Kamis, 10 September 2020

Premature reopening, gatherings among factors that led to COVID-19 clusters in Jakarta workplaces - CNA

JAKARTA: In July, credit analyst Budi Wardiman went back to work in his office in Jakarta, after having worked from home for almost three months due to a partial lockdown that was imposed in the capital to break the chain of COVID-19 infection.

The first round of restrictions were put in place on Apr 10 and lifted in early June, as Jakarta saw a decrease in cases. Most businesses were allowed to reopen.

But about 10 days after Mr Wardiman, not his real name, and his colleagues went back to work in their office, two of his co-workers were tested positive for COVID-19.

All the staff at the bank where Mr Wardiman worked then had to undergo a Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test. Five others also tested positive.

As of early September, a total of 18 people at the bank’s Jakarta branch have been tested positive, while 23 others who work at the bank’s branch in South Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, also have COVID-19.  

Mr Wardiman said that they actually implemented some health protocols, like having safe distancing for seating and each cubicle getting a partition.

“But a flaw is that the air conditioner is still centralised and the rooms lack air circulation.

“We also suspect the elevator is a transmission medium,” Mr Wardiman told CNA.

Indonesia COVID-19 swab test
A health agency official takes a mucus swab sample to test for COVID-19 from a commuter at a train station in Bekasi, West Java on May 5, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Khairul Basyar)

Mr Wardiman's account is just one of the many instances in Jakarta and its surrounding satellite cities where workplaces have been the focus of COVID-19 clusters after the first round of restrictions were eased.

In Bekasi regency east of Jakarta, there have been at least five major known clusters of COVID-19 in industrial areas.

Cases have been detected in factories under major multinational corporations, including Unilever Indonesia, LG Electronics, and Hitachi. These clusters in Bekasi alone account for more than 500 COVID-19 cases.

READ: Six months after COVID-19 strikes Indonesia, questions linger over healthcare capacity and equipment

As the total number of COVID-19 cases in Indonesia crossed the 200,000 mark, Jakarta city governor Anies Bawedan announced on Wednesday (Sep 9) that large-scale social restrictions will be reimposed.

Why have workplaces been the focus of new COVID-19 clusters?

Experts say there are several reasons for this, including how businesses could have resumed operating prematurely back in June, as well as gatherings and meetings in workplaces.

EXPERT SAYS BUSINESSES REOPENED PREMATURELY

Mr Pandu Riono, an epidemiologist from the University of Indonesia believes that the businesses had reopened prematurely after the restrictions were eased.

“There was a decrease in COVID-19 cases, but there were still a lot of them,” Mr Riono told CNA.

“In other countries, they wait until there is only a handful of cases, then they open the businesses. Here, it happened when there were still hundreds (of new cases daily).”

He also said that some companies did not comply with health protocols with respect to allowing employees to resume work in the office.

“They did not want to invest in health,” he said, adding that some may not have taken things seriously because there is a lack of monitoring by the government.

READ: Active COVID-19 cases in Indonesia are on the decline, says President Jokowi

Mr Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist with Griffith University in Brisbane added that resuming work in the office is not simply a matter of implementing health protocols. Things must start with the management screening the employees to know whether they are free of COVID-19.

It is also necessary to know the employees' health condition. Employees with a comorbid condition, for example, must work from home, he pointed out.  

Workers wearing protective suits bury a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victim at Pondok Ranggon cem
Workers wearing protective suits bury a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) victim at Pondok Ranggon cemetery complex in Jakarta, Indonesia, September 8, 2020 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Antara Foto/Muhammad Adimaja/ via REUTERS

GATHERINGS, MEETINGS ANOTHER RISK FACTOR

Meanwhile, the spokesman of the national COVID-19 taskforce Wiku Adisasmito said that activities that required people to meet in groups could have contributed to the transmission of the disease.

“That’s why when you hold meetings or work from the office, it is advised not to stay in a closed room for too long,” he said during a press conference last month.

Prof Adisasmito also suggested that the clusters could have been formed at the employees’ neighbourhoods or they could have been infected while they were commuting to work.

“Actually employees have homes, so of course there are clusters in the settlements and they can catch it (COVID-19) at their neighbourhood or at home or on the way to the office.” 

Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Jakarta
FILE PHOTO: People wearing protective face masks and face shields walk at the park amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Jakarta, Indonesia, August 22, 2020. REUTERS/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana

READ: Spike in occupancy rate for Jakarta's COVID-19 wards over the past 2 weeks

On Tuesday, the government decided to take extra precautions to prevent COVID-19 from spreading in workplaces.

Prof Adisasmito said that civil servants who work in green zones can all work from the office, and only a maximum of 75 per cent of workers in yellow zones can work from the office.

