Selasa, 07 Juli 2020

'At war time speed', China leads Covid-19 vaccine race - The Straits Times

SEOUL/SINGAPORE (REUTERS) - China is forging ahead in the race to develop a vaccine to help control the Covid-19 pandemic, with Sinovac Biotech's experimental vaccine set to become the country's second and the world's third to enter final stage testing later this month.

While a laggard in the global vaccine industry, China, where the new coronavirus is thought to have originated, has brought state, military and private sectors together in a quest to combat a disease that has killed over 500,000 people worldwide.

Many other countries, including the United States, are coordinating closely with the private sector to try to win the vaccine development race, and China faces many challenges.

Its success in driving down Covid-19 infections makes it harder to conduct large-scale vaccine trials, and so far only a few other countries have agreed to work with it.

After past vaccine scandals, Beijing will also have to convince the world it has met all safety and quality requirements.

But China's use of command economy-type tools is so far yielding results.

A state-controlled entity, for example, completed two vaccine plants at what it called the "war time speed" of a couple of months, while state-owned enterprises and the military have allowed experimental shots to be used on staff.

The People's Liberation Army's (PLA) medical research unit, which has been a driving force in China's efforts to fight infectious diseases, is also working with private firms including CanSino to develop Covid-19 vaccines.

Challenging the West's traditional dominance of the industry, China is behind eight of the 19 vaccine candidates in human trials, with Sinovac's experimental shot and one jointly developed by the military and CanSino among the front runners.

It is also focused mainly on inactivated vaccine technology - a technology that is well known and has been used to make vaccines against diseases such as influenza and measles - something which could raise the chances of success.

By contrast, several Western rivals such as US-based Moderna and Germany's CureVac and BioNTech are using a new technology called messenger RNA that has never before yielded a product approved by regulators.

'TRIED AND TRUE'

"It's a tried and true strategy," said Dr Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Centre at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, about inactivated vaccine technology.

"If I had to pick a vaccine that I think would be the most likely to be safe and effective, it would be that one," he said.

Dr Offit is also co-inventor of the rotavirus vaccine, RotaTeq, manufactured by Merck & Co Inc.

Four of the Chinese candidates in human trials are inactivated vaccines, including Sinovac's and two vaccines from China National Biotec Group (CNBG), a unit of state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm).

There are currently only two experimental Covid-19 vaccines in final Phase III trials - one from Sinopharm and another from AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford. Sinovac's is set to become the third later this month.

To speed up the process, China allowed Sinopharm and Sinovac to combine Phase I and Phase II trials for their vaccine candidates.

For CanSino's experimental vaccine, the PLA research institute played a key role, with the two working on a method using an adenovirus - a similar approach to AstraZeneca's.

The PLA has its own approval process for "military specifically-needed drugs", and approved the military use of the candidate developed by its research unit and CanSino last month.

PLA lead scientist Chen Wei, who has been the face of its vaccine development effort, was among the first to take the experimental Covid-19 shot developed by her team, as well as its potential Sars treatment years before, according to state media.

CHALLENGES

China has challenges, though, as the epidemic has petered out in the country, hampering efforts to conduct large trials.

It has since shifted its focus overseas, but only a handful of countries have shown willingness to collaborate - UAE, Canada, Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico.

Neither major European countries nor the United States have shown interest in China's Covid-19 vaccines as they focus on their own projects.

China must also address concerns over its vaccine quality and safety issues following several scandals over substandard vaccines in recent years.

"The Chinese national regulatory authority has been improving its oversight," said Dr Jerome Kim, head of the International Vaccine Institute, a non-profit agency established as an initiative of the UN Development Programme.

China introduced a law last year to regulate the vaccine industry, with heavier penalties for selling and making fake or low-quality vaccines than other drug products.

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2020-07-07 13:36:42Z
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What are Hong Kong police's new powers? - CNA

HONG KONG: Hong Kong's government has expanded police surveillance and enforcement powers using Beijing's sweeping new national security law.

The changes were spelled out in 116-pages of guidelines released late on Monday (Jul 6) that form part of a new law targeting subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign collusion.

Below are some of the key powers granted authorities when conducting national security investigations.

WARRANTLESS SEARCHES

Police can now raid premises without a court-granted warrant in "exceptional circumstances", the government said.

The guidelines specifically stated this would apply if it "would not be practicable to obtain" a warrant. The rules also apply to searches of vehicles or electronic devices.

INTERNET CENSORSHIP

Police now have the power to remove online content - a move that embeds unprecedented control over the Internet in a city outside of China's "Great Firewall".

