Selasa, 08 September 2020

AstraZeneca puts COVID-19 vaccine trial on hold over safety concern: Report - CNA

NEW YORK: AstraZeneca has paused a late-stage trial of one of the leading COVID-19 vaccine candidates after a suspected serious adverse reaction in a study participant, health news website Stat News reported on Tuesday (Sep 8).

It quoted an AstraZeneca spokesperson as saying in a statement that the "standard review process triggered a pause to vaccination to allow review of safety data.”

The study is testing a COVID-19 vaccine being developed by AstraZeneca and University of Oxford researchers at various sites, including the United Kingdom, where the adverse event was reported.

The nature of the case and when it happened were not detailed, although the participant is expected to recover, according to Stat News.

The suspension of the trial has impacted other AstraZeneca vaccine trials - as well as clinical trials being conducted by other vaccine makers, which are looking for signs of similar reactions, Stat said.

The AstraZeneca spokesperson's statement said that "in large trials, illnesses will happen by chance but must be independently reviewed to check this carefully." Stat reported that serious adverse reactions vary and can include issues that require hospitalization, life-threatening illness and death.

AstraZeneca did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nine leading US and European vaccine developers pledged on Tuesday to uphold scientific safety and efficacy standards for their experimental vaccines despite the urgency to contain the coronavirus pandemic.

The companies, including AstraZeneca, Pfizer Inc and GlaxoSmithKline, issued what they called a "historic pledge" after a rise in concern that safety standards might slip in the face of political pressure to rush out a vaccine.

The companies said they would "uphold the integrity of the scientific process as they work towards potential global regulatory filings and approvals of the first COVID-19 vaccines."

The other signatories were Johnson & Johnson, Merck & Co, Moderna Inc, Novavax Inc, Sanofi and BioNTech.

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2020-09-08 23:15:00Z
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China is leading world in Covid-19 control and economic recovery: President Xi Jinping - The Straits Times

BEIJING - China is the first major economy to resume growth since the coronavirus outbreak wreaked havoc around the globe, and it is paving the way in Covid-19 control and economic recovery, said President Xi Jinping on Tuesday (Sept 8), in his most extensive remarks on the pandemic yet.

In a 70-minute speech trumpeting his nation's achievements in overcoming the epidemic, the Chinese leader told an audience of top officials, party cadres and healthcare workers that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was "the most reliable backbone of the Chinese people when a storm hits", and it was under its strong leadership that the country could emerge from the devastating crisis.

Mr Xi's speech was made against the backdrop of China maintaining a record of more than three weeks with no domestic Covid-19 cases.

His comments also come as Sino-US ties are at their worst in decades, after US President Donald Trump blamed the pandemic on China while his administration sought to demonise the CCP, calling on its allies to stand up to "this new tyranny".

On Tuesday, Mr Xi praised his country's political model instead, saying the battle against the outbreak "has once again proven the significant advantages of the socialist system with Chinese characteristics in defending risks and challenges and improving the effectiveness of national governance".

"An important aspect of measuring the success and superiority of a country's system is to see whether it can give orders from all sides and organise all parties to cope with major risks and challenges," he added.

"My country's socialist system has extraordinary organisational and mobilisation capabilities, overall planning and coordination capabilities and implementation capabilities."

He did not address shortcomings in China's handling of the outbreak, which had caused much unhappiness in the early days, especially after the death of Dr Li Wenliang, a Wuhan doctor who was sanctioned for warning last December about the then mysterious disease.

Tuesday's ceremony was meant to laud those who had contributed to China's fight in the Covid-19 war.

Mr Xi conferred the Medal of the Republic, the highest national honour, to well-known respiratory disease expert Zhong Nanshan.

He also presented national honours to three other "national heroes": traditional Chinese medicine expert Zhang Boli, Wuhan hospital chief Zhang Dingyu, and military medical doctor Chen Wei, who led research and development into vaccines and treatment.

More than 2,000 healthcare workers, police officers, sanitation workers and volunteers were also given awards at the ceremony.

