Selasa, 29 Desember 2020

Biden says Trump's COVID-19 vaccine roll out 'falling far behind' - CNA

WILMINGTON, Delaware: US President-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday (Dec 29) vowed a relentless effort to fight COVID-19 the moment he takes office, as he warned that Donald Trump's vaccination drive was falling dangerously short.

Speaking after a briefing by experts, Biden promised that as president he will undertake the "greatest operational challenge we've ever faced as a nation" to inoculate against the illness that has claimed more than 1.7 million lives globally.

"The Trump administration's plan to distribute vaccines is falling far behind," Biden said, promising: "I'm going to move heaven and earth to get us going in the right direction."

The Trump administration had predicted that 20 million Americans would be vaccinated by the end of December.

With less than three days left, some 2.1 million have received the first shot of the vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

READ: COVID-19: Kamala Harris vaccinated on camera, urges public to trust process

READ: Over 11.4 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines distributed, 2.1 million administered: US CDC

Biden, who takes office on Jan 20, confirmed that he would invoke the Korean War-era Defense Production Act to force private industry to step up vaccine production for the government.

He also implored Americans to wear masks to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and said he would impose a mandate on face covers in areas where the federal government has jurisdiction, such as airplanes.

"We're planning a whole-of-government effort and we're going to work to set up vaccination sites and send mobile units to hard-to-reach communities," Biden said,

"We're going to make sure vaccines are distributed equitably so every person can get one, no matter the color of their skin and where they live."

He voiced confidence of a return to normality in 2021 - but not immediately.

"We might not see improvement until we're well into March as it will take time for our COVID-19 response plan to begin to produce visible progress," Biden said.

"The next few weeks and months are going to be very tough - a very tough period for our nation, maybe the toughest during this entire pandemic."

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2020-12-29 21:56:15Z
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Part-time Grab driver who contracted Covid-19 temporarily suspended; S'porean man among 13 new cases - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The part-time Grab driver who was the sole Covid-19 community case on Monday has been temporarily suspended from the Grab platform, in line with the ride-hailing operator's safety precaution measures.

Grab said in a statement on Tuesday (Dec 29) that it is working with the Ministry of Health (MOH) to provide all necessary information on the man - who also works as a Singapore Airlines cabin crew member - for contact tracing purposes.

It added that to ensure higher safety and hygiene standards, all of its drivers have access to free sanitiser and disinfectant at the Grab Driver Centre.

After every ride, Grab drivers and passengers have the option to provide feedback or report on any health and hygiene-related concerns.

Meanwhile, a 48-year-old Singaporean man who returned from Indonesia was one of the 13 coronavirus cases announced on Tuesday, bringing Singapore's total to 58,542.

All the coronavirus cases announced on Tuesday were imported and comprised one Singaporean, two permanent residents, nine work permit holders and one short-term visit pass holder.

A 71-year-old female permanent resident returned from the United States. The other cases returned from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia and Malaysia.

All the imported cases had been placed on stay-home notice or isolated on arrival in Singapore, said the Ministry of Health.

There were no new community cases and none from worker dormitories on Tuesday.

No new places were added to the list of locations visited by Covid-19 patients while they were infectious.

Overall, the number of new cases in the community has remained low, with just one currently unlinked case in the past week.

With 14 cases discharged on Tuesday, 58,385 patients have now fully recovered from the disease.

A total of 37 patients remain in hospital while 76 are recuperating in community facilities. None is in intensive care.

Singapore has had 29 deaths from Covid-19 complications, while 15 who tested positive have died of other causes.

- Additional reporting by Timothy Goh

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2020-12-29 14:13:25Z
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Taiwan's EVA Air says 8 sacked since March for breaching COVID-19 rules - CNA

TAIPEI: Taiwan's EVA Airways said on Tuesday (Dec 29) it has sacked four pilots and four cabin crew members since March for breaching rules related to preventing COVID-19 infections, adding that it was committed to enforcing anti-pandemic measures.

Last week the company said it had fired a New Zealand national who had worked as one of its pilots after the government blamed him for Taiwan's first domestic transmission since Apr 12. 

The case ignited public anger after the government said he had not reported all his contacts and the places he had been, nor worn a face mask in the cockpit when he should have.

READ: Taiwan fines EVA Air US$35,000 after pilot blamed for COVID-19 infection

In a statement, EVA Air said that since March it has sacked eight employees - four pilots and four cabin crew members - for "regretfully breaching anti-pandemic rules", although it did not give details.

"EVA Air always attaches great importance to discipline, and the vast majority of crew members on the front line of duty face transportation and epidemic prevention tasks with a cautious and serious attitude," it added.

"EVA Air's position on strictly following epidemic prevention has never changed."

