Selasa, 19 Oktober 2021

All healthcare workers in S'pore allowed to apply for overseas leave: MOH Holdings - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The Ministry of Health (MOH) has lifted the suspension on overseas leave application for all healthcare workers.

This comes after almost two years of long working hours and being away from their loved ones for some doctors and nurses.

The update was announced on Tuesday (Oct 19) in an MOH Holdings circular to healthcare workers.

MOH Holdings is the holding company of Singapore's public healthcare institutions.

The circular said: "With the recent government announcement on the streamlined protocols and the newly opened Vaccinated Travel Lanes (VTLs) on Oct 9, MOH has further reviewed the overseas travel guidelines for healthcare workers."

The VTL arrangement allows travellers to visit 11 countries without undergoing quarantine if passengers are fully vaccinated. They must also take two polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, before departure and on arrival.

These countries, whose Covid-19 situations are stable, are Brunei, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, South Korea, Spain, Britain and the United States.

On Tuesday, MOH Holdings said: "All overseas travel shall be subject to MOH's prevailing travel advisory as well as the national travel health control measures found on the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority website."

Checks by The Straits Times showed that these include having a passport with a validity period of at least six months and having the required entry visa for destination countries.

MOH Holdings added that healthcare professionals who wish to travel overseas should declare their vaccination status and indicate the country and city of their overseas trip when they apply for annual leave.

ST understands that both public and private healthcare providers have been making preparations so that their staff can go on vacation.

Dr Prem Kumar Nair, IHH Healthcare Singapore's chief executive, told ST that since Monday, it has lifted all travel restrictions on its staff.

IHH Healthcare Singapore manages Mount Elizabeth Orchard, Mount Elizabeth Novena, Gleneagles Hospital and Parkway East Hospital.

Dr Nair said: "We are grateful to all our foreign employees who have sacrificed being with their families to continue working with us to care for our patients over the past 20 months."

ST has contacted MOH for comment.

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2021-10-19 07:26:49Z
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China, Russia navy ships jointly sail through Japan strait - CNA

TOKYO: A group of 10 naval vessels from China and Russia sailed through a strait separating Japan's main island and its northern island of Hokkaido on Monday (Oct 18), the Japanese government said, adding that it is closely watching such activities.

It was the first time Japan has confirmed the passage of Chinese and Russian naval vessels sailing together through the Tsugaru Strait, which separates the Sea of Japan from the Pacific.

While the strait is regarded as international waters, Japan's ties with China have long been plagued by conflicting claims over a group of tiny East China Sea islets. Tokyo has a territorial dispute with Moscow, as well.

"The government is closely watching Chinese and Russian naval vessels' activities around Japan like this one with high interest," Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihiko Isozaki told a regular news conference on Tuesday.

"We will continue to do our utmost in our surveillance activity in waters and airspace around Japan."

A Japanese Defence Ministry spokesperson said there had been no violation of Japanese territorial waters and no international rules were broken by the passage of the vessels.

Russia and China held joint naval drills in the Sea of Japan as part of naval cooperation between the two countries from Oct 14 to 17 involving warships and support vessels from Russia's Pacific Fleet.

Moscow and Beijing have cultivated closer military and diplomatic ties in recent years at a time when their relations with the West have soured.

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2021-10-19 06:03:05Z
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North Korea likely launched its first submarine missile in two years - The Straits Times

SEOUL (BLOOMBERG, REUTERS) - North Korea appeared to have fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile for the first time in about two years, adding to a series of tests by Kim Jong Un’s regime of nuclear weapons designed to evade US interceptors.

North Korea is suspected of launching an SLBM on Tuesday (Oct 19) from the east coast area of Sinpo into waters between the peninsula and Japan, South Korea’s military said. It did not say if the short-range missile was fired from a submarine or an underwater platform. North Korea has a submarine base and an underwater platform for missile tests in that area. 

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said North Korea fired two ballistic missiles and no damage has been reported. North Korea is barred by United Nations resolutions from ballistic missile testing, and Tokyo protested the latest launch. 

The latest launch follows a series of tests in September of weapons designed to deliver nuclear warheads to South Korea and Japan – two US allies that host the bulk of American troops in the region.

One of the weapons was what North Korea called a “hypersonic missile", suggesting the regime had come closer to putting nuclear warheads in high-speed gliders that can evade US missile defences. Kim Jong Un’s state last month also showed off a new system to launch ballistic missiles from a train – just hours before South Korean President Moon Jae-in observed his government’s test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile. 

