Minggu, 27 Juni 2021

Millions of Sydney residents in coronavirus lockdown - Yahoo Singapore News

Millions of Sydney residents began the first full day of a two-week coronavirus lockdown on Sunday, as Australia imposed new restrictions to contain an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Restaurants, bars and cafes were shuttered after stay-at-home orders for central neighbourhoods were extended Saturday evening across the sprawling city and to the coastal and mountainous regions surrounding it.

While the city centre was virtually deserted, large numbers of surfers and swimmers hit the water at Sydney's Bondi Beach, with outdoor exercise still allowed.

Australia's northern city of Darwin also entered a separate snap 48-hour lockdown on Sunday after a handful of cases were linked to a coronavirus outbreak on a remote gold mine.

Northern Territory Chief Minister Michael Gunner said officials were concerned about being unable to reach close contacts of infected people in the region, home to a large Indigenous population feared to be more vulnerable to Covid-19.

"We are taking extreme action right now to stop or slow any spread before the coronavirus is let loose in the Territory, and that means we need a lockdown," he said.

Health experts had advised that a shorter snap lockdown of Sydney -- which has proved effective in other Australian cities in recent months -- would not be enough to contain the growing cluster, New South Wales state Premier Gladys Berejiklian said.

More than 110 Covid-19 cases have been reported since a driver for an international flight crew tested positive in mid-June to the highly contagious Delta variant, which first emerged in India.

"Given how contagious this strain of the virus is, we do anticipate that in the next few days case numbers are likely to increase even beyond what we have seen today," Berejiklian told reporters Sunday.

- Testing time -

The flare-up has been a shock for a city that had returned to relative normality after months with few local cases.

Matt Daly, 37, who lives south of Sydney, said he supported the measures but anticipated a "testing" period of working from home and entertaining his two young children who are on school holidays.

"A lot of juggling over the next two weeks. Really hope it doesn't extend further," he told AFP.

Sydney's restrictions require people to stay home until at least July 9, only venturing out to purchase essential goods, obtain medical care, exercise, go to school or if they are unable to work from home.

Professional musician Blain Cunneen, 27, said his work -- performing gigs, studio sessions and teaching students -- had gone "up in smoke" overnight.

"All that was starting to operate again almost as normal... very suddenly overnight I got a bunch of emails and texts about everything being cancelled," he told AFP.

Anyone outside of the lockdown zone who had visited Sydney since Monday was also instructed to self-isolate for 14 days, while several other states have banned travel to and from the city.

It is the latest in a string of "circuit-breaker" lockdowns across major Australian metropolises, with most cases linked to quarantining returning travellers.

More than 150,000 people in Darwin and surrounding areas are under stay-at-home orders for at least 48 hours to give health officials time to trace contacts, for the first time since a nationwide shutdown in the early stages of the pandemic.

"The Northern Territory is now facing its biggest threat since the Covid crisis began," Gunner said.

Cases of Covid-19 were also detected in the major cities of Perth and Brisbane on Sunday, prompting local authorities to tighten restrictions.

Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said he was confident Australia would manage.

"It's a difficult day but we've done this before, we know how to do it. And we will get through it," he said.

Australia has been among the world's most successful countries in containing Covid-19, with just over 30,000 cases and 910 deaths in a population of about 25 million. However, the government has faced criticism for a sluggish vaccine rollout.

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2021-06-27 08:03:39Z
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Sabtu, 26 Juni 2021

Malaysia's Covid-19 lockdown to be extended beyond June 28: PM Muhyiddin - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR (REUTERS) - Malaysia will extend a national lockdown beyond Monday (June 28) to curb the spread of Covid-19, state news agency Bernama reported on Sunday, citing Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin.

Lockdown measures were set to end on Monday. But Mr Muhyiddin said they will not be eased until daily cases fell below 4,000, Bernama said.

Malaysia reported 5,803 cases on Saturday. It was the fourth consecutive day that cases had remained more than 5,000. The number of deaths has also been hovering above 80 in the past four days, with 81 deaths reported on Saturday.