As the pandemic rages on in other parts of the world, China has gone for more than three weeks with no domestic cases. Since the outbreak started in the central city of Wuhan last December, it has recorded just over 85,000 cases and 4,634 deaths.

More than 27 million cases worldwide have been recorded so far, with nearly 900,000 deaths.

Official news agency Xinhua on Tuesday ran a glowing special report in English titled Chronicle Of Xi's Leadership In China's War Against Coronavirus, saying the Chinese leader "did not sleep well on Chinese New Year's Eve as he shouldered the heavy responsibility to fight the epidemic".

China has also helped to save tens of thousands of lives around the world, and showed its sincerity in promoting common good, said Mr Xi in his speech.

In an apparent dig at the US, the Chinese leader called for global unity and cooperation in dealing with the pandemic.

"Any practice that is selfish, that blames others, reverses right and wrong, and confuses black with white will not only cause harm to the country and its people, but also to the people of the world."

The US has come under fire for withdrawing from the World Health Organisation, the United Nations health body leading the global response to the outbreak.

Chinese state media have, after Mr Trump began calling the coronavirus the "Wuhan virus" and the "Chinese virus", routinely reported the mishandling of the pandemic and the soaring number of infections and deaths in the US.

Nearly 200,000 people have died in the US, which has recorded over six million cases.

Turning to domestic challenges, Mr Xi urged officials and party cadres to develop a long-term strategy to deal with the coronavirus, while the country powers on with its economic recovery.

"We must increase our confidence and enthusiasm, and strive to regain the lost time and make up for the losses caused by the epidemic."

China's gross domestic product grew by a stronger-than-expected 3.2 per cent in the second quarter of this year from a year earlier, making it the world's first major economy to rebound positively after the coronavirus pandemic struck.

It has also been the world's largest provider of Covid-19-related medical supplies, exporting 209,000 ventilators, 1.4 billion protective suits and 151.5 billion masks between March 15 and Sept 6, said Mr Xi.

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2020-09-08 15:16:49Z
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China passed 'extraordinary' coronavirus test, says bullish Xi - CNA

BEIJING: China has passed "an extraordinary and historic test" with its handling of the coronavirus, President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday (Sep 8) at a triumphant awards ceremony for medical professionals decorated with bugle calls and applause.

The nation's propaganda machine has churned out praise for China's COVID-19 response, reframing the public health crisis as an example of the agility and organisation of the Communist leadership.

Xi doled out gold medals to four "heroes" from the medical field in front of hundreds of applauding delegates on Tuesday, all wearing face masks and strikingly large red flower pins.

"We have passed an extraordinary and historic test," Xi said, praising the country for a "heroic struggle" against the disease.

"We quickly achieved initial success in the people's war against the coronavirus. We are leading the world in economic recovery and in the fight against COVID-19."

China has come under intense global scrutiny over its response to the virus, with the United States and Australia leading accusations against Beijing that it covered up the origins and severity of the virus.

READ: WHO says it was first alerted to coronavirus by its office, not China

READ: WHO says China team interviewed Wuhan scientists over COVID-19 origins

Defying charges from the United States and elsewhere that early failures enabled the coronavirus pandemic to spread more quickly, Xi said that China acted in an open and transparent manner throughout, and took decisive actions that saved lives.

"China has helped save the lives of tens of millions of people around the world with its practical actions, showing China's sincere desire to build a common future and community for humanity," Xi said.

Tuesday's lavish ceremony in the Great Hall of the People began with a minute's silence for those who lost their lives during the outbreak.

Meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) out
China's President Xi Jinping (centre) at a meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the COVID-19 outbreak, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Sep 8, 2020. (Photo: Reuters)

The four awardees included 83-year-old Zhong Nanshan – the country's most famous medical expert who emerged as the face of China's fight against the contagion.

He was awarded China's top national medal by Xi, who placed it around Zhong's neck.

"We will join hands with the ... world's medical workers to continue the fight in tracing the origins of the virus," said Zhong.

