Jumat, 05 Juni 2020

Trump sparks controversy saying 'great day' for George Floyd - CNA

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump sparked controversy Friday (Jun 5), calling it a "great day" for George Floyd, the man whose death in custody last week unleashed nationwide protests over police brutality against African Americans.

"We all saw what happened last week. We can't let that happen," Trump said of Floyd, who was killed as a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

"Hopefully, George is looking down right now and saying, 'This is a great thing that's happening for our country.'"

The remarks during a televised White House briefing came eleven days after Floyd's death and sparked confusion as to why Trump thought it was a great day for Floyd.

"This is a great, great day in terms of equality," Trump added, even as he stands accused by many of having failed to respond to the racism, police brutality and inequalities that demonstrators are protesting.

READ: Washington emblazons defiant Black Lives Matter sign near White House

Trump had summoned the media to welcome a surprisingly strong US jobs report, the opposite of what economists had expected given measures in place to curtail the spread of the coronavirus.

The rest of his speech was devoted to welcoming the good news on the economy, which Trump said was now in "rocket" mode.

Trump's "great day" comments were seen by many as too closely conflating Floyd's death and the day's good economic news, and as speaking on behalf of Floyd on the economy.

The White House called such an interpretation "false."

"It was very clear the President was talking about the fight for equal justice and equal treatment under the law when he made this comment," White House senior communications advisor Ben Williamson wrote on Twitter.

Trump brought up this theme before speaking about Floyd: "Equal justice under the law must mean that every American receives equal treatment in every encounter with law enforcement regardless of race, color, gender or creed," he said.

READ: Video shows police in Buffalo, New York, shoving 75-year-old man to ground

READ: George Floyd killing: Charges filed against all 4 police officers

"DESPICABLE"

Trump's decision to put words in Floyd's mouth was nonetheless roundly criticised.

Joe Biden, his presumptive Democratic opponent in the November election, immediately lashed out at Trump for invoking Floyd's name, calling it "despicable."

"George Floyd's last words, 'I can't breathe,' have echoed across our nation and around the world," Biden tweeted.

"For the President to try to put any other words in his mouth is frankly despicable."

Since Floyd's May 25 death and subsequent protests, which have included rioting and looting in many US cities, Trump has favored a militant response.

Presenting himself as a "law and order" president, Trump has threatened to send the US military into the streets to quell the ongoing demonstrations.

Trump reiterated on Friday that authorities need to "dominate the streets," and criticised governors in states that had rejected sending in the National Guard during protests and rioting.

Secretary of Defense Mark Esper rebuffed Trump over the idea of deploying troops, a proposal that earned sharp criticism from previous Pentagon leaders including Jim Mattis.

Trump has always believed the best policy for reducing inequality is promoting economic growth among African Americans.

"What you now see ... is the greatest thing that can happen for race relations, for the African American community, for the Asian American, for the Hispanic American, for women, for everything," Trump said Friday.

"Our country is so strong, and that's what my plan is. We're going to have the strongest economy in the world," he added.

For the past three years, Trump has repeatedly claimed that he has "done more for the black community than any president since Abraham Lincoln," who abolished slavery in the 1860s.

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2020-06-06 02:14:18Z
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Asia's search for a Covid-19 vaccine, Asia News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

Singapore: Boosting capacity for fast production


PHOTO: GLAXOSMITHKLINE

Singapore is building up vaccine manufacturing capacity so production can be ramped up quickly and safely once a Covid-19 vaccine is found.

It will offer fill-and-finish contract manufacturing services to vaccine developers, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said at yesterday's virtual Global Vaccine Summit.

Fill-and-finish manufacturing involves contamination-free filling of drugs into containers such as vials or syringes. It plays a critical role in scaling up vaccine production for populations as many biopharmaceutical products are fragile and prone to contamination.

READ MORE HERE

Biomedical manufacturing a bright spot for S'pore


PHOTO: GLAXOSMITHKLINE

Singapore's investments in biomedical sciences have paid off during the Covid-19 pandemic, with the biomedical manufacturing sector remaining a bright spot in a sluggish economy.

"The demand for healthcare products has not been affected and is generally quite resilient," said Ms Goh Wan Yee, senior vice-president of healthcare at the Economic Development Board (EDB).

EDB data out last month showed that biomedical manufacturing was the main bright spot in Singapore's factory production for April.