If police decide an Internet user's online post is likely to constitute or cause "an offence endangering national security", they can order the user to delete the post, order the platform on which it was posted to remove it, or order the platform's web host to pull the message.

READ: TikTok says it will exit Hong Kong market within days

READ: Tech companies suspend processing Hong Kong government data requests

This applies whether the message was posted in Hong Kong or elsewhere.

If users or providers do not follow the police order, officers can apply to a magistrate for a warrant to seize relevant electronic devices and take action to remove the message.

Recent legal changes have broadened police powers in Hong Kong
Recent legal changes have broadened police powers in Hong Kong. (Photo: AFP/Isaac Lawrence)

They can also apply for a warrant ordering people and businesses to hand over a message's identification record or help decrypt messages.

Individuals who do not obey the order are liable to be fined up to HK$100,000 (US$12,900) or jailed for up to a year. Jail terms for service providers are capped at six months.

ASSET SEIZURES AND TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS

Once someone is suspected of endangering national security, police can apply to a magistrate for a warrant ordering them to surrender their passport.

The city's security chief can also freeze any assets deemed to be related to an offence against national security, and the justice chief can apply to the courts to order the property's confiscation.

FOREIGN POLITICAL ORGANISATIONS

The city's police chief can - with the security minister's approval - compel political groups or agents from abroad, including Taiwan, to hand over certain information.

That includes their activities, personal details, and details on their finances and sources of income.

READ: 'We're next': Hong Kong security law sends chills through Taiwan

Any agent or group that fails to hand over the information is liable on conviction to a fine of HK$100,000 and six months in prison - or two years in prison if they give information which proves false.

COVERT SURVEILLANCE

The city's chief executive - a pro-Beijing appointee - will have final approval on all applications for interception of communications and covert surveillance operations to do with national security cases.

Less intrusive surveillance can be approved by senior police officers.

"The authorising authority," the government said in its statement, "has to ensure that the covert operation concerned satisfies the proportionality and necessity tests before granting the authorisation."

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2020-07-07 12:27:47Z
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TikTok quits Hong Kong as US giants suspend processing data requests - CNA

NEW YORK/HONG KONG: Chinese-owned social media platform TikTok announced on Tuesday (Jul 7) it would pull out of Hong Kong within days, as global tech giants struggle to figure out how to operate in the city under sweeping new security rules imposed by Beijing.

Major US internet companies including Facebook, Microsoft, Google, Twitter and Zoom have all announced they have suspended the processing of requests for user data from the Hong Kong authorities while they study the new law.

The US companies' social media platforms are generally banned in China, where access is blocked by Beijing's "great firewall". Most have operated freely in Hong Kong, but will now have to determine how to comply with new rules for the city, which rights groups say threaten freedoms enjoyed for decades.

Facebook , which also owns WhatsApp and Instagram, said in a statement on Monday it was pausing reviews of user data requests for all of its services "pending further assessment of the National Security Law."

Google and Twitter said they had suspended their reviews of data requests from Hong Kong authorities immediately after the law went into effect last week. Zoom and Microsoft's LinkedIn issued similar statements on Tuesday.

Apple said it does not receive requests for user content directly from Hong Kong, but requires authorities there to submit requests through the US department of justice under a legal assistance treaty.

"We're assessing the new law, which went into effect less than a week ago, and we have not received any content requests since the law went into effect," Apple said in a statement.

Tuesday's announcement by TikTok of its plan to quit Hong Kong is notable because the short-form video app is owned by a Chinese company but operates only outside of mainland China. 

Its parent company, ByteDance, runs a separate, similar service inside China, while saying TikTok is intended to appeal to users worldwide. Its exit means Hong Kong users, like those in mainland China, will now be cut off from the global version.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Monday Washington was considering banning TikTok in the United States. Asked if Americans should download it, he told Fox News: "Only if you want your private information in the hands of the Chinese Communist Party."

A source familiar with TikTok's decision to exit Hong Kong said the city was a small, loss making market for the platform.

RADICAL CHANGES

China's parliament passed the national security legislation last week, setting the stage for the most radical changes to the former British colony's way of life since it returned to Chinese rule 23 years ago.

Hong Kong late on Monday published more details about how the new law will strengthen police powers over the internet, including the ability to ask publishers to remove information deemed a threat to national security.

Asked about the moves by the US tech firms, Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam told a news conference on Tuesday: "Ultimately, time and facts will tell that this law will not undermine human rights and freedoms."

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, in response to a question on TikTok's plan to exit Hong Kong, said the business environment would improve after the law was established.