The government has since tightened its rules for airline crew, including on quarantines when they return to Taiwan, and has also fined EVA Air US$35,000 for the New Zealand pilot incident.

EVA Air, like most airlines, is operating a very reduced schedule due to border restrictions globally.

Until last week, Taiwan had not reported domestic transmission in eight months, thanks to early and effective moves to stop the virus, including mass mask wearing and strict quarantines for all arrivals.

READ: Keep calm, Taiwan says after first local COVID-19 case in 8 months

Taiwan has logged 795 confirmed infections, the vast majority imported, including seven deaths. A total of 127 people are currently being treated in hospital.

Wary after the domestic infection, some New Year's Eve events around Taiwan have been scaled back or cancelled, but major celebrations are still expected to go ahead, albeit with tightened controls like mandatory mask wearing.

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2020-12-29 09:09:04Z
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Taiwan's EVA Air says 8 sacked since March for breaching COVID-19 rules - CNA

TAIPEI: Taiwan's EVA Airways said on Tuesday (Dec 29) it has sacked four pilots and four cabin crew members since March for breaching rules related to preventing COVID-19 infections, adding that it was committed to enforcing anti-pandemic measures.

Last week the company said it had fired a New Zealand national who had worked as one of its pilots after the government blamed him for Taiwan's first domestic transmission since Apr 12. 

The case ignited public anger after the government said he had not reported all his contacts and the places he had been, nor worn a face mask in the cockpit when he should have.

READ: Taiwan fines EVA Air US$35,000 after pilot blamed for COVID-19 infection

In a statement, EVA Air said that since March it has sacked eight employees - four pilots and four cabin crew members - for "regretfully breaching anti-pandemic rules", although it did not give details.

"EVA Air always attaches great importance to discipline, and the vast majority of crew members on the front line of duty face transportation and epidemic prevention tasks with a cautious and serious attitude," it added.

"EVA Air's position on strictly following epidemic prevention has never changed."

The government has since tightened its rules for airline crew, including on quarantines when they return to Taiwan, and has also fined EVA Air US$35,000 for the New Zealand pilot incident.

EVA Air, like most airlines, is operating a very reduced schedule due to border restrictions globally.

Until last week, Taiwan had not reported domestic transmission in eight months, thanks to early and effective moves to stop the virus, including mass mask wearing and strict quarantines for all arrivals.

READ: Keep calm, Taiwan says after first local COVID-19 case in 8 months

Taiwan has logged 795 confirmed infections, the vast majority imported, including seven deaths. A total of 127 people are currently being treated in hospital.

Wary after the domestic infection, some New Year's Eve events around Taiwan have been scaled back or cancelled, but major celebrations are still expected to go ahead, albeit with tightened controls like mandatory mask wearing.

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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2020-12-29 09:03:38Z
CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9hc2lhL2NvdmlkLTE5LXRhaXdhbi1ldmEtYWlyLTgtc2Fja2VkLXNpbmNlLW1hcmNoLWJyZWFjaGluZy1ydWxlcy0xMzg1OTQxONIBAA

Senin, 28 Desember 2020

US House approves US$2000 coronavirus aid cheques sought by Trump - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON/PALM BEACH, FLORIDA (REUTERS) - The Democratic-led US House of Representatives voted 275-134 to meet President Donald Trump’s demand for US$2,000 (S$2,656) Covid-19 relief cheques on Monday (Dec 28), sending the measure on to an uncertain future in the Republican-controlled Senate.

But even as Democrats helped secure approval for what the Republican President sought on stimulus payments, they spearheaded a House vote just a short time later to override his veto of a separate US$740 billion defence policy Bill. The rebuke, in Trump’s final weeks in office, would be the first veto override of his presidency if seconded by the Senate this week.

Trump last week threatened to block a massive pandemic aid and spending package if Congress did not boost stimulus payments from US$600 to US$2,000 and cut other spending.

He backed down from his demands on Sunday (Dec 27) as a possible government shutdown loomed, brought on by the fight with lawmakers.

But Democratic lawmakers have long wanted US$2,000 relief cheques and used the rare point of agreement with Trump to advance the proposal – or at least to put Republicans on record against it – in the vote on Monday, less than a month before he leaves office.

Spending and coronavirus aid package

The 275 votes for passage meant the stimulus proposal narrowly exceeded the two-thirds of votes cast needed. A total of 130 Republicans, two independents and two Democrats opposed the increased checks on Monday.

Trump, who lost November’s election to Democratic challenger Joe Biden but has refused to concede defeat, finally signed the US$2.3 trillion package into law after holding it up with a veiled veto threat. But he continued demanding US$2,000 checks.

