Jumat, 01 Januari 2021

World ushers in New Year in shadow of COVID-19 pandemic - CNA

NEW YORK: Confetti fluttered on to frontline workers scattered across Times Square after fireworks burst above eerily quiet landmarks from Sydney Harbour Bridge to Copacabana beach, as the world ushered in the New Year with muted celebrations and said good riddance to a pandemic-ridden 2020.

Virus Outbreak New York
Confetti flies after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square on Jan 1, 2021, in New York, as the area normally packed with revelers remained closed off to due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. (Photo: AP/Craig Ruttle)

After a grinding year that has seen at least 1.8 million people die from COVID-19, fresh waves of infection have sparked renewed lockdowns and forced would-be revellers to extend their 2020 tradition of watching events from the sofa.

Virus Outbreak New York New Years
A New Year reveller celebrates after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square on Jan 1, 2021, in New York. (Photo: AP)

In New York's famous Times Square, the usual overflow crowd was replaced with a group of specially invited frontline workers, separated by barricades to enforce social distancing. The public was blocked from the square, where a crystal ball dropped at midnight following performances from stars including Jennifer Lopez and Gloria Gaynor.

COMMENTARY: After a year of uncertainty, make short-term goals your New Year’s resolutions for 2021

"I think I feel hopeful. It can't get much worse than the last year," 31-year-old actress and nanny Jordan Mann told AFP from her home in Brooklyn. 

"I'm just really hoping that we have a lot more wisdom next year from the leaders in our country and that they'll actually be able to help us out," she said as she spent the night with her roommates eating Indian takeout.

Las Vegas New Years Eve
A couple kisses as they celebrate New Year's Eve along the Las Vegas Strip Thursday, Dec 31, 2020, in Las Vegas. (Photo: AP/David Becker)

President-elect Joe Biden, who will take office in January, sounded a positive note as the US, the worst-hit country by COVID-19, is nearing 20 million recorded infections and 345,000 deaths.

"I'm more optimistic about America's chances than I've ever been," he said in a video interview on ABC's countdown program.

"America can do anything and I'm absolutely positively confident, confident we're gonna come back and come back even stronger than we were before."

Virus Outbreak New York New Years
Confetti flies after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square, early Friday, Jan 1, 2021, as the area normally packed with revelers remained closed off due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. (Photo: AP/Craig Ruttle)

In Brazil - where 195,000 people have died of COVID-19, the second-highest death toll - Rio de Janeiro blocked the usual swarms of revelers from gathering on Copacabana beach.

That did not stop people from lighting up the city's iconic skyline with amateur fireworks of their own, whose booms competed with the banging pots of critics protesting against far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, the leader dubbed the "Tropical Trump."

FIRST MOMENTS OF 2021

The eagerly awaited first seconds of 2021 fell on the Pacific nations of Kiribati and Samoa from 1000 GMT. The uninhabited Howland and Baker Islands will be the last to tip over into the New Year.

In New Zealand, which has won plaudits for its handling of the coronavirus, large crowds gathered in Auckland for a fireworks display.

In Australia's largest city, Sydney, fireworks lit up the glittering harbor with a dazzling display, but few spectators watched in person.

"I think everybody is looking towards 2021 as a fresh beginning and a fresh start," Karen Roberts, among the lucky few who were allowed past checkpoints around the area, told AFP at a bar nestled under the Sydney Opera House.

Some Hong Kongers, despite restrictions, ventured out to mark the start of the year, gathering on the Victoria Harbour waterfront to take selfies.

In Tokyo, where residents face the prospect of a state of emergency after infections touched new highs, people queued in face masks to offer New Year prayers.

READ: Heavy snow and COVID-19 crimp New Year celebrations in Japan

Wuhan in China, where the virus first appeared late last year, saw thousands gather to celebrate.

NO LARGE GATHERINGS

Elsewhere, the mood was more downbeat.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin acknowledged in a New Year's address that a second wave of COVID-19 was battering the nation.