"We hope the relevant sides will view China’s rights in safeguarding its sovereignty and safety in a fair, objective and reasonable manner, to speak and act cautiously on the Hong Kong issue, to not selectively create barriers and politicize the issue," he said.

King-wa Fu, an associate professor at The University of Hong Kong's Journalism and Media Studies Centre, said he expected Hong Kong to introduce measures to regulate media and the Internet, with a system of censorship similar to that in mainland China.

"That’s why (the platforms) are 'suspending' and evaluating the situation. I don’t have a crystal ball. But I believe the national security office wouldn’t tolerate a free Internet in Hong Kong to continue and further restrictions would be imposed," he said.

Some Hong Kong residents say they are reviewing their social media posts, deleting ones that could be viewed as sensitive.

"It's not safe anymore if the government really does this," said Richard Lai, 26, a former medical worker. "I'll keep using the social media platforms but will just use it for obtaining information but will not post anything."

Messaging app Signal, which promises end-to-end encryption, has seen a surge in sign-ups by Hong Kong residents.

"We'd announce that we're stopping too, but we never started turning over user data to HK police. Also, we don't have user data to turn over," it said on Twitter on Monday.

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2020-07-07 11:14:48Z
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Singapore GE2020: Marks made by self-inking pens on ballot papers will not become invisible, says Elections Department - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The marks made by self-inking pens on ballot papers for the election will not become invisible, said the Elections Department (ELD), debunking false claims.

ELD said on Tuesday (July 7) that it was aware of false information being circulated in messages and online posts, which claimed that ballot papers and self-inking pens provided for the election have been treated such that marks made on the ballot papers will become invisible after several minutes.

"ELD would like to state categorically that this is not true," the department said in a statement.

The marks made using the self-inking pens are permanent, it said.

In fact, the ink is oil-based and water and temperature resistant, said ELD, adding that similar pens have also been used in elections in other countries like South Korea.

ELD also said the ballot papers used for this election are no different from past elections, and are printed under tight security conditions.

"It will not be possible for the ballot papers to be put through any additional treatment under such a tightly controlled environment," it said.

Self-inking pens were introduced following feedback in previous elections that some voters, especially seniors, had difficulty gripping regular pens to mark their votes.

The pens allow voters to easily mark an "X" on the ballot paper by applying pressure, like a chop.

Voters are also allowed to bring their own pens to mark the ballot papers.

"ELD is committed to ensuring voting security and secrecy, and has put in place rigorous controls at every step of the voting process to ensure this," the department said.

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2020-07-07 10:51:10Z
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GE2020: Not true that ink from pens provided for voters on Polling Day will 'become invisible', says ELD - CNA

SINGAPORE: The Elections Department (ELD) has refuted false information circulating online that ballot papers and self-inking pens provided for voters on Polling Day have been treated so that marks on the ballot papers become "invisible" after several minutes.

The false information has been circulating online and on instant messaging platforms, the department said in a media statement on Tuesday (Jul 7).

"ELD would like to state categorically that this is not true," it said, adding that marks made by the self-inking pens are permanent.

"In fact, the ink is oil-based, and water and temperature resistant. Similar pens have also been used in elections in other countries, including the Republic of Korea."

The ballot papers used for this year's General Election are "no different" from the ballot papers used in previous elections, and are printed under tight security conditions, ELD said.

"It will not be possible for the ballot papers to be put through any additional treatment under such a tightly controlled environment," it added. 

READ: More services available online for voters, candidates ahead of next General Election

The self-inking pens were introduced to allow voters to indicate their choice on the ballot papers "clearly and easily", the ELD said.

"This arose from feedback in previous elections that some voters, especially more senior voters, had difficulty gripping regular pens to mark their votes," the department added.

Voters may also bring their own pens on Polling Day to mark the ballot papers.

The ELD said it is committed to ensuring "voting security and secrecy", and that there are "rigorous controls" at every step of the voting process. 

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2020-07-07 09:29:15Z
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Melbourne under new COVID-19 lockdown - CNA

MELBOURNE: More than five million residents of Melbourne will be locked down for six weeks after coronavirus cases surged in Australia's second-biggest city, authorities announced Tuesday (Jul 7).

State Premier Daniel Andrews said the lockdown would begin at midnight on Wednesday and last at least six weeks, as he warned residents "we can't pretend" the coronavirus crisis is over.

After the southeastern city detected 191 new cases in 24 hours, Andrews said there were now too many incidents of the virus to trace and track.

"These are unsustainably high numbers," he said. "No one wanted to be in this position. I know there will be enormous amounts of damage that will be done because of this. It will be very challenging."