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2021-06-27 04:29:06Z
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Australia's New South Wales state reports 30 new COVID-19 cases - CNA

MELBOURNE: Australia's New South Wales reported 30 new coronavirus cases on Sunday (Jun 27), authorities said, as Sydney and its surroundings woke up to the first day of a two-week lockdown imposed to quell an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Sunday numbers, collected before 8pm on Saturday, take the number of infections linked to the Bondi outbreak to 110 and two other cases remain investigation. Some 52,000 tests were conducted.

"Given how contagious this strain of the virus is, we do anticipate that in the next few days, case numbers are likely to increase beyond what we have seen today because we are seeing that people in isolation, unfortunately, would have already transmitted to all their house contacts," state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told a news briefing.

On Saturday, several million of people in Sydney and the regions of Blue Mountains, Central Coast and Wollongong, which surround Australia's largest city, were ordered into a lockdown.

Neighbouring Queensland reported on Sunday two locally acquired COVID-19 cases, with authorities saying both infections were of the Alpha variant, first detected in the United Kingdom in September of 2020.

READ: Downtown Sydney, beachside suburbs locked down due to spike in Bondi Beach COVID-19 outbreak

READ: Sydney reinstates masks to contain Delta COVID-19 variant

Restaurants, bars and cafes were shuttered after stay-at-home orders for central neighbourhoods were extended across Sydney and to the coastal and mountainous regions surrounding the sprawling city.

Authorities had initially imposed movement restrictions on only those in Sydney's business district and affluent eastern suburbs, but the fast spread of cases in other areas saw the more drastic step introduced Saturday evening.

Health experts had advised that a shorter snap lockdown - which has proved effective in other Australian cities in recent months - would not be enough to contain the growing cluster, Berejiklian said in announcing the measures.

The flare-up has been a shock for a city that had returned to relative normality after months with few local cases.

Sydney's restrictions require people to stay home for at least two weeks, only venturing out to purchase essential goods, obtain medical care, exercise, go to school or if they are unable to work from home.

Anyone outside of the lockdown zone who had visited Sydney since Monday was also instructed to self-isolate for 14 days.

READ: Sydney faces 'scariest period' in pandemic amid COVID-19 Delta outbreak

The city is experiencing the latest in a string of "circuit-breaker" lockdowns across major Australian cities, with most cases linked to returning travellers quarantining in hotel rooms.

Northern Territory, home to some of Australia's most famous ancient Aboriginal culture and a strong mining sector, which saw its first coronavirus case in months on Saturday, reported four locally acquired infections, unrelated to the Sydney outbreak.

The Delta variant infections started with a worker at a gold mine owned by Newmont Corp, now in lockdown.

As authorities have not been able to track down all close contacts of the miner, an immediate 48-hour hard lockdown on Darwin and some surroundings was imposed.

"I would rather regret us going too hard, too early than go too easy and risk it all," Chief Minister Michael Gunner said at a news briefing.

Australia has been among the world's most successful countries in containing COVID-19, with just over 30,000 cases and 910 deaths in a population of about 25 million.

But the government has faced criticism for a sluggish vaccine roll-out, with about 7.2 million doses administered by Friday and only a small proportion having received both jabs.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic 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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2021-06-27 04:18:45Z
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Australia's New South Wales state reports 30 new COVID-19 cases - CNA

MELBOURNE: Australia's New South Wales reported 30 new coronavirus cases on Sunday (Jun 27), authorities said, as Sydney and its surroundings woke up to the first day of a two-week lockdown imposed to quell an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Sunday numbers, collected before 8pm on Saturday, take the number of infections linked to the Bondi outbreak to 110 and two other cases remain investigation. Some 52,000 tests were conducted.

"Given how contagious this strain of the virus is, we do anticipate that in the next few days, case numbers are likely to increase beyond what we have seen today because we are seeing that people in isolation, unfortunately, would have already transmitted to all their house contacts," state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told a news briefing.

On Saturday, several million of people in Sydney and the regions of Blue Mountains, Central Coast and Wollongong, which surround Australia's largest city, were ordered into a lockdown.

Neighbouring Queensland reported on Sunday two locally acquired COVID-19 cases, with authorities saying both infections were of the Alpha variant, first detected in the United Kingdom in September of 2020.