"The fight against it does not stop for a minute," he said.

Virus Outbreak Russia New Year
Fireworks illuminate the night sky over Russia on Jan 1, 2021. (Photo: AP)

Italy - where shocking images of makeshift morgues and exhausted medics awoke the world to the severity of the crisis - is on a nationwide lockdown until Jan 7 with a 10pm curfew in place.

From France to Latvia and Brazil, police and - in some cases - military personnel were deployed to enforce curfews or bans on large gatherings.

Paris and Athens both featured socially distanced gatherings, with a virtual concert and light show over Notre Dame in the French capital and fireworks over the Acropolis in Greece.

Greece New Year
Fireworks explode over the ancient Parthenon temple at the Acropolis hill during the New Year's Eve celebrations in Athens on Jan.1, 2021. (Photo: AP/Lefteris Pitarakis)

In London, a few dozen revelers arrived in Parliament Square to watch Big Ben chime 11pm - midnight in Brussels - marking the moment that Brexit finally became a reality, with Britain severing its turbulent half-century partnership with Europe.

Police ordered them home well before midnight, however.

WALRUSES

A fireworks and laser show was held in Dubai at the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower, where there has been a slew of new cases. Those watching were required to wear masks and register with identifying QR codes.

On the banks of Lake Baikal in Siberia, where temperatures plummet to as low as -35 degrees Celsius, around a dozen Russians emerged invigorated after a New Year's Eve ice dip.

The swimmers, known in Russia as "walruses," ran several kilometers through a snowy forest in swimsuits and festive costumes before plunging into the world's largest freshwater lake.

"It's invigorating. It stings a little!" Andrei Bugai told AFP.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel used her New Year greeting to warn the coronavirus crisis would extend into 2021 even if vaccines bring some hope, as police clashed with revellers near the Brandenburg gate in Berlin.

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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2021-01-01 09:22:30Z
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Crowds throng Wuhan, where COVID-19 pandemic began, to celebrate New Year - CNA

WUHAN: Thousands of New Year revellers packed into the centre of Wuhan, the Chinese city where COVID-19 was first detected, cheering and releasing balloons to welcome in 2021.

Police erected fences to try to prevent congestion around the city's Customs House clock tower, but the measure was ineffective due to the large turnout of mainly young people.

"2020 has been a very difficult year for us because we have experienced the epidemic, especially in Wuhan, which is an unforgettable experience for us," local resident Xu Du told AFP.

Most of the crowd wore masks for the celebrations on Thursday (Dec 31) evening, which included a light show.

READ: World ushers in New Year in shadow of COVID-19 pandemic

Wuhan was put under a strict lockdown for more than two months from late January, but has returned to normal life since the summer. Schools fully reopened in September.

"China has controlled the epidemic very well now," said reveller Li Yusu. "But there are still some other countries suffering from the virus. I hope other countries can get through this difficulty as soon as possible."

People dance on the banks of Yangtze River on New Year's Eve in Wuhan, Hubei province
People dance on the banks of Yangtze River on New Year's Eve in Wuhan, Hubei province. (Photo: AFP/NOEL CELIS)

China has faced widespread criticism over its initial handling of the virus, which emerged in Wuhan, in the central province of Hubei, in December 2019.

The country has been accused of covering up the outbreak and allowing the virus to spread internationally.

READ: Heavy snow and COVID-19 crimp New Year celebrations in Japan

Beijing has also recently attempted to cast doubts on whether COVID-19 originated in Wuhan.

On Monday, citizen journalist Zhang Zhan was jailed for four years for reporting on conditions inside Wuhan during the height of the outbreak.

The city of 11 million people was forced into a tough lockdown from January until April and about 4,000 people died, according to Chinese figures.

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

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2021-01-01 09:36:03Z
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Bangkok to close schools for two weeks as number of COVID-19 cases rises - CNA

BANGKOK: The Thai capital of Bangkok will close all schools for two weeks after the New Year holiday as it tightens measures to control a new wave of the coronavirus pandemic, the city said on Friday.