FILE PHOTO: People wearing face masks walk on Bourke Street after cases of the coronavirus were con
People wearing face masks walk on Bourke Street after cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Jan 29, 2020. (File photo: REUTERS/Andrew Kelly)

Most school students will return to remote learning while restaurants and cafes will be limited to serving takeaway food.

"There is simply no alternative other than thousands and thousands of cases and potentially more," he told reporters.

Although the lockdown covers the Melbourne metropolitan area, the entire state of Victoria will effectively be sealed off from the rest of the country from Tuesday midnight, as state borders are closed.

READ: Australia to close internal border after Victoria COVID-19 outbreak

Police and the military are patrolling dozens of border crossings and using drones and other aircraft to surveil the vast frontier with other states where the coronavirus has been successfully contained.

READ: Australia deploys police, army to enforce border closure amid COVID-19 outbreak

Health officials last week effectively shut off some 300,000 Melbourne residents to the rest of the city until the end of July, but that has now been extended beyond their neighbourhoods.

Roughly 3,000 people were also locked in their homes on Saturday in Australia's strictest COVID-19 response to date after a cluster emerged in a high-rise public housing estate.

READ: Premier of Australia's Victoria state defends hard COVID-19 lockdown

So far, 69 cases have been recorded across the nine densely populated towers and there are concerns the virus could spread widely, with one health official likening the crowded conditions inside to "vertical cruise ships".

A sign is seen pasted on a window at one of nine public housing estates locked down due to a spike
A sign is seen pasted on a window at one of nine public housing estates locked down due to a spike in COVID-19 coronavirus numbers in Melbourne. (AFP/William WEST)

Cruise ships emerged as early coronavirus hotspots, with passengers and crew often packed in small cabins and at high risk of infection.

Australia has recorded almost 9,000 cases of COVID-19 and 106 deaths from the virus.

Almost all new daily cases are being detected in Melbourne, while all other regions are enjoying relaxed restrictions after largely curbing the virus spread.

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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2020-07-07 07:21:34Z
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Melbourne under new COVID-19 lockdown - CNA

MELBOURNE: More than five million residents of Melbourne will be locked down for six weeks after coronavirus cases surged in Australia's second-biggest city, authorities announced Tuesday (Jul 7).

State Premier Daniel Andrews said the lockdown would begin at midnight on Wednesday and last at least six weeks, as he warned residents "we can't pretend" the coronavirus crisis is over.

After the southeastern city detected 191 new cases in 24 hours, Andrews said there were now too many incidents of the virus to trace and track.

"These are unsustainably high numbers," he said. "No one wanted to be in this position. I know there will be enormous amounts of damage that will be done because of this. It will be very challenging."

FILE PHOTO: People wearing face masks walk on Bourke Street after cases of the coronavirus were con
People wearing face masks walk on Bourke Street after cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Jan 29, 2020. (File photo: REUTERS/Andrew Kelly)

Most school students will return to remote learning while restaurants and cafes will be limited to serving takeaway food.

"There is simply no alternative other than thousands and thousands of cases and potentially more," he told reporters.

Although the lockdown covers the Melbourne metropolitan area, the entire state of Victoria will effectively be sealed off from the rest of the country from Tuesday midnight, as state borders are closed.

READ: Australia to close internal border after Victoria COVID-19 outbreak

Police and the military are patrolling dozens of border crossings and using drones and other aircraft to surveil the vast frontier with other states where the coronavirus has been successfully contained.

READ: Australia deploys police, army to enforce border closure amid COVID-19 outbreak

Health officials last week effectively shut off some 300,000 Melbourne residents to the rest of the city until the end of July, but that has now been extended beyond their neighbourhoods.

Roughly 3,000 people were also locked in their homes on Saturday in Australia's strictest COVID-19 response to date after a cluster emerged in a high-rise public housing estate.

READ: Premier of Australia's Victoria state defends hard COVID-19 lockdown

So far, 69 cases have been recorded across the nine densely populated towers and there are concerns the virus could spread widely, with one health official likening the crowded conditions inside to "vertical cruise ships".

A sign is seen pasted on a window at one of nine public housing estates locked down due to a spike
A sign is seen pasted on a window at one of nine public housing estates locked down due to a spike in COVID-19 coronavirus numbers in Melbourne. (AFP/William WEST)

Cruise ships emerged as early coronavirus hotspots, with passengers and crew often packed in small cabins and at high risk of infection.

Australia has recorded almost 9,000 cases of COVID-19 and 106 deaths from the virus.

Almost all new daily cases are being detected in Melbourne, while all other regions are enjoying relaxed restrictions after largely curbing the virus spread.

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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2020-07-07 07:18:45Z
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