READ MORE HERE

India: 'Pharmacy of the world' in overdrive


PHOTO: AFP

India's ability to deliver cost-effective and quality generic drugs, such as those that helped millions living with HIV, earned it the reputation of being the "pharmacy of the world".

This attribute has come into greater salience amid a global quest for potential treatment options and vaccines for Covid-19.

Indian pharmaceutical companies, for instance, quickly ramped up production of hydroxychloroquine in April and are now helping to meet a surging demand for an anti-viral drug believed to aid in the treatment of Covid-19 patients.

READ MORE HERE

Thailand: Tax perks to spur pharma investments


PHOTO: REUTERS

Thailand-based firm Bionet-Asia is racing with other companies and institutes across the world to produce a vaccine for the Covid-19 virus. It has diverted all its resources, including 200 people, to accelerate development of a gene-based vaccine.

"We have already ordered millions of vials even though we don't know yet if the vaccine could work in humans," Bionet chief executive Pham Hong Thai told The Straits Times. In fact, Bionet chose to ship the vials by air rather than sea, despite the flight restrictions around the world.

"No one wants to be in a situation where they have the vaccine working in humans but then discover they are missing the passage containers or stoppers to supply the vaccine," he said. "So there is a race, there is restriction, there is shortage of materials - not only of active ingredients."

READ MORE HERE

Indonesia: Big players and partners join race


PHOTO: AFP

Indonesia's major pharmaceutical companies and their foreign partners have joined the race to produce vaccines against the coronavirus that has killed nearly 1,800 people and infected more than 29,000 in the world's fourth-most populous nation.

State-owned Bio Farma, which was founded in 1890 and is the only vaccine maker in the country, is teaming up with Chinese biopharmaceutical company Sinovac Biotech to work on a vaccine that will be available in Indonesia early next year.

Dr Neni Nurainy, Bio Farma's research and development project senior integration manager, said the cooperation would quickly make available a vaccine in Indonesia, which is home to around 270 million people. "Bio Farma will source the active pharmaceutical ingredient from Sinovac, then formulate and do the fill-finish part," she told The Straits Times.

READ MORE HERE

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2020-06-05 23:41:19Z
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Wear masks in public, says WHO in update of Covid-19 advice - The Straits Times

LONDON (REUTERS) - The World Health Organisation (WHO) updated its guidance on Friday (June 5) to recommend that governments ask everyone to wear fabric face masks in public areas where there is a risk of transmission of Covid-19 to help reduce the spread of the pandemic disease.

In its new guidance, prompted by evidence from studies conducted in recent weeks, the WHO stressed that face masks were only one of a range of tools that can reduce the risk of viral transmission, and should not give a false sense of protection.

"Masks on their own will not protect you from Covid-19," the WHO's director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters at a briefing.

The WHO's technical lead expert on Covid-19, Maria Van Kerkhove, said in a Reuters interview: "We are advising governments to encourage that the general public wear a mask.

And we specify a fabric mask - that is, a non-medical mask.

"We have new research findings," she added.

"We have evidence now that if this is done properly it can provide a barrier ... for potentially infectious droplets."

While some countries and US states have recommended or mandated the wearing of face coverings in public, the WHO had previously said there was not enough evidence for or against the use of masks for healthy people in the wider community.

It had always recommended that medical masks be worn by people who are sick and by those caring for them.

Britain has said masks will be compulsory for passengers on buses, trains, aircraft and ferries in England from June 15.

The UN agency's advice that all healthcare workers dealing with Covid-19 patients, or with suspected cases of the respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus, should wear medical masks remains the same, Van Kerkhove said.

But the advice has been broadened to recommend staff coming into contact with any patients or residents in clinics, hospitals, care homes and long-term residential facilities should also wear masks at all times, she said.

Related Stories: 

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2020-06-05 19:52:53Z
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Malaysia’s Mahathir slams Muhyiddin for calling probes into his allies - South China Morning Post

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  1. Malaysia’s Mahathir slams Muhyiddin for calling probes into his allies  South China Morning Post
  2. Malaysian deputy minister resigns, says it is mistake to back PM Muhyiddin's government  AsiaOne
  3. Malaysia PM Muhyiddin Yassin is Bersatu's legitimate acting chairman, says supreme council  The Straits Times
  4. Bersatu politician resigns as Malaysia's deputy works minister  CNA
  5. 'Give yourself time, suffer a little': Dr Mahathir to Malaysia's young generation  AsiaOne
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2020-06-05 17:40:22Z
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Singapore building vaccine-manufacturing capacity in Covid-19 fight, says PM Lee - AsiaOne

The Republic is building up its vaccine-manufacturing capacity even as researchers around the world race to develop one for Covid-19.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Friday (June 5) that Singapore intends to offer fill-and-finish contract manufacturing services to vaccine developers.