READ: Downtown Sydney, beachside suburbs locked down due to spike in Bondi Beach COVID-19 outbreak

READ: Sydney reinstates masks to contain Delta COVID-19 variant

Restaurants, bars and cafes were shuttered after stay-at-home orders for central neighbourhoods were extended across Sydney and to the coastal and mountainous regions surrounding the sprawling city.

Authorities had initially imposed movement restrictions on only those in Sydney's business district and affluent eastern suburbs, but the fast spread of cases in other areas saw the more drastic step introduced Saturday evening.

Health experts had advised that a shorter snap lockdown - which has proved effective in other Australian cities in recent months - would not be enough to contain the growing cluster, Berejiklian said in announcing the measures.

The flare-up has been a shock for a city that had returned to relative normality after months with few local cases.

Sydney's restrictions require people to stay home for at least two weeks, only venturing out to purchase essential goods, obtain medical care, exercise, go to school or if they are unable to work from home.

Anyone outside of the lockdown zone who had visited Sydney since Monday was also instructed to self-isolate for 14 days.

READ: Sydney faces 'scariest period' in pandemic amid COVID-19 Delta outbreak

The city is experiencing the latest in a string of "circuit-breaker" lockdowns across major Australian cities, with most cases linked to returning travellers quarantining in hotel rooms.

Northern Territory, home to some of Australia's most famous ancient Aboriginal culture and a strong mining sector, which saw its first coronavirus case in months on Saturday, reported four locally acquired infections, unrelated to the Sydney outbreak.

The Delta variant infections started with a worker at a gold mine owned by Newmont Corp, now in lockdown.

As authorities have not been able to track down all close contacts of the miner, an immediate 48-hour hard lockdown on Darwin and some surroundings was imposed.

"I would rather regret us going too hard, too early than go too easy and risk it all," Chief Minister Michael Gunner said at a news briefing.

Australia has been among the world's most successful countries in containing COVID-19, with just over 30,000 cases and 910 deaths in a population of about 25 million.

But the government has faced criticism for a sluggish vaccine roll-out, with about 7.2 million doses administered by Friday and only a small proportion having received both jabs.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic 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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2021-06-27 02:15:02Z
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From jazz to Mozart, young Indonesian breathes new life into centuries-old stringed instrument - CNA

JAKARTA: With great precision and agility, Seto Noviantoro’s fingers glided across the strings of an Indonesian musical instrument, while his right arm moved the bow back and forth.

Despite its distinctive sound, not many people know the name of this two-string bowed fiddle, even in Jakarta where the instrument originated centuries ago. Those who know how to play the instrument are even rarer.  

Noviantoro, 23, has been showcasing his kongahyan skills for the past five years on Instagram and YouTube, creating his own renditions of anything from contemporary pop songs to jazz improvisations and Mozart’s Turkish March.

The musician has also been updating traditional Betawi songs, rearranging them with modern beats and using both the kongahyan and contemporary instruments like keyboards and electric bass to perform them.

“People think of traditional instruments as something old fashioned and irrelevant with today’s time. I want to use social media to reintroduce kongahyan to the masses, so people are aware that the Betawi (community) has an instrument called kongahyan,” Noviantoro told CNA.

“I get people interested by playing hit songs of today. People are intrigued and realise that this instrument is suited for all kinds of genres. Eventually, they will want to know more about the instrument, what it is and where it’s from.”

His endeavour soon attracted accomplished musicians, artists and producers like jazz veterans Tohpati Ario Hutomo and budding composer Eka Gustiwana, who invited him for collaborations, both on stage and on records.

A NATURAL TALENT

Although his father was a traditional Javanese gamelan (ensemble music) player, Noviantoro said he never expressed any real interest in becoming a musician as a boy.

“The only reason I enrolled for a traditional music major at my vocational school was because my grades were not good enough for regular high schools and other majors at the school,” he said.

Tourism Vocational School Number 57 in South Jakarta had just opened a new major in traditional music by the time Noviantoro graduated from junior high school in 2012. There was not much interest in the new programme and the then 14-year-old was accepted easily.

“My class was the first batch. The programme was so new, we didn’t have a teacher until the fourth day of school,” he recalled.