North Korea often times its tests for political purposes. On Thursday, South Korea is set to launch its new three-stage Nuri rocket, a US$1.8 billion project designed to put a 1.5-tonne satellite into a orbit about 600-800 km above the Earth.

The missile launched on Tuesday flew 430-450km and reached an altitude of about 60km, the Yonhap News Agency reported, citing a person it did not identify. That would be consistent with a short-range ballistic missile and not nearly as long as when it last tested a submarine-launched ballistic missile in October 2019, firing a Pukguksong-3 from an underwater platform.

The Pukguksong-3 is designed to be launched from a submarine and has an estimated range of at least 1,900 kilometers. Japan initially mistook that test of a single, two-stage missile as being a launch of two missiles.

Since then, North Korea has rolled out two new versions of the weapon – the Pukguksong-4 and Pukguksong-5 – in military parades.

Yonhap News Agency said the latest test may be of a shorter-range SLBM, which appeared to be part of an array of weapons on display last week at an indoor show in Pyongyang. The exhibitions also included the hypersonic glide vehicle and what weapons experts said is the world’s largest road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missile and likely designed to carry multiple nuclear warheads to the US mainland.

The latest launch provides a reminder to US President Joe Biden that Kim’s nuclear arsenal remains among the United States' biggest foreign policy challenges despite former president Donald Trump’s decision to hold face-to-face summits with the North Korean leader. Although Kim made a vague commitment in 2018 to “work toward complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula”, he has continued to advance his nuclear weapons programme.

In January, Kim outlined broad plans to upgrade his nuclear arsenal to improve his capability to strike the US, feeding speculation he would resume weapons tests.  North Korea has one submarine capable of launching missiles and has been building a second one at Sinpo. While such a vessel would probably be noisy and unable to stray far from the coast without being tracked, even one submarine lurking off the Korean Peninsula would give US military planners a dangerous new threat to consider in the event of any conflict.

North Korea’s debut of an SLBM in 2015 opened a new potential area of operations for its navy, the US Defence Intelligence Agency said in a report this month.

“This capability is likely to grow slowly because constructing and deploying new submarines requires a lengthy, resource-intensive manufacturing process,” the report said.

Timing of launch 

The North's missile launch on Tuesday pulled Japan’s new prime minister off the campaign trail and overshadowing the opening of a major arms fair in Seoul.

It came after US and South Korean envoys met in Washington to discuss the nuclear standoff with North Korea on Monday. Spy chiefs from the United States, South Korea, and Japan were reported to be meeting in Seoul on Tuesday as well.

“Our military is closely monitoring the situation and maintaining readiness posture in close cooperation with the United States, to prepare for possible additional launches,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

South Korea’s national security council held an emergency meeting and expressed “deep regret” over the test, urging the North to resume talks.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida cancelled scheduled campaign appearances in northern Japan, and the deputy chief cabinet secretary told reporters that Kishida was planning to return to Tokyo to deal with the missile situation.

South Korea’s unification ministry, which handles inter-Korean relations, said daily routine liaison calls with the North were conducted normally on Tuesday.

The series of recent launches as well as the opening of the unusual military show in Pyongyang suggest that North Korea may be resuming military and international affairs after nearly two years of focusing inward amid the Covid-19 pandemic, said Chad O’Carroll, CEO of Korea Risk Group.

 

“North Korea’s renewed testing of ballistic missiles suggests the worst of domestic hardship between summer 2020-2021 could be over,” he said on Twitter.

“Pyongyang tends to focus on one big strategic issue at a time, so the renewed testing could suggest military – later foreign policy – now priority”.

The launch came as the intelligence chiefs of the United States, South Korea, and Japan were due to meet in Seoul to discuss the standoff with North Korea, amid other issues, Yonhap news agency reported, citing a government source.

The US special representative for North Korea, Sung Kim, said that he would visit Seoul for talks this week.

“The US continues to reach out to Pyongyang to restart dialogue,” Kim said after meeting with his South Korean counterpart in Washington on Monday. “We harbour no hostile intent towards (North Korea), and we are open to meeting with them without preconditions.”

Missile race

The missiles tested recently by North Korea appear aimed at matching or surpassing South Korea’s quietly expanding arsenal, analysts have said.

Last month South Korea successfully tested an SLBM, becoming the first country without nuclear weapons to develop such a system. North Korea test fired a missile launched from a train on the same day.

This month the two Koreas held duelling defence exhibitions aimed at showcasing their latest weaponry amid a spiralling arms race.

As news of Tuesday’s missile launch broke, representatives of hundreds of international companies and foreign militaries were gathered in Seoul for the opening ceremonies of the International Aerospace and Defence Exhibition (ADEX).