In addition, in government institutions, only half of the employees in orange zones can go to work and only 25 per cent of employees can work from the office in red zones.

Red zones are defined by the government as areas where there are a lot of COVID-19 cases and deemed dangerous. Orange zones and yellow zones are places with not that many COVID-19 cases, while green zones are places believed to be safe as they have reported little COVID-19 cases.

“The clusters which happen at workplaces could have happened during lunchtime or while performing prayers, that is why one must keep a distance from one another and only take off your masks when eating lunch,” Prof Adisasmito stated.

As of Thursday, there were more than 207,000 COVID-19 cases and 8,456 deaths in Indonesia, one of the highest in Southeast Asia.

LOOKING AHEAD: BETTER STRATEGY NEEDED

Starting next Monday, Jakarta will return to large-scale social restrictions amid a continuous increase in the number of daily infections and an increase in hospitals' bed occupancy rate.  

Citizens will be required to work from home, study from home and conduct activities of worship from home. Only 11 essential business may operate from their premises.

The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Jakarta
Passengers wearing protective masks and face shields queue for a public bus, following the COVID-19 outbreak, at a central bus spot in Jakarta, Indonesia, Jul 27, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan)

Mr Riono cautioned that the restrictions must not be violated, unlike the previous round where there were anecdotal accounts of people flouting the rules. 

He also asserted that better strategies are needed to contain the spread of COVID-19 in industrial zones.

To make enforcement more effective, there is a need for closer coordination between the central government and municipal authorities, he said.

He also emphasised that public education should be improved, as some believe that they cannot catch COVID-19.

READ: Contact tracers in Indonesia face threats, assaults in fight against COVID-19

Going a step further, Mr Budiman said just education is not enough.

He said that employers who demand their staff to work from the office should regularly test them for COVID-19.

They should also implement other measures apart from the standard health protocols known in Indonesia – wearing a mask, safe distancing and washing one's hands regularly. 

For instance, there should be guards to ensure that there are not too many people in the lavatory at the same time, he said.

Companies that are still allowed to operate should make sure that they have the best ventilation such as using air conditioners with High-Efficiency Particulate Arrestance (HEPA) air filters or replacing systems that are activated by fingerprints.

Within the broader community, what is needed is a more aggressive testing and tracing approach, something Indonesia is lagging far behind compared to other developing countries, Mr Budiman added.

In the meantime, Mr Wardiman, the credit analyst does not have many options rather than to continue to work from his office, as banks are categorised as essential services.

“I am actually afraid, but there is nothing I can do other than trying to implement strict health protocols like always bringing extra clothes to change at the office and carrying a hand sanitiser to disinfect things.

“I hope this COVID-19 pandemic will soon end and everyone is disciplined in complying with health protocols because I see a lot of people in public transport who do not wear their masks properly or stand too near to each other.”

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

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2020-09-10 22:21:25Z
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Singapore welcomes talks with Hong Kong on resuming cross-border travel - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The Singapore Consulate-General in Hong Kong said on Thursday (Sept 10) the Republic welcomes talks with Hong Kong on the gradual resumption of cross-border travel between the two sides.

It added that, given the strong business and social ties between the two cities, the resumption of cross-border travel will benefit both.

The Consulate-General said that with a low number of new community cases daily and one of the lowest Covid-19 fatality rates in the world, Singapore has the confidence to reopen its economy, albeit gradually and carefully.

On Tuesday, Hong Kong's Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development Edward Yau said the city had sent letters expressing interest in a "travel bubble" to 11 countries, including Singapore.

The territory is already in talks with Japan and Thailand on the resumption of travel.

Hong Kong's leadership also announced on Tuesday the cautious easing of some social distancing rules in the territory as its third coronavirus wave stabilises.

Barring any spike in infections, the limit imposed on eateries will be raised for a week to four people a table, up from the current two patrons, from Friday.

Sports premises, amusement game centres and places of public entertainment will also reopen, said its Secretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan on Tuesday.

Singapore currently permits visitors from five countries, with varied number of restrictions in place.

On June 3, Singapore and China announced details of a "fast lane" or "green lane" agreement for travellers from both sides to fly into each other's countries without serving a quarantine period of up to 14 days.

Singapore then reopened its borders with Malaysia under two schemes - the Reciprocal Green Lane and the Periodic Commuting Arrangement - on Aug 17.

General travellers from New Zealand and Brunei started arriving in Singapore from Tuesday,  while a Reciprocal Green Lane with the latter was announced on Sept 1.

On Sept 2, a "fast lane" for essential business and official travel between Singapore and South Korea was announced.

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2020-09-10 11:45:51Z
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Pompeo urges Southeast Asia to shun Chinese firms working in South China Sea - CNA

HANOI: Washington's top diplomat urged Southeast Asia on Thursday (Sep 10) to cut ties with Chinese companies helping build islands in the South China Sea, weeks after the US blacklisted two dozen firms working in the disputed waters.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's comments came at a regional Asian summit overshadowed by the US-China rivalry over a range of issues, from trade to the coronavirus.

