COVID-19 Daily Cases To Continue Rising For Some Weeks: Singapore PM

SINGAPORE, Singapore Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, said today that, he expects COVID-19 daily cases to continue rising for some weeks, and that the country’s healthcare system will still be under pressure.

 

“We can slow, but we cannot stop the Delta variant,” said Lee, when delivering his message on updating the COVID-19 situation in Singapore.

 

He said, the surge of daily cases will level off and cases will start to decline, at a timing that is unknown exactly right now. But from the experience of other countries, it will hopefully be within a month or so.

 

The prime minister said, it has been a long campaign against COVID-19. “The war continues, but we are in a much better position now than a year or six months ago.”

 

“Sometimes it may not feel like it, but we are making steady progress towards the new normal,” the prime minister said.

 

Singapore’s Ministry of Health announced last night that, the country added 3,590 cases of COVID-19 on that day, bringing the total tally in the country to 120,454. This is the fourth consecutive day when the daily new cases surpass 3,000.

 

The ministry also said that six more cases have passed away from complications due to COVID-19 infection, bringing the death toll to 142.

 

Lee said, Singapore must protect its healthcare system and workers at all costs, in order to get through the pandemic safely. He asked Singaporeans to support this effort by continuing to abide by prevailing Safe Management Measures (SMMs) and cutting back on social activities, to slow the spread of the virus, getting vaccinated, conducting self-test regularly to avoid infecting others, and recovering at home if infected, unless having serious illness or vulnerable family members.

 

He also said, it will take Singapore three to six months to get to the new normal, when the country can ease restrictions, have light SMMs in place, and cases remain stable.

 

He said, with vaccinations, COVID-19 has become a treatable, mild disease for most people. “So for 98 percent of us, if we catch COVID-19, we can recover by ourselves at home, just as we would if we had the flu.”

 

He also said that as part of living with COVID-19, Singapore must also connect itself back to the world. In particular, the country must continue to re-open its borders safely.

 

Singapore has started Vaccinated Travel Lanes with Germany and Brunei, and recently announced another with South Korea.

 

Lee said that Singapore is implementing more such arrangements, especially with countries whose COVID-19 situations are stable, so as to keep the country connected to global supply chains and help to preserve Singapore’s hub status.

 

Source: Nam News Network

Chinese FM Calls For Building Closer China-ASEAN Community With Shared Future

BEIJING, As this year marks the 30th anniversary of the establishment of dialogue relations between China and ASEAN, the two sides should cherish the valuable experience accumulated over the past 30 years, and build a closer community with a shared future, Chinese State Councillor and Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, said yesterday.

 

Wang made the remarks, when attending a reception to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of dialogue relations between China and ASEAN.

 

Since the establishment of dialogue relations in 1991, China and ASEAN have embarked on a path of unity and win-win cooperation, making important contributions to regional and world peace, stability, development and prosperity, Wang added.

 

Thirty years on, Wang suggested the two sides create a more favourable strategic environment, for the development of respective countries and long-term peace and prosperity of the region.

 

Wang stressed, the two sides should uphold high-level guidance and deepen strategic communication and political mutual trust, so as to draw a new blueprint for the long-term development of relations.

 

Wang also called for fostering new areas of practical cooperation, vigorously exploring emerging fields, such as, digital economy, scientific and technological innovation, and blue economy to promote regional green transformation and sustainable development.

 

Noting efforts to improve people’s livelihood and well-being, Wang said, China would continue to do its best to provide vaccines and other anti-pandemic supplies to ASEAN.

 

The two sides should strengthen cooperation in poverty reduction, disaster prevention and mitigation, and social development, Wang added.

 

Wang also called on both sides to safeguard long-term peace and stability in the South China Sea, practice true multilateralism and open regionalism together and jointly participate in global governance.

 

Source: Nam News Network

Taiwan President to Pledge Defense of Sovereignty, Democracy

TAIPEI, TAIWAN —

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen will pledge to defend the island’s sovereignty and democracy in a major speech Sunday, saying it faces challenges more complex and severe than ever, at a time when tensions with China have risen.

Democratic Taiwan, claimed by China as its own territory, has come under increasing military and political pressure from Beijing, which included this month four straight days of mass incursions by China’s air force into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone.

According to an outline of her national day speech Sunday, as described to Reuters by a source briefed on its contents, Tsai will say Taiwan is at the front lines of defending democracy and faces unprecedented complicated and severe challenges.