In the pharmaceutical industry, contract development and manufacturing organisations work on a contractual basis to fulfil services such as the manufacture of drugs or vaccines.

"This should help them ramp up production faster, and assure them high standards of safety and quality in the manufacturing process," PM Lee told the Global Vaccine Summit, co-hosted by the British government and Gavi, the vaccine alliance, over a video call.

The discovery, production and distribution of a safe and effective vaccine is vital to getting life back to normal despite Covid-19, he said.

He added: "I hope that this summit will help focus our minds and resources, and forge partnerships to promote 'vaccine multilateralism'."

Singapore is also pulling its weight in the global fight against Covid-19 on other fronts, including investing in international efforts to combat the virus and leveraging its research expertise to develop new cures.

"The Covid-19 pandemic demands a unified and concerted response by all nations," he said, adding that Singapore welcomes this global call for action and is doing its part.

The Republic has contributed about US$13 million (S$18 million) towards international Covid-19 efforts through the World Health Organisation and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, and in donations of essential medical equipment and supplies, said PM Lee.

The nation is also investing heavily in research and development on diagnostics, vaccines and therapeutics.

[embed]https://www.facebook.com/leehsienloong/videos/696383454490211/[/embed]

On the diagnostics front, for example, Singapore researchers have developed a range of serological and nucleic acid-based diagnostic tests, said PM Lee.

The Fortitude diagnostic kit, for example, was developed and rolled out by the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*Star) and Tan Tock Seng Hospital during the early stages of the outbreak in February.

Today, it has been deployed in 13 public and private hospitals and laboratories in Singapore, as well as in more than 20 other places, including New Zealand and the United States.

PM Lee said Singapore researchers have also been developing therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, as well as a vaccine, and have started clinical trials of various therapeutics.

Duke-NUS Medical School, for instance, is working with American medicine company Arcturus Therapeutics on a Covid-19 vaccine, which involves getting the human body to produce part of Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

For the latest updates on the coronavirus, visit here.

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

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2020-06-05 07:24:29Z
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China-US financial war over Hong Kong seen as unlikely due to mutual damage - South China Morning Post

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  1. China-US financial war over Hong Kong seen as unlikely due to mutual damage  South China Morning Post
  2. Hong Kong protesters seek sanctuary overseas as noose tightens  CNA
  3. Police fire pepper spray at Hong Kong protesters as they hold Tiananmen vigil  AsiaOne
  4. China will crush dissent in Hong Kong, just as it did in Tiananmen Square  The Guardian
  5. Tiananmen’s Other Children  The New York Times
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2020-06-05 07:22:38Z
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Dozens in Hong Kong stage protest in shopping mall - CNA

HONG KONG: Dozens of protesters marched through the IFC mall in Hong Kong's Central district on Friday afternoon (Jun 5), a day after thousands defied a police ban to hold a vigil for the anniversary of China's Tiananmen incident in 1989.  

Protesters of all ages joined the march in the heart of the city's financial district, which ended peacefully after an hour.

Chanting slogans, some held banners that read "Hong Kong independence" and "Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times", as well as the former British colonial flag. Others chanted "Glory to Hong Kong", the unofficial anthem of the protests.

According to Apple Daily, about 50 people joined the protest. Police kept watch outside the mall but did not enter the building. 

Thursday's anniversary of Chinese troops opening fire on student-led protests in and around Beijing's Tiananmen Square was particularly sensitive this year, as the central government drafts national security laws for the Asian financial hub.

READ: Thousands in Hong Kong defy ban on Tiananmen vigil

READ: Hong Kong protesters seek sanctuary overseas as noose tightens

It was the first time in 31 years that scuffles briefly disrupted what is usually a solemn day in Hong Kong, which traditionally organises the world's biggest memorial for the incident.

Officers would not have intervened if protesters had not blocked roads in the working class district of Mong Kok, police said on Twitter on Thursday. They had rejected the application for the vigil over concerns about COVID-19.

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2020-06-05 07:20:26Z
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