Thailand confirmed 279 new coronavirus cases on Friday (Jan 1), with the majority of them linked to a cluster among migrant workers in Samut Sakhon province south of Bangkok, and another cluster linked to illegal gambling dens that started in the eastern province of Rayong.

These new clusters have started to spread into Bangkok, prompting the city's administrator to tighten measures to curb the spread of the virus.

READ: Thailand reports 279 new COVID-19 cases, 2 new deaths

"We begin to detect new cases linked to students and other service businesses," said Pongsakorn Kwanmuang, the spokesman for the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration.

"Therefore we decided to close more places," he said.

All schools, daycare centres for the young and elderly, preschool and tutorial centres will be close from Jan 4 to 17 while other public facilities including amusement parks, playgrounds, public baths and massage parlours will be closed starting from Saturday, he said.

Pongsakorn also said the city is considering restrictions on eating-in at restaurants but said that more discussions were needed with the government COVID-19 taskforce on Saturday.

Thailand recorded two new deaths from coronavirus on Friday, taking the total number of infections to 7,163 and the number of deaths to 63 since the outbreak started last January.

The majority of the new cases resulted from local transmission of the disease while six were imported from abroad, the government COVID-19 taskforce said.

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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2021-01-01 08:54:04Z
52781279411643

World ushers in New Year in shadow of COVID-19 pandemic - CNA

NEW YORK: Confetti fluttered on to frontline workers scattered across Times Square after fireworks burst above eerily quiet landmarks from Sydney Harbour Bridge to Copacabana beach, as the world ushered in the New Year with muted celebrations and said good riddance to a pandemic-ridden 2020.

Virus Outbreak New York
Confetti flies after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square on Jan 1, 2021, in New York, as the area normally packed with revelers remained closed off to due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. (Photo: AP/Craig Ruttle)

After a grinding year that has seen at least 1.8 million people die from COVID-19, fresh waves of infection have sparked renewed lockdowns and forced would-be revellers to extend their 2020 tradition of watching events from the sofa.

Virus Outbreak New York New Years
A New Year reveller celebrates after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square on Jan 1, 2021, in New York. (Photo: AP)

In New York's famous Times Square, the usual overflow crowd was replaced with a group of specially invited frontline workers, separated by barricades to enforce social distancing. The public was blocked from the square, where a crystal ball dropped at midnight following performances from stars including Jennifer Lopez and Gloria Gaynor.

COMMENTARY: After a year of uncertainty, make short-term goals your New Year’s resolutions for 2021

"I think I feel hopeful. It can't get much worse than the last year," 31-year-old actress and nanny Jordan Mann told AFP from her home in Brooklyn. 

"I'm just really hoping that we have a lot more wisdom next year from the leaders in our country and that they'll actually be able to help us out," she said as she spent the night with her roommates eating Indian takeout.

Las Vegas New Years Eve
A couple kisses as they celebrate New Year's Eve along the Las Vegas Strip Thursday, Dec 31, 2020, in Las Vegas. (Photo: AP/David Becker)

President-elect Joe Biden, who will take office in January, sounded a positive note as the US, the worst-hit country by COVID-19, is nearing 20 million recorded infections and 345,000 deaths.

"I'm more optimistic about America's chances than I've ever been," he said in a video interview on ABC's countdown program.

"America can do anything and I'm absolutely positively confident, confident we're gonna come back and come back even stronger than we were before."

Virus Outbreak New York New Years
Confetti flies after the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball drops in a nearly empty Times Square, early Friday, Jan 1, 2021, as the area normally packed with revelers remained closed off due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. (Photo: AP/Craig Ruttle)

In Brazil - where 195,000 people have died of COVID-19, the second-highest death toll - Rio de Janeiro blocked the usual swarms of revelers from gathering on Copacabana beach.

That did not stop people from lighting up the city's iconic skyline with amateur fireworks of their own, whose booms competed with the banging pots of critics protesting against far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, the leader dubbed the "Tropical Trump."