Tsai will reiterate Taiwan’s full determination to defend itself and maintain regional peace and stability, and she also will emphasize Taiwan will not “advance rashly.”

But when it comes to Taiwan’s sovereignty, there can be no backing down, she will say.

Speaking earlier Saturday in Beijing, Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed to realize “peaceful reunification” with Taiwan and did not directly mention the use of force after the week of tensions with the island that sparked international concern.

Taiwan reacted angrily to the speech, saying only Taiwan’s people have the right to decide their own future, and decrying China’s coercive tactics.

China refuses to speak to Tsai, re-elected by a landslide last year on a promise to stand up to Beijing, believing she is a separatist.

She has made strengthening Taiwan’s defenses a cornerstone of her administration to enable it to mount a more credible deterrence to China, which is ramping up an ambitious modernization program of its own military.

Tsai spent Saturday evening at a national day reception at the Hsinchu air base in northern Taiwan, where she thanked the armed forces for their efforts to defend the island.

Source: Voice of America

Hong Kong’s Boy Band Mirror Reflects Expats’ Yearning for Home

LONDON —

Jenny Chan strode through central London on a late summer Saturday afternoon, heading for the South Bank Lion statue opposite Big Ben.

There, by the River Thames, the 57-year-old mother and her two children joined a group of fellow Hong Kong expats who had gathered to sign a banner for Anson Lo, a 26-year-old singer with Hong Kong boy band Mirror.

About 200 people, most wearing clothes in Lo’s signature pink, wrote messages on the giant scroll. The banner had been hauled to the United Kingdom by Mirror fans, and its London stop on Sept. 25 was just one of many scheduled for outposts of the global Hong Kong diaspora. Its final destination is Hong Kong, where it will be presented to Lo himself.

The 12-member Hong Kong boy group Mirror originated in 2018 on the first season of King Maker, an elimination-style talent contest produced by Hong Kong’s ViuTV. The producers hand-picked contestants to form a boy band around the winner, Keung To. Mirror’s first release, roughly translated as One Moment in Time, debuted in November of that year.

Mirror’s trajectory — from its emergence before Hong Kong’s massive pro-democracy protests of 2019 to its superstar status in the Cantonese-speaking world — has made listening to the band “a type of resistance,” wrote Mary Hui on Quartz, as China cracks down almost daily on Hong Kong’s civil society.

Inspirational lyrics

Mirror members are identified more by their signature colors — Keung To’s is peach — than their politics. But it was widely reported via Facebook that former journalist and activist Gwyneth Ho, detained on a national security charge and facing the possibility of life imprisonment, cried upon hearing their song Warrior, which includes a line that translates to “I’d rather die / And I won’t retreat.”

Such lyrics help explain why Mirror is now a common thread among those fleeing China’s repression in the once freewheeling former British colony. Today, wherever Hong Kongers gather, Mirror provides the soundtrack, with hits such as Ignited and Boss.

Howard Chan, 23, and his sister Maggie Chan, 16, were studying in the United Kingdom when Maggie discovered Mirror late in 2018 on a show streaming online. She was drawn by the Cantonese, the language spoken in Hong Kong. VOA is using pseudonyms to ensure the safety of Chan family members as China tracks people overseas under Hong Kong’s national security law.

Through the band, the younger Chans told VOA Cantonese, they have connected with old friends in Hong Kong and friends who had moved to Australia.

Maggie Chan, a high school student, said she persuaded her brother, a Ph.D. candidate in engineering at a U.K. university, to join her in binge-watching Mirror’s ViuTV shows.

Howard Chan became a Mirror fan.

Their mother, Jenny Chan, moved to London in August 2019 to take care of her children. She continued watching a daily sitcom on TVB, a Hong Kong station often labeled pro-China.

Her children pushed her to quit TVB, but she resisted until the COVID-19 lockdown, when she started watching ViuTV.

Jenny Chan became a Mirror fan in part because “they’re handsome.”


The U.K. Chans rely on Thomas Chan, a 60-year-old patriarch and an executive with an international company in Hong Kong, to collect Mirror-related material and send it to them.

When he visited in July, he pushed through jet lag by binge-watching Ossan’s Love HK, which features Mirror’s Edan Lui and Lo.

The 15-episode series is a remake of a Japanese “boys love” drama. ViuTV’s Cantonese version is the first of the genre to air in Hong Kong.