It is set to be South Korea’s largest defence expo ever, organisers said, with displays of next-generation fighter aircraft, attack helicopters, drones, and other advanced weapons, as well as space rockets and civilian aerospace designs.

South Korea is also preparing to test fire its first homegrown space launch vehicle on Thursday.

Though analysts say the South Korean rocket has few potential applications as a weapon, such tests are unlikely to be welcomed in North Korea, which has complained of a double standard in which its own space programme is criticised overseas as a front for military missile development.

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2021-10-19 01:38:35Z
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Senin, 18 Oktober 2021

Australia's COVID-19 cases remain subdued as vaccinations rise - CNA

SYDNEY: Australia's COVID-19 cases remained subdued on Tuesday (Oct 19) as its largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, gradually move towards normality amid a surge in vaccinations, after being rocked by a third wave of infections from the Delta variant.

The fast-moving Delta strain forced Sydney, Melbourne and the national capital of Canberra to ditch their COVID-zero approach and officials now aim to ease the tough restrictions once double-dose vaccination rates passed 70 per cent, 80 per cent and 90 per cent.

Sydney, Australia's largest city, and Canberra exited a months-long lockdown last week after racing through its inoculation targets while Melbourne is on track to lift its strict stay-home orders later this week.

Authorities in Queensland, which on Monday became the first COVID-free state to outline its reopening plans, urged the state's 5 million residents to get vaccinated ahead of opening its state borders a week before Christmas - when its double-dose vaccination rate is expected to reach 80 per cent. 

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the opening of borders should act as an "incentive" for residents to get inoculated.

Queensland has so far only fully vaccinated 57 per cent of its population above 16, well below the national average of 68 per cent and 81 per cent in NSW.

"We've had the luxury of essentially being largely Delta free, so now it is really important for people across Queensland to get vaccinated ... Time is of the essence," Palaszczuk told Nine News on Tuesday.

A total of 1,749 new cases were reported in Victoria, the majority in state capital Melbourne, down from 1,903 on Monday.

Daily infections in New South Wales, home to Sydney, rose to 273 on Tuesday from 265 a day earlier, but well down from its pandemic high of 1,599 in early September.

More than one-fifth of the new cases reported in NSW over the past week are in children below 10, government data showed.

Australia has recorded around 147,000 COVID-19 cases and 1,558 deaths.

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2021-10-19 00:13:45Z
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First flight under expanded Vaccinated Travel Lane scheme to touch down at Changi Airport on Wednesday - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - The first flight under the expanded quarantine-free travel scheme for travellers vaccinated against Covid-19 will touch down in Singapore on Wednesday morning (Oct 20), in the next step of Singapore's border reopening.

SQ329, which is operated by Singapore Airlines (SIA), is expected to touch down at Changi Airport at 5.55am on Wednesday. It will depart from Amsterdam in the Netherlands at 11.15am local time (5.15pm Singapore time) on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the first Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL) flight from the United States, SQ23, is expected to depart from New York at Tuesday night local time, and land in Singapore at 5.20am on Thursday.

The Netherlands and the United States are among eight countries that the Republic will open up Vaccinated Travel Lanes (VTLs) to from Tuesday. The other countries are Canada, Denmark, France, Italy, Spain and Britain.

Singapore had earlier opened up VTLs to Germany and Brunei on Sept 8. It will jointly launch VTLs with South Korea on Nov 15.

The VTL scheme allows vaccinated travellers on designated flights to enter Singapore quarantine-free.

But they must take a Covid-19 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test before departure and when they land at Changi Airport.

There is currently no outbound VTL flights as the scheme is a unilateral move by Singapore, with the only exception being the upcoming arrangement with South Korea.

As the eight countries that Singapore will open up to from Tuesday had already unilaterally opened up to the Republic earlier, this means travellers from Singapore could already fly to these countries on any flight without having to serve quarantine there.

The launch of the eight new VTLs represents Singapore's biggest move to reopen its borders since the Covid-19 pandemic. It has been welcomed by the industry as a step forward in reviving the Republic's air hub and tourism sector.

Mr Toh Thiam Wei, founder of tour company Indie Singapore, has received "a handful" of bookings over the past two weeks from travellers from Germany and their families here.

There were six groups in total, comprising two to six customers each. Mr Toh has received inquiries, but no bookings from guests from other VTL countries.

Pre-pandemic, the company used to receive between 20 and 30 guests a day.

Mr Toh, who is also a tour guide, said the bookings for his firm's walking tours were unexpected but welcome.