FIRST MOMENTS OF 2021

The eagerly awaited first seconds of 2021 fell on the Pacific nations of Kiribati and Samoa from 1000 GMT. The uninhabited Howland and Baker Islands will be the last to tip over into the New Year.

In New Zealand, which has won plaudits for its handling of the coronavirus, large crowds gathered in Auckland for a fireworks display.

In Australia's largest city, Sydney, fireworks lit up the glittering harbor with a dazzling display, but few spectators watched in person.

"I think everybody is looking towards 2021 as a fresh beginning and a fresh start," Karen Roberts, among the lucky few who were allowed past checkpoints around the area, told AFP at a bar nestled under the Sydney Opera House.

Some Hong Kongers, despite restrictions, ventured out to mark the start of the year, gathering on the Victoria Harbour waterfront to take selfies.

In Tokyo, where residents face the prospect of a state of emergency after infections touched new highs, people queued in face masks to offer New Year prayers.

READ: Heavy snow and COVID-19 crimp New Year celebrations in Japan

Wuhan in China, where the virus first appeared late last year, saw thousands gather to celebrate.

NO LARGE GATHERINGS

Elsewhere, the mood was more downbeat.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin acknowledged in a New Year's address that a second wave of COVID-19 was battering the nation.

"The fight against it does not stop for a minute," he said.

Virus Outbreak Russia New Year
Fireworks illuminate the night sky over Russia on Jan 1, 2021. (Photo: AP)

Italy - where shocking images of makeshift morgues and exhausted medics awoke the world to the severity of the crisis - is on a nationwide lockdown until Jan 7 with a 10pm curfew in place.

From France to Latvia and Brazil, police and - in some cases - military personnel were deployed to enforce curfews or bans on large gatherings.

Paris and Athens both featured socially distanced gatherings, with a virtual concert and light show over Notre Dame in the French capital and fireworks over the Acropolis in Greece.

Greece New Year
Fireworks explode over the ancient Parthenon temple at the Acropolis hill during the New Year's Eve celebrations in Athens on Jan.1, 2021. (Photo: AP/Lefteris Pitarakis)

In London, a few dozen revelers arrived in Parliament Square to watch Big Ben chime 11pm - midnight in Brussels - marking the moment that Brexit finally became a reality, with Britain severing its turbulent half-century partnership with Europe.

Police ordered them home well before midnight, however.

WALRUSES

A fireworks and laser show was held in Dubai at the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower, where there has been a slew of new cases. Those watching were required to wear masks and register with identifying QR codes.

On the banks of Lake Baikal in Siberia, where temperatures plummet to as low as -35 degrees Celsius, around a dozen Russians emerged invigorated after a New Year's Eve ice dip.

The swimmers, known in Russia as "walruses," ran several kilometers through a snowy forest in swimsuits and festive costumes before plunging into the world's largest freshwater lake.

"It's invigorating. It stings a little!" Andrei Bugai told AFP.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel used her New Year greeting to warn the coronavirus crisis would extend into 2021 even if vaccines bring some hope, as police clashed with revellers near the Brandenburg gate in Berlin.

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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2021-01-01 08:35:23Z
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In Pictures: New Year 2021 celebrations around the world - The Straits Times

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  1. In Pictures: New Year 2021 celebrations around the world  The Straits Times
  2. World begins ushering in locked-down New Year amid COVID-19  CNA
  3. Destinations that are famous for their New Years celebrations and fireworks  Happytrips
  4. New Year's Eve fireworks: How to keep your dogs calm and happy this NYE  Daily Express
  5. World ushers in new year amid Covid-19 lockdowns  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-01-01 00:40:00Z
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Kamis, 31 Desember 2020

Times Square barricaded, quiet for New Year's Eve - CNA

NEW YORK: New York City's Times Square was barricaded on Thursday (Dec 31), with only a handful of invited guests, including health care workers and others from the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic, allowed in to watch the New Year's Eve ball drop in person.