Beijing has insisted the source of the virus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, is still unknown.

Three others were given the honorary title of "The People's Hero" – biochemical expert Chen Wei, the head of a hospital in Wuhan, and a 72-year-old expert in traditional Chinese medicine.

Some delegates were in tears during a series of speeches.

There was no mention however of whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang, who was among the first to be silenced for raising the alarm about the outbreak and later died from the disease.

READ: China tries to flip the COVID-19 pandemic script, starring a 'reborn' Wuhan

Local authorities in Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus was first identified, were accused of a cover-up that delayed the country's emergency response by at least two weeks.

But as infections spread throughout the world while slowing domestically, Beijing grew more assertive, resisting global investigations into the origins of the outbreak and saying its swift actions helped buy time for other countries to prepare.

Before the ceremony, state broadcaster CCTV showed a video montage of Wuhan at the peak of the outbreak set to rousing music, including images of medical staff in hazmat suits and crowded hospitals.

READ: China shows off COVID-19 vaccines for first time

According to official numbers there have been 4,634 deaths in China from COVID-19. The government has largely contained the outbreak through a serious of strict lockdowns and travel restrictions.

State media has stressed Xi's role in China's containment of the coronavirus.

The official Xinhua news agency said in a long special report on Tuesday that Xi has worked tirelessly since January and even suffered sleepless nights as he "shouldered the extremely difficult mission of fighting the epidemic".

Beijing has sought to focus on China's success at overcoming the virus, rather than its origins.

During a government-arranged tour of Wuhan last week, reporters were shown schools and tourist sites reopening, but were not allowed to report from the Huanan seafood market where the outbreak was first believed to have originated.

"The shifting narrative is aided by the government's success in containing the spread and it has been quite successful at home, though internationally it isn't as successful as it would hope," said Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, a US think-tank.

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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2020-09-08 06:56:15Z
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China passed 'extraordinary' coronavirus test, says bullish Xi - CNA

BEIJING: China has passed "an extraordinary and historic test" with its handling of the coronavirus, President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday (Sep 8) at a triumphant awards ceremony for medical professionals decorated with bugle calls and applause.

The nation's propaganda machine has churned out praise for China's COVID-19 response, reframing the public health crisis as an example of the agility and organisation of the Communist leadership.

Xi doled out gold medals to four "heroes" from the medical field in front of hundreds of applauding delegates on Tuesday, all wearing face masks and strikingly large red flower pins.

"We have passed an extraordinary and historic test," Xi said, praising the country for a "heroic struggle" against the disease.

"We quickly achieved initial success in the people's war against the coronavirus. We are leading the world in economic recovery and in the fight against COVID-19."

China has come under intense global scrutiny over its response to the virus, with the United States and Australia leading accusations against Beijing that it covered up the origins and severity of the virus.

READ: WHO says it was first alerted to coronavirus by its office, not China

READ: WHO says China team interviewed Wuhan scientists over COVID-19 origins

Defying charges from the United States and elsewhere that early failures enabled the coronavirus pandemic to spread more quickly, Xi said that China acted in an open and transparent manner throughout, and took decisive actions that saved lives.

"China has helped save the lives of tens of millions of people around the world with its practical actions, showing China's sincere desire to build a common future and community for humanity," Xi said.

Tuesday's lavish ceremony in the Great Hall of the People began with a minute's silence for those who lost their lives during the outbreak.

Meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) out
China's President Xi Jinping (centre) at a meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the COVID-19 outbreak, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Sep 8, 2020. (Photo: Reuters)

The four awardees included 83-year-old Zhong Nanshan – the country's most famous medical expert who emerged as the face of China's fight against the contagion.

He was awarded China's top national medal by Xi, who placed it around Zhong's neck.

"We will join hands with the ... world's medical workers to continue the fight in tracing the origins of the virus," said Zhong.

Beijing has insisted the source of the virus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, is still unknown.