Tensions are also simmering over the South China Sea, with the US last month sanctioning 24 Chinese state-owned companies it said had helped Beijing's military buildup in the resource-rich waterway.

READ: US becoming driver of militarisation in South China Sea: Wang Yi

Pompeo said it was time for Southeast Asian governments to reconsider their own relationship with firms working in the sea.

"Don't just speak up, but act," he told the 10 foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) during an online summit.

"Reconsider business dealings with the very state-owned companies that bully ASEAN coastal states in the South China Sea.

"Don't let the Chinese Communist party walk over us and our people."

Disputed claims in the South China Sea
Disputed claims in the South China Sea AFP

This year's ASEAN summit comes days after Beijing launched ballistic missiles in the South China Sea as part of live-fire exercises.

Vietnam, which is chairing the summit, expressed "serious concern" about recent militarisation of the sea.

"This has eroded trust and confidence, increased tension and undermined peace, security and rule of law in the region," said Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh.

READ: Don't trap us in your rivalry: Indonesia to US, China

Commentary: Southeast Asia is pushing back on Beijing on the South China Sea

But the Philippines already said last week it would not follow the US lead because it needed Chinese investment, even as a fresh dispute between the two nations over Scarborough Shoal - one of the region's richest fishing grounds - hangs over the talks.

And Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi laid blame on the United States for tensions, claiming Washington was "becoming the biggest driver" of the waterway's militarisation.

CONTESTED WATERS

China claims the majority of the South China Sea, invoking its so-called nine-dash line to justify what it says are historic rights to the key trade waterway.

Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan all contest parts of China's declared territory in the sea.

Tensions between the US and China have also been exacerbated by concerns over Hong Kong, where Beijing recently imposed a draconian national security law in response to months of civil unrest last year.

Pompeo "joined several countries in raising concerns over ... the arrests of pro-democracy students, the year-long postponement of elections, and disqualification of pro-democracy electoral candidates," according to spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus.

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2020-09-10 07:18:41Z
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Java and Bali record most active Covid-19 cases in Indonesia - The Straits Times

JAKARTA (THE JAKARTA POST/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Indonesia's national Covid-19 task force has revealed that Java and Bali islands currently have the highest number of active cases in the country, with a total of more than 23,200, which includes patients under treatment at hospitals and people in self-isolation.

"Java and Bali have recorded the highest number of active Covid-19 cases. More than 23,000 (of their residents currently have Covid-19)," a member of the task force, Dewi Nur Aisyah, said on Wednesday (Sept 9) as reported by kompas.com. However, she did not reveal the details on the number of active cases recorded in Java - which has six provinces - and Bali.

Dewi added that Sumatra had the second-most cases with at least 7,779 active cases, followed by Sulawesi with 3,771 cases, Kalimantan with 3,694 cases, as well as Maluku and Papua with 1,910 cases combined.

Indonesia continues to record a significant number of new Covid-19 cases daily, the government data has revealed.

The country saw an additional 3,307 cases on Wednesday alone, bringing the total accumulative number of coronavirus infections to 203,342 so far.

At least 8,336 people have died from the disease, while some 145,200 people have reportedly recovered.

Jakarta detected the highest number of new infections with 1,004 cases, followed by East Java and West Java with 370 and 288 cases, respectively.

President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo recently vowed that the government would remain focused on ensuring health and Covid-19 mitigation to ensure the survival of all aspects of the nation's development, including the country's economy.

Authorities previously relaxed some Covid-19 restrictions in a bid to restart the economy, including in capital Jakarta. However, the policy seemed to backfire as data showed that cases increased significantly following the relaxations.

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2020-09-10 01:26:40Z
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US revokes visas for 1000 Chinese under Trump order - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The United States has revoked visas of more than 1,000 Chinese students and researchers under an order by President Donald Trump that accused some of them of espionage, the State Department said Wednesday (Sept 9).

Trump, in a May 29 proclamation as tensions rose with Beijing on multiple fronts, declared that some Chinese nationals officially in the United States for study have stolen intellectual property and helped modernise China's military.

The State Department, offering its first figures on the effects of Trump's order, said that more than 1,000 visas have been revoked since it began implementing the proclamation on June 1.

"The high-risk graduate students and research scholars made ineligible under this proclamation represent a small subset of the total number of Chinese students and scholars coming to the United States," a State Department spokesman said.

"We continue to welcome legitimate students and scholars from China who do not further the Chinese Communist Party's goals of military dominance," she said.

The State Department declined to give details on whose visas have been revoked, citing privacy laws.