Everyone else should stay home and watch the pared-down festivities on television, Mayor Bill de Blasio said, with scores of events around the United States similarly curtailed or moved online.

Tens of thousands of people usually fill the blocks around Times Square, standing for hours in the cold at the focal point of US New Year's Eve celebrations, waiting for a crystal ball to slowly descend in the year's final seconds.

Police will allow in only a few dozen this year, with masks and no sign of fever required for entry, among them the Bronx-born singer Jennifer Lopez and Gloria Gaynor, who is due to sing her disco classic I Will Survive for a few dozen front-line workers and their families.

Organisers have invited a grocery store worker, a building doorman, a pizza delivery man and doctors and nurses, including Sandra Lindsay, the New York nurse who became the first recipient of a coronavirus vaccine in the United States outside of a trial earlier this month.

More than 25,000 New Yorkers have been killed by COVID-19 this year as the city at one time grappled with the world's deadliest outbreak back in the spring.

"It's going to be actually, arguably, the most special, the most poignant, the most moving New Year's Eve," de Blasio, who will push the button to start the crystal's ball descent, told reporters. "In 2021, we're going to show people what it looks like to recover, to come back."

As new daily case tallies continue to rise across the United States, bars and restaurants and other gathering places are closed or have sharply limited capacity.

In Las Vegas, Boston and beyond, official fireworks displays have been canceled. Organisers of Boston's annual First Night arts festival on New Year's Eve have arranged for six hours of live performances streamed online by local musicians and artists.

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2020-12-31 18:48:46Z
52781270727083

askST: What are possible side effects from Covid-19 vaccine? - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Vaccinations against Covid-19 began on Wednesday (Dec 30) with the first Pfizer-BioNTech jabs administered to 40 healthcare workers at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID).

The Straits Times answers some of the questions that have arisen about the vaccine.

Q: Will front-line and essential workers be allowed to stay in their posts if they decline the injection?

A: Although vaccination of healthcare workers is not compulsory, all local residents - healthcare workers and the general public - are urged to take the jab.

There is no plan to alter the duties of healthcare workers who do not get vaccinated, said NCID executive director Leo Yee Sin. Hospitals also continue to comply with preventive measures.

Q: What precautions need to be taken after the injection? Do patients wait to ensure they do not have side effects?

A: The Covid-19 vaccination is no different from other vaccinations, said Prof Leo, adding: "It is recommended by the Health Sciences Authority to observe the vaccinees for 15 to 30 minutes after vaccination."

There are resting spaces in full sight of healthcare workers for patients who have completed their vaccination.

Q: How do we know the vaccination is working? Some people have no observable reactions, while others might have a mild or severe one.

A: There is no evidence to suggest that those with no or mild discomfort are not protected by the vaccine.

The safety profile of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is generally consistent with other vaccines used against other diseases, said Prof Leo, who was vaccinated on Wednesday.

Some people may have side effects like pain, redness, swelling at the injection site. Other side effects include fatigue, fever, headaches, muscle aches, chills, vomiting, diarrhoea and joint pain.

While not everyone will experience these, they are common and expected as part of the body's natural response, so as to build immunity against Covid-19. These side effects are also usually resolved within a few days.

As with other vaccines, in rare cases, a person may experience severe allergic reactions, such as difficulty in breathing, wheezing and swelling around the eyes and lips. Immediate medical attention must be sought. Anyone with a history of anaphylaxis should also not receive the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

Q: Will the vaccination leave a keloid scar like the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine?

A: It is unlikely as this is intra-muscular injection (like the influenza vaccine). There have been no reports of scarring. The BCG is a live attenuated vaccine - a vaccine created by reducing the virulence of a pathogen.

Q: How is the vaccine kept viable?

A: The NCID works closely with the Health Ministry to hold just enough doses before they are to go to vaccination providers. Vaccines can be stored at a temperature of 2-8 deg C for up to five days.

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2020-12-31 09:29:12Z
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