe because my students are all in upper primary, so they are not too hard to control. I have spoken to many of my student’s parents and they also shared that the children are doing pretty well,” she said.

(kd) e-learning 4
Schools in Malaysia have been closed since Mar 18, 2020 as part of the movement control order measures. (File photo: Bernama)

Nonetheless, the teachers said that children still need direct guidance in order to learn effectively. 

Even though the kids may not find online learning a challenge, Shri Thivya said "they are accustomed to asking questions in person and teachers are also used to giving them guidance in person." 

Similarly, Ng said setting up online separate tutor sessions for the kids whenever they need guidance gets tiring after awhile. 

READ: Singapore's Doctor Love launches online platform for migrant workers to consult doctors in their home countries

“In addition to that, these children miss interacting with their friends. They get very excited when we have Zoom classes, especially when I do not require them to mute their audio. They get to talk to one another instead of just hearing me talk. On some days, I just allow the chatter,” she said.

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2020-05-19 22:15:11Z
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WHO chief vows to continue leading coronavirus response after Trump threat to quit - CNA

GENEVA: The head of the World Health Organization vowed on Tuesday (May 19) to continue to lead the global fight against the coronavirus pandemic, after President Donald Trump threatened to cut off funding and to quit the body.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus defended his agency's role, after the United States again caused ripples by withholding full support for a resolution on the pandemic.

Washington allowed the resolution calling for a review into the global response to the pandemic to pass by consensus, but announced it was objecting to language about reproductive health rights and permission for poor countries to waive patent rules.

"We want accountability more than anyone," Tedros told a virtual meeting of the body's 194 member states. "We will continue providing strategic leadership to coordinate the global response" to the pandemic.

Hours after Trump tweeted his threat to quit the WHO, the United States allowed the resolution to be adopted without a vote. The resolution calls for a review into the WHO-led global response, something the United States has demanded.

But in a statement, Washington said it dissociated itself from language in the resolution on patents and reproductive healthcare.

Paragraphs on the right of poor countries to waive patents to obtain medicine during a health emergency would "send the wrong message to innovators" trying to produce new drugs and vaccines, the US mission in Geneva said in an "explanation of position".

The reproductive healthcare language could be interpreted as requiring countries to permit abortion: "The United States believes in legal protections for the unborn," it said.

BACKING FROM CHINA

Even as Trump has proposed quitting the WHO, the body has received backing and a two-year pledge of US$2 billion in funds from China's President Xi Jinping.

During his three years in office, Trump has criticised many international organisations and quit some. Still, European diplomats said they were taken aback by Washington's decision to stand aside at the WHO while China is boosting its role.

"It was so striking to see Xi Jinping seizing the opportunity to open up, with broad (cooperation), and make a proposal for US$2 billion, and say if ever there is a vaccine they will share it with everyone," a European diplomat said.

"It's exactly what we feared: the space liberated by Washington will be taken up by China."

The Geneva-based body declined to comment on Trump's threat to quit, saying only that it had received a letter from Trump and was considering its contents.

Tuesday's resolution, sponsored by the European Union, calls for a review into how the novel coronavirus spread after making the jump from animals to humans, believed to have happened in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

On Monday, the WHO said an independent review of the global coronavirus response would begin as soon as possible. "I will initiate such an evaluation at the earliest appropriate moment," Tedros said on Tuesday.

Diplomats said ultimately Washington had decided not to block it outright, despite its objections.

"There is a strong desire on their part to join consensus," a Western diplomat said ahead of adoption. Referring to the intellectual property issue in particular, the diplomat added: "If they don't join, they are isolated, unfortunately. There is really a global consensus on the importance of this." 

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2020-05-19 15:33:45Z
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