Nearly 370,000 students from China were enrolled at US universities in 2018-19, the most of any country, offering a lucrative source of income to institutions that are now facing growing pressure from the coronavirus pandemic.

Some Asian American activists have warned that Trump's orders are creating a climate of suspicion on campuses, with students of Asian descent facing unfounded questions about their intentions.

But US officials say the number of espionage cases involving China has soared in recent years as part of a concerted effort by Beijing.

US officials accuse China of seeking to steal university research into Covid-19, a reason cited for the Trump administration's closing China's consulate in Houston in June.

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2020-09-09 23:24:57Z
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Rabu, 09 September 2020

US cancels more than 1000 visas for Chinese nationals deemed security risks - CNA

WASHINGTON: The United States has revoked visas for more than 1,000 Chinese nationals under a May 29 presidential proclamation to suspend entry from China of students and researchers deemed security risks, a State Department spokeswoman said on Wednesday (Sep 9).

The acting head of the US Department of Homeland Security, Chad Wolf, said earlier that Washington was blocking visas "for certain Chinese graduate students and researchers with ties to China's military fusion strategy to prevent them from stealing and otherwise appropriating sensitive research".

In a speech, Wolf repeated US charges of unjust business practices and industrial espionage by China, including attempts to steal coronavirus research, and accused it of abusing student visas to exploit American academia.

Wolf said the United States was also "preventing goods produced from slave labour from entering our markets, demanding that China respect the inherent dignity of each human being," an apparent reference to alleged abuses of Muslims in China's Xinjiang region.

A State Department spokeswoman said the visa action was being taken under a proclamation President Donald Trump announced on May 29 as part of the US response to China's curbs on democracy in Hong Kong.

"As of Sep 8, 2020, the Department has revoked more than 1,000 visas of PRC nationals who were found to be subject to Presidential Proclamation 10043 and therefore ineligible for a visa," she said.

She said the ineligible "high-risk graduate students and research scholars" represented "a small subset" of the Chinese coming to the United States to study and research and that legitimate students and scholars would continue to be welcomed.

READ: China delays renewing credentials for journalists at US outlets

US Customs and Border Protection officials have prepared orders to block imports of cotton and tomato products from Xinjiang over accusations of forced labour, though a formal announcement has been delayed.

China said in June it resolutely opposed any US move to restrict Chinese students from studying in the United States and urged Washington to do more to enhance mutual exchanges and understanding.

About 360,000 Chinese nationals study in the US, bringing in significant revenue to US colleges, although the COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted the return to campus this autumn semester.

DETERIORATING RELATIONS

Sino-US relations have sunk to historic lows with the world's two biggest economies clashing over issues ranging from trade and human rights to Hong Kong and the coronavirus.

Trump, who had touted friendly ties with Chinese President Xi Jinping as he sought to make good on promises to rebalance a massive trade deficit, has made getting tough on China a key part of his campaign for re-election on Nov 3. He has accused his Democratic opponent Joe Biden, who leads in most opinion polls, of being soft toward Beijing.

Earlier, some Chinese students enrolled in US universities said they received emailed notices from the US embassy in Beijing or US consulates in China on Wednesday informing them that their visas had been cancelled.

READ: Need a visa to visit the US? Expect much longer wait times, officials warn

Nearly 50 students holding F-1 academic visas including postgraduates and undergraduates said in a WeChat chatroom the notices stated they would have to apply for new visas if they wanted to travel to the United States.

Many in the chatroom said they were majoring in subjects such as science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Some said they were postgraduates who obtained bachelor's degrees at Chinese universities with links to the People's Liberation Army.

In late May, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters Washington was planning to cancel the visas of thousands of Chinese graduate students believed to have links to China's military. 

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2020-09-09 22:41:15Z
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US becoming driver of militarisation in South China Sea: Wang Yi - CNA

HONG KONG: The Chinese government's senior diplomat, state councillor Wang Yi, said on Wednesday (Sep 9) the United States is directly intervening in territorial and maritime disputes in the South China Sea due to its own political needs.

It is becoming the biggest driver of militarisation in the region, Wang said.

READ: Taiwan reports multiple Chinese fighters to its southwest

READ: China to hold more military drills off northeast, east coasts

He made the remark in a video conference with foreign ministers at an ASEAN summit.

"Peace and stability is China's greatest strategic interest in the South China Sea. It is also the common strategic aspiration of China and ASEAN countries," Wang said in a statement posted on the foreign ministry's website.

Wang said China is willing to communicate and have dialogue with the United States in order to achieve cooperation.

Last month, the United States blacklisted 24 Chinese companies and targeted individuals it said were part of construction and military actions in the South China Sea, its first such sanctions move against Beijing over the disputed strategic waterway.

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2020-09-09 15:54:40Z
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