The US$2.3 trillion includes US$1.4 trillion in spending to fund government agencies and US$892 billion in Covid-19 relief.

It is not clear how the measure to increase aid checks will fare in the Senate, where individual Republican lawmakers have complained the higher amount would add hundreds of billions of dollars to the latest relief Bill.

Increasing the checks would cost US$464 billion, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation, which prepares cost estimates for legislation before Congress.

The Senate is due to convene on Tuesday, and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said he would then seek passage of the higher stimulus checks Bill in the chamber, where Republicans have the majority. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Sunday made no mention of Senate plans for a vote, after welcoming Trump’s signing of the relief Bill.

The coronavirus pandemic has killed nearly 330,000 people in the United States and led to widespread economic hardship, with millions of families relying on unemployment benefits and Covid-19 relief funds.

Global markets were buoyed after Trump approved the package.

Wall Street’s main indexes hit record highs on Monday as Trump’s signing of the aid Bill bolstered bets on an economic recovery and drove gains in financial and energy stocks.

Pelosi: 'Republicans have a choice'

As the floor debate was under way, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said: “Republicans have a choice, vote for this legislation, or vote to deny the American people the bigger paychecks that they need.”

And Democratic US Representative Dan Kildee said: “We would have included much larger payments in the legislation had he (Trump) spoken up sooner. But it’s never too late to do the right thing.”

Asked at the end of an event in Wilmington, Delaware, whether he supported expanding the coronavirus payments to US$2,000, Biden replied: “Yes.” Georgia Republicans Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who face crucial Senate runoffs next month that could determine who controls the chamber, welcomed Trump’s move, without saying whether the payments should be increased.

Republican Representative Kevin Brady said the Bill does nothing to help people get back to work.

“I worry that as we spend another half a trillion dollars so hastily, that we are not targeting this help to the Americans who are struggling the most and need that help,” he said.

The US Treasury Department is anticipating sending the first wave of US$600 stimulus checks to US individuals and households as early as this week, as previously planned, a senior Treasury official said on Monday.

House overrides veto

Also in the hands of the Senate, for a vote expected this week, will be whether to override Trump’s veto of the defence Bill.

In Monday’s 322-87 House vote, which met the two-thirds majority needed, only 66 Republicans sided with Trump’s rejection of the bipartisan Bill, underscoring deep divisions in the Republican Party.

Trump, who is angry that some Republicans have acknowledged his loss to Biden, vetoed the defence Bill last Wednesday.

He said he was against it because he wanted it to overturn liability protections for social media companies unrelated to national security, and opposed a provision to rename military bases named after generals who fought for the pro-slavery Confederacy during the Civil War.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told reporters that Trump’s veto had been “stupid” and “small-minded.”

“This was too irrational a move for the Republicans to rationalise,” the Democratic lawmaker said, predicting that the Senate would take similar action.

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2020-12-28 23:23:47Z
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German COVID-19 vaccination campaign overshadowed by mishaps - CNA

FRANKFURT/BERLIN: Germany's COVID-19 vaccination campaign has been overshadowed by an overdose mishap in the north and problems with the transportation of the vaccine in the south which lead to 1,000 shots being sent back.

Some districts in Bavaria said on Monday (Dec 28) they would not use the shots received over the weekend on concerns the vaccines developed by Pfizer and BioNTech may have become too warm during their delivery in household cool boxes, a spokesman for the Lichtenfels district said.

READ: Breakfast, freezers, Lego: The BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine trail in Germany

"There were doubts as to whether the cold chain was maintained at all times," Lichtenfels District Administrator Christian Meissner told Reuters TV.

The vaccine, which uses new so-called mRNA technology, must be stored at ultra-low temperatures of about minus 70 Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit) before being shipped to distribution centres in specially designed cool boxes filled with dry ice.

Once out of ultra-low temperature storage, the vaccine must be kept at 2 degrees Celsius  to 8 degrees Celsius to remain effective for up to five days. The cool boxes designed by Pfizer are fitted with GPS trackers so the companies can deal with potential storage issues en route.

While BioNTech takes responsibility for the transport to the deep freezer hubs, local authorities are tasked with providing safe and cooled transport to the individual vaccination centres.

The vaccines arrived in Lichtenfels and six other northern Bavarian districts on Saturday in cool boxes of the type used for picnics or camping trips. The temperature loggers in some cases showed interim temperatures of up to 15 degrees Celsius.

"BioNTech commented and said that the vaccine was probably okay, but probably okay is not enough," Meissner said, adding that the shots would not be used to prevent damage to the public's trust in the vaccination campaign.