READ: Heavy metal loving graphic designer sets up wealth redistribution website to help Indonesians hit by COVID-19

The school eventually brought in Firman Jalut, a multi-instrumentalist and son of Betawi music maestro Babe Jali Jalut, to serve as one of the programme’s first teachers.

The first thing Firman did in Noviantoro’s class was to show a humble-looking wooden instrument about 60cm long, with a sound box made from dried coconut shell covered in goat’s skin on one end and two tuning pegs at another. A curved bow is permanently wedged between the instrument’s two strings.

Like many others in Jakarta, Noviantoro had never seen such an instrument in person, let alone played one. Most pupils in his class did not even know the instrument's name.

“My teacher stood in front of the class, rested the instrument against his waist and began to play. It produced the most beautiful and smoothest sound I have ever heard in my life. I was immediately hooked,” he said.

(ni) Kongahyan 03
Seto Noviantoro regularly uploads videos of him using the kongahyan to play not only traditional Betawi music but also pop songs and jazz improvisations. (Photo: Nivell Rayda) 

Noviantoro proved to be a natural talent. His teacher Firman was so impressed by his pupil that one year later he began bringing Noviantoro along to perform as a backup musician.

Firman even introduced Noviantoro to jazz veteran Dwiki Dharmawan, who at the time was looking to collaborate with a traditional musician for a major jazz festival later that year.

READ: In traffic-choked Jakarta, volunteer motorcyclists help ambulances weave through congestion

“During the rehearsal, I was told to improvise a kongahyan solo. I didn’t know what to do. I had only been learning kongahyan for a year back then,” he said, adding that eventually, Firman stepped in and took Noviantoro’s place in the band.

Although he did not get to perform at the jazz festival, the experience made Noviantoro realise that the kongahyan is a versatile instrument which can fit into a wide variety of musical genres.

“I also realised that as a musician you have to be versatile in adapting to changes on the fly, be mindful of what other players are doing and be prepared to improvise,” he said.

A year after his encounter with Dharmawan, he eventually got his second chance to collaborate with the jazz veteran and perform in big concerts and festivals. Today, Noviantoro works as a full-time musician. 

KEEPING TRADITION ALIVE

No one knows for sure when kongahyan was first invented – some historians believe it first emerged in the 15th century while others believe that it had been around for much longer.

However, everyone agrees that kongahyan, along with its bigger and lower-sounding siblings tehyan and sukong, were modelled after the Chinese erhu brought to the archipelago by merchants from mainland China.

(ni) Kongahyan 04
Kongahyan is thought to be modelled after erhu, which was brought to Indonesia by Chinese merchants centuries ago. (Photo: Nivell Rayda) 

The erhu was also the inspiration for another instrument called rebab, which is found in Sundanese and Javanese communities in other parts of Java.

While rebab is relatively well preserved, the same cannot be said about the Betawi stringed instruments.

“Perhaps it is because no one is teaching them. In West Java and Yogyakarta (provinces), they have schools and institutes dedicated to preserving their musical heritage and teaching the next generation of artists. For some reasons, we don’t have that here,” Noviantoro opined.

“To be honest, I am quite jealous of the other provinces.”

READ: ‘I’m as good as any man’ - Aceh activist champions megafauna sanctuary preservation

The musician believed that the traditional music of Jakarta is facing a chicken-and-egg situation. “No one is teaching people these instruments because no one is interested. No one is interested because no one is teaching them about it,” he said.

Noviantoro aimed to change that through social media.  

“I want to use social media to reintroduce kongahyan to the masses so people are aware of the kongahyan instrument and that the Betawi (community) has instruments called kongahyan, tehyan and sukong,” he said.

Noviantoro said he noticed many people his age are starting to show an interest in the instrument. “I don’t want to say that it happens solely because of what I am doing on social media. Other musicians are also working hard to promote kongahyan in their own ways," he said.

"I hope more and more people are picking up kongahyan for the first time. Nothing would give me more joy.” 

(ni) Kongahyan 05
Seto Noviantoro's versatility in playing different music genres with kongahyan has earned him opportunities to collaborate with accomplished musicians, artists and producers. (Photo: Nivell Rayda) 

​​​​​​​“I want the Betawi culture and music to be more well known, not just in Indonesia but also internationally. I believe that the Betawi culture can get the worldwide recognition that it deserves. But before we can do that, we have to start with ourselves first. We must be the ones who appreciate it and preserve it.”