Three others were given the honorary title of "The People's Hero" – biochemical expert Chen Wei, the head of a hospital in Wuhan, and a 72-year-old expert in traditional Chinese medicine.

Some delegates were in tears during a series of speeches.

There was no mention however of whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang, who was among the first to be silenced for raising the alarm about the outbreak and later died from the disease.

READ: China tries to flip the COVID-19 pandemic script, starring a 'reborn' Wuhan

Local authorities in Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus was first identified, were accused of a cover-up that delayed the country's emergency response by at least two weeks.

But as infections spread throughout the world while slowing domestically, Beijing grew more assertive, resisting global investigations into the origins of the outbreak and saying its swift actions helped buy time for other countries to prepare.

Before the ceremony, state broadcaster CCTV showed a video montage of Wuhan at the peak of the outbreak set to rousing music, including images of medical staff in hazmat suits and crowded hospitals.

READ: China shows off COVID-19 vaccines for first time

According to official numbers there have been 4,634 deaths in China from COVID-19. The government has largely contained the outbreak through a serious of strict lockdowns and travel restrictions.

State media has stressed Xi's role in China's containment of the coronavirus.

The official Xinhua news agency said in a long special report on Tuesday that Xi has worked tirelessly since January and even suffered sleepless nights as he "shouldered the extremely difficult mission of fighting the epidemic".

Beijing has sought to focus on China's success at overcoming the virus, rather than its origins.

During a government-arranged tour of Wuhan last week, reporters were shown schools and tourist sites reopening, but were not allowed to report from the Huanan seafood market where the outbreak was first believed to have originated.

"The shifting narrative is aided by the government's success in containing the spread and it has been quite successful at home, though internationally it isn't as successful as it would hope," said Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, a US think-tank.

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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2020-09-08 06:11:15Z
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Senin, 07 September 2020

China passed 'extraordinary' coronavirus test, says bullish Xi - CNA

BEIJING: China has passed "an extraordinary and historic test" with its handling of the coronavirus, President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday (Sep 8) at a triumphant awards ceremony for medical professionals decorated with bugle calls and applause.

The nation's propaganda machine has churned out praise for China's COVID-19 response, reframing the public health crisis as an example of the agility and organisation of the Communist leadership.

Xi doled out gold medals to four "heroes" from the medical field in front of hundreds of applauding delegates on Tuesday, all wearing face masks and strikingly large red flower pins.

"We have passed an extraordinary and historic test," Xi said, praising the country for a "heroic struggle" against the disease.

"We quickly achieved initial success in the people's war against the coronavirus. We are leading the world in economic recovery and in the fight against COVID-19."

China has come under intense global scrutiny over its response to the virus, with the United States and Australia leading accusations against Beijing that it covered up the origins and severity of the virus.

READ: WHO says it was first alerted to coronavirus by its office, not China

READ: WHO says China team interviewed Wuhan scientists over COVID-19 origins

Tuesday's lavish ceremony in the Great Hall of the People began with a minute's silence for those who lost their lives during the outbreak.

Meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) out
China's President Xi Jinping (centre) at a meeting to commend role models in China's fight against the COVID-19 outbreak, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Sep 8, 2020. (Photo: Reuters)
​​​​​​​

The four awardees included 83-year-old Zhong Nanshan – the country's most famous medical expert who emerged as the face of China's fight against the contagion.

He was awarded China's top national medal by Xi, who placed it around Zhong's neck.

"We will join hands with the ... world's medical workers to continue the fight in tracing the origins of the virus," said Zhong.

READ: China shows off COVID-19 vaccines for first time

Beijing has insisted the source of the virus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, is still unknown.

Three others were given the honorary title of "The People's Hero" – biochemical expert Chen Wei, the head of a hospital in Wuhan, and a 72-year-old expert in traditional Chinese medicine.

Some delegates were in tears during a series of speeches.

There was no mention however of whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang, who was among the first to be silenced for raising the alarm about the outbreak and later died from the disease.