According to the government of Upper Franconia, where the districts are based, BioNTech had told it: "Based on the facts presented by you in your email of 12-27-2020 at 19.52 and internal stability data we do not see any influence of the described transport deviation on the quality of the vaccine shots concerned."

READ: Germany reports first case of new COVID-19 variant that was found in Britain

BioNTech declined to comment.

After consulting with the Bavarian Health Ministry, the districts decided not to use the 1,000 shots earmarked for use in Lichtenfels as well as Coburg, Kronach, Kulmbach, Hof, Bayreuth and Wunsiedel, also in northern Bavaria, the Lichtenfels spokesman said.

Local medical staff had said that they would not feel comfortable using the shots, he said, adding that a new batch of vaccine shots arrived on Monday perfectly cooled and that the vaccination campaign started one day late.

Elsewhere in Germany, in the Vorpommern-Ruegen district, authorities said eight workers in an elderly care home in Stralsund city received five times the recommended dose of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine on Sunday.

Four went to hospital for observation after developing flu-like symptoms.

"I deeply regret the incident. This individual case is due to individual errors. I hope that all those affected do not experience any serious side-effects," district chief Stefan Kerth said in a statement.

Vorpommern-Ruegen authorities pointed to previous statements by BioNTech saying larger doses were tested in the Phase I study without serious consequences.

BioNTech pointed to the vaccine's package insert, which says that in the event of overdose, monitoring of vital functions and possible symptomatic treatment is recommended.

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2020-12-28 20:45:33Z
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In final days, a weakened Trump faces first veto override - CNA

WASHINGTON: Donald Trump, after caving to pressure and signing a US$900 billion coronavirus relief package, faces another potential humiliation this week with Congress poised to deliver the first veto override of his waning presidency.

A two-thirds majority of those voting is needed in the 435-member House of Representatives and 100-seat Senate to strike down Trump's veto of the fiscal 2021 defence bill.

The US$740.5 billion National Defense Authorisation Act was passed this month by 335 votes to 78 in the Democratic-controlled House and by 84 to 13 in the Republican-majority Senate.

But the NDAA was vetoed by the president because it did not repeal Section 230, a federal law that provides liability protection to internet companies.

Trump also opposed a provision that would strip several US military bases of the names of generals who fought for the secessionist, pro-slavery South in the 1861-65 Civil War.

The House is to vote to override Trump's veto later Monday and Democrats are optimistic they have enough Republican support to do so. The Senate could take up the matter later this week.

Including the defence bill, Trump has vetoed nine bills during his four years in the White House. Congress has not previously mustered the votes to override any of his vetoes.

For a real estate tycoon who prides himself as a master negotiator, the past few days have been an exercise in humiliation.

Trump threatened for days to not sign the COVID-19 relief and spending bill that had been hammered out by his own treasury secretary and had received broad bipartisan support in Congress.

His surprise move risked shutting down the government from Tuesday and depriving millions of Americans of economic relief badly needed during the pandemic.

He finally backed down under pressure from both Democrats and Republicans, and signed the bill on Sunday at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida out of the sight of television cameras.

'STOP THE INSANITY'

In an attempt to save face, Trump released a statement airing his grievances about the Nov 3 election and claiming that he had obtained a number of concessions.

Among Trump's demands was increasing direct relief payments to Americans from US$600 to US$2,000, a request met enthusiastically by Democrats in the House, who will vote on the measure on Monday.

Increasing the direct payments has been met with scepticism by many members of Trump's own Republican party, however.

President-elect Joe Biden, asked by a reporter Monday if he favoured raising the payouts to US$2,000, replied, "Yes."

And, speaking after a briefing by his transition teams on national security, Biden said that political appointees at the Pentagon, which Trump has packed with loyalists since the election, have refused to provide a "clear picture" on troop posture or budgeting.

"It is nothing short, in my view, of irresponsibility," Biden said in Wilmington, Delaware, warning that US adversaries could take advantage of the transition.

The strange episode over the relief package highlighted the degree to which Trump has become isolated, spending most of his time railing on Twitter about his election loss.

In a sign of his fading influence, the Rupert Murdoch-owned New York Post, one of Trump's most ardent supporters, published an editorial late Sunday telling him to "Stop the Insanity" and acknowledge he lost the election.

"Mr. President, it's time to end this dark charade," the newspaper said. "We understand, Mr. President, that you're angry that you lost.

"But to continue down this road is ruinous," the Post said. "If you insist on spending your final days in office threatening to burn it all down, that will be how you are remembered.

"Not as a revolutionary, but as the anarchist holding the match."

Trump's Twitter feed was uncharacteristically silent on Monday morning as he left Mar-a-Lago for another round of golf at the nearby Trump International Golf Club.

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2020-12-28 22:12:26Z
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