"I did not think tours would be high on the priority list for people here to spend time with family," he said.

Hotels, too, have reported a rise in inquiries.

Mr Paul Er, vice-president of sales for Asia for Millennium Hotels and Resorts, said inquiries for the group's Orchard Hotel have doubled since the announcement of the new VTL countries, but he declined to reveal booking numbers.

The hotel last week launched a "Stay to eat free 100%" promotion, where guests will receive the full amount of their stay in dining credits.

Initially targeted at local staycationers, Mr Er said the package has been popular among VTL guests who can order in-room dining while waiting for the results of their on-arrival Covid-19 PCR test.

"We anticipate bookings to spike when similar VTLs are established with countries within our region, as the rise in leisure trips will outpace the recovery of business travel," he added.

But experts have cautioned that the VTLs will not be a silver bullet for the aviation and tourism sector.

They also noted that the cap of allowing just 3,000 travellers to come in under the VTLs daily will limit the impact of the scheme.

Aviation analyst from Endau Analytics Shukor Yusof said: "The VTL is a great morale booster for some in Singapore, and indeed for SIA, but I am not convinced it will help much in reducing the cash burn the flag carrier is facing.

"Moreover, these schemes will widen inequality as air travel becomes the privilege of the affluent and the fully vaccinated, which could result in an imbalance in mobility amongst the masses."

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2021-10-18 13:39:11Z
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Britain falls behind Europe on Covid-19 as surge sparks call for probe into Delta Plus mutation - The Straits Times

LONDON (BLOOMBERG) - Surging cases in the UK have left the country behind the rest of Europe with former US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) commissioner Scott Gottlieb calling for "urgent research" into a mutation of the Delta variant known as Delta Plus.

Britain reported 45,140 new cases on Sunday (Oct 17), the highest daily jump since mid-July, around when Prime Minister Boris Johnson authorised the removal of most Covid-19-related restrictions in what was dubbed "Freedom Day".

Weekly deaths from the virus topped 800 for each of the past six weeks, higher than in other major western European nations, according to Bloomberg’s tracker. 

The UK also has lagged in rolling out the vaccines to adolescents amid concerns that some side effects undermined the net benefit of the shots given children are less likely to become seriously ill.

The delay meant most older children weren't offered a vaccine until the school year had started. Prevalence of Covid-19 is growing among those aged 17 and younger, the latest React-1 study led by Imperial College London found last week.

The reproduction rate in that age group was 1.18, meaning that on average every 10 young people infected are passing it on to about 12 others. 

The Delta plus strain Dr Gottlieb highlighted includes the K417N mutation, which has also stoked concern because that’s also harboured by the Beta variant that’s associated with an increased risk of reinfection.

"We need urgent research to figure out if this Delta Plus is more transmissible, has partial immune evasion," Dr Gottlieb said in a tweet on Sunday. "There's no clear indication that it's considerably more transmissible, but we should work to more quickly characterise these and other new variants. We have the tools."

British researchers said in late June that there is no evidence yet to suggest the additional mutation is more worrisome.

A German paper earlier this month found while both Delta and Delta Plus infect lung cells more efficiently than the original coronavirus strain, Delta Plus does not appear to be significantly more dangerous than Delta.

In England, the percentage of people testing positive continued to increase in the week ending Oct 9, with an estimated 890,000 people having Covid-19, or about 1 in 60, according to the Office for National Statistics.

To date, Britain has recorded almost 140,000 Covid-19-related fatalities.

"At the moment the UK has a higher level of Covid-19 than most other comparable countries, this is seen not just in positive tests but in hospital admissions and deaths," Dr Jim Naismith, a professor at the University of Oxford, wrote in a statement published by the Science Media Centre on Oct 15. Each death "represents a tragedy", he said.

Dr Gottlieb, who serves on Pfizer's board of directors, led the FDA from 2017 to 2019. He has been promoting his new book, Uncontrolled Spread: Why Covid-19 Crushed Us And How We Can Defeat The Next Pandemic.

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2021-10-18 10:26:18Z
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Ex-US Secretary of State Colin Powell dies of Covid-19 complications - TODAY

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  1. Ex-US Secretary of State Colin Powell dies of Covid-19 complications  TODAY
  2. Colin Powell: War hero, historymaker haunted by Iraq  The Straits Times
  3. Colin Powell: Former US secretary of state dies of Covid complications  BBC News
  4. Colin Powell, former US secretary of state, dies at 84 of Covid complications  The Guardian
  5. Colin Powell, First US Black Secretary Of State, Dies Of Covid  NDTV
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-10-18 12:20:26Z
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