Before the ceremony, state broadcaster CCTV showed a video montage of Wuhan at the peak of the outbreak set to rousing music, including images of medical staff in hazmat suits and crowded hospitals.

According to official numbers there have been 4,634 deaths in China from COVID-19. The government has largely contained the outbreak through a serious of strict lockdowns and travel restrictions.

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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2020-09-08 05:37:30Z
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Hong Kong residents arrested at sea 'will have to be dealt with' by mainland China: Carrie Lam - CNA

HONG KONG: Twelve people from Hong Kong arrested as they reportedly sailed to Taiwan for political asylum will "have to be dealt with" by mainland China, but the city government would try to provide assistance, chief executive Carrie Lam said on Tuesday (Sep 8).

Chinese authorities arrested the 12 people on Aug 23 after intercepting a boat off the coast of the southern mainland province of Guangdong. Local media have reported they were headed to Taiwan to apply for political asylum.

"The question is not a question of simply getting (them) back," Lam told a regular weekly press conference.

"If these Hong Kong residents were arrested for breaching mainland offences then they have to be dealt with according to the mainland laws and in accordance to the jurisdiction before any other things could happen."

Lam added that her government had "a duty to render assistance" to Hong Kong residents "caught in all sorts of situations" abroad and the government's representative office in Guangzhou, Guangdong's capital, will look into ways to provide that assistance and liaise with mainland authorities.

News agency AFP reported on Monday that lawyers representing some of those captured have been denied access to their clients. Lam did not address that particular aspect when asked.

Neither mainland nor Hong Kong authorities have publicly confirmed who has been arrested, but local media have identified some of them as facing prosecution for involvement in protests last year.

One man, Andy Li, was recently arrested under a sweeping national security law imposed by Beijing on the Asian financial hub on Jun 30. Another is a dual national with Hong Kong and Portuguese citizenship.

The Guangdong Coast Guard, which announced the arrests on its social media platform late on Aug 26, said two of the detained were surnamed Li and Tang, without providing further details.

It is not clear what charges they face, beyond potentially illegal border crossing.

Lam also reiterated a remark made last week which stoked further worries that Hong Kong had taken a more authoritarian turn, saying the city had no separation of powers, and that its executive, legislative and judicial powers were derived from Beijing.

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2020-09-08 04:29:31Z
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Johor urges Malaysia authorities to speed up full reopening of Singapore border - The Straits Times

JOHOR BARU (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Johor wants Putrajaya to speed up the full reopening of Malaysia's border with Singapore, says Mentri Besar Datuk Hasni Mohammad.

Hasni said he recently met Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin to discuss the matter, adding that Muhyiddin had asked Senior Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob to look into it.

"Both governments are currently finding positive ways so that we can quickly open up the border between Malaysia and Singapore," said Hasni during a speech at the Johor Islamic Religious Council (Maij) zakat handing over ceremony at Holiday Villa Hotel here on Monday (Sept 7).

He added that to date, more than 35,000 Johor residents working across the Causeway have lost their jobs since the pandemic started.

"It has also affected more than 250,000 Malaysians who used to travel daily between the border as the state's economy depends on the economy of our neighbouring country.

"The border reopening is also important as it contributes 50 per cent of the Customs revenue to the country, " he said, adding that he hopes the government would announce the good news soon.

On July 26, Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein and his Singapore counterpart Vivian Balakrishnan met at the halfway mark of Causeway in a symbolic gesture to mark the agreement by both countries to reopen their borders on Aug 17 under the Reciprocal Green Lane and Periodic Commuting Arrangement.

The border was closed after Malaysia introduced the movement control order (MCO) to curb the spread of Covid-19 on March 18.

The green lane will enable cross-border travel for essential business and official purposes between Malaysia and Singapore up to a maximum of 400 people a week for stays up to two weeks.

On the other hand, the commuting agreement will allow residents of both countries who hold long-term immigration passes for business and work purposes in the other country to enter that country for work, up to a maximum of 2,000 people a day.

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2020-09-08 00:25:10Z
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