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2021-06-26 22:02:45Z
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UK health minister quits after breaking COVID-19 rules with affair - CNA

LONDON: UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock resigned on Saturday (Jun 26) following revelations that he broke the government's own coronavirus restrictions during an affair with a close aide.

The frontman for Britain's response to the pandemic, particularly the nationwide vaccine roll-out, quit in a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

"We owe it to people who have sacrificed so much in this pandemic to be honest when we have let them down as I have done by breaching the guidance," he wrote.

"The last thing I would want is for my private life to distract attention from the single-minded focus that is leading us out of this crisis," he added.

Johnson said he was "sorry" to receive Hancock's resignation, and that he should be "immensely proud" of his service.

The prime minister had initially stood by his beleaguered health secretary after he admitted to breaking COVID-19 rules on social distancing, at a time when he was urging the public to stick by the measures, including curbs on funeral numbers.

Opposition parties accused the government of hypocrisy over breaches of lockdown rules which have seen many members of the public slapped with fines.

Hancock conceded he had let the public down after The Sun newspaper published a security camera still obtained apparently from a whistleblower showing him kissing the aide in his office on May 6.

The main opposition Labour party said the government needed to answer questions about the undisclosed appointment of the aide, former lobbyist Gina Coladangelo, to Hancock's top advisory team.

Both she and Hancock are married, and first met at university.

READ: UK health minister pictured kissing aide; opposition wants appointment 'looked into'

"HOPELESS"

Last week, Hancock rejected criticism of his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic after private WhatsApp exchanges emerged in which Johnson appeared to describe him as "hopeless".

Hancock has also previously faced allegations that he lied to Johnson and awarded a contract to an unqualified friend.

He has faced further questions about his ownership of shares in a family company that won a COVID-related contract from his ministry last year.

But Johnson praised Hancock for his role in Britain's succesful vaccine rollout, which he called "one of the greatest successes of the modern state".

"It has been your task to deal with a challenge greater than faced by any of your predecessors and in fighting Covid you have risen to that challenge - with abundant energy, intelligence and determination that are your hallmark," he added.

Labour leader Keir Starmer said Hancock was right to resign, but tweeted that Johnson "should have sacked him".

Johnson's former aide Dominic Cummings had recently turned his guns on Hancock, releasing scathing internal documents related to his early handling of the pandemic.

Johnson was already under pressure to replace him, with Saturday's announcement taking that dilemma out of his hands.

Britain was due to fully ease restrictions on Jun 21, but the emergence of the Delta variant, first found in India, has led to an extension of social distancing rules.

Hancock assumed the role on Jul 9, 2018, having previously been head of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport department.

Before entering politics, Hancock worked for his family business and as an economist at the Bank of England. He has three children with his wife Martha.

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

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2021-06-26 18:22:30Z
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Indonesia reports record 21095 Covid-19 cases, targets 2m vaccine doses daily in Aug - The Straits Times

JAKARTA (REUTERS, XINHUA) - Indonesia recorded its biggest daily increase in coronavirus cases on Saturday (June 26) with 21,095 cases, taking the total tally to 2,093,962, according to data from the country's health ministry.

The data showed 358 new deaths overnight, taking the total to 56,729.

Indonesia has the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths from Covid-19 in South-east Asia.

President Joko Widodo on Saturday said the South-east Asian country has set a target of administering two million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine per day in August in efforts to curb the surge in infections following the Eid al-Fitr holiday in May.

Mr Widodo said the surge in cases in Indonesia was worsened by the inclusion of the more contagious coronavirus variants of concern such as Delta, Alpha and Beta.

The daily number of two million doses marks a sharp increase over the target of 700,000 doses in June and one million doses in July.

"I hope that starting today, the target of one million doses of vaccine (per day) is achieved for the entire Indonesian population and we will keep it until July. In August, we are targeting twice," Mr Widodo said.

Indonesia has administered 25.48 million doses as at Friday nationwide, including 12.91 million as the second doses.

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2021-06-26 12:25:16Z
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