Thomas Chan became a Mirror fan.

Mom worries about band

Despite Mirror’s popularity, Jenny Chan worries about the band’s fate given China’s targeting of effeminate male celebrities.

Her favorite, Lo, is known for his androgynous style.

Described by her son as politically liberal and open to new ideas, she also worries that the band’s influence may upset authorities.

When hundreds of fans attended a Hong Kong birthday event for Lo in July, they ignored police orders to disperse, instead waiting for a pink double-decker bus proclaiming “Happy Birthday Anson Lo” on its side.

“I believe China would feel afraid, as a group of people gathered, and they were not scared (of the police). We were worried (about Mirror),” she told VOA Cantonese.

She is relieved the semiofficial Hong Kong Tourism Board recently invited Lo and fellow Mirror member Ian Chan to appear in a promotional advertisement.

The U.K. Chans attend fan-hosted events in the London area, the most recent on Oct. 3. Howard Chan told VOA Cantonese that the events help maintain a Hong Kong identity.

“We live in London and often see many Hong Kongers. But for some who live quite far away, there is barely any chance to speak Cantonese. These events are something where we can get together,” he said.

Howard Chan recalled attending London marches supporting Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement with his sister before the pandemic. Those felt similar to Mirror fan events, he said, in that both attracted Cantonese-speaking people to a common activity.

“When I see someone with an Asian face, I don’t even have to think or ask in English whether they are Hong Kongers. I can just speak Cantonese,” he said of the marches and Mirror events.

Jenny Chan, who said she could tell her son felt heavy-hearted at the protests, likes seeing him relaxed at Mirror events. “It was like going to therapists, helping him to release his emotions and get happier.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Philippine Nobel Winner Ressa Calls Facebook ‘Biased Against Facts’

MANILA —

Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa used her new prominence to criticize Facebook as a threat to democracy, saying the social media giant fails to protect against the spread of hate and disinformation and is “biased against facts.”

The veteran journalist and head of Philippine news site Rappler told Reuters in an interview after winning the award that Facebook’s algorithms “prioritize the spread of lies laced with anger and hate over facts.”

Her comments add to the pile of recent pressure on Facebook, used by more than 3 billion people, which a former employee turned whistleblower accused of putting profit over the need to curb hate speech and misinformation. Facebook denies any wrongdoing.

Sought for comment on Ressa’s remarks, a Facebook spokesperson said the social media giant continues to invest heavily to remove and reduce the visibility of harmful content.

“We believe in press freedom and support news organizations and journalists around the world as they continue their important work,” the spokesperson added.

Ressa shared the Nobel Friday with Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov, for what the committee called braving the wrath of the leaders of the Philippines and Russia to expose corruption and misrule, in an endorsement of free speech under fire worldwide.

Facebook has become the world’s largest distributor of news and “yet it is biased against facts, it is biased against journalism,” Ressa said.

“If you have no facts, you can’t have truths, you can’t’ have trust. If you don’t have any of these, you don’t have a democracy,” she said. “Beyond that, if you don’t have facts, you don’t’ have a shared reality, so you can’t solve the existential problems of climate, coronavirus.”

Ressa has been the target of intense social-media hatred campaigns from Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s supporters, which she said were aimed at destroying her and Rappler’s credibility.

Election ‘a battle for facts’

“These online attacks on social media have a purpose, they are targeted, they are used like a weapon,” said the former CNN journalist.

Rappler’s reporting has included close scrutiny of Duterte’s deadly war on drugs and a series of investigative reports into what it says is his government’s strategy to “weaponize” the internet, using bloggers on its payroll to stir up anger among online supporters who threaten and discredit Duterte’s critics.

Duterte has not commented on Ressa’s award. The presidential palace, Duterte’s spokesperson, his chief legal counsel, and communications office did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Facebook in March 2019 removed an online network in the Philippines for “coordinated inauthentic behavior,” and linked it to a businessman who has previously said he helped manage the president’s social media election campaign in 2016.

Filipinos top the world in time spent on social media, according to 2021 studies by social media management firms.

Platforms like Facebook have become political battlegrounds and have helped strengthen Duterte’s support base, having been instrumental in his election victory in 2016 and a rout by his allies in mid-term polls last year.

The Philippines will hold an election in May to choose a successor to Duterte, who under the constitution is not allowed to seek another term.

That campaign “will be a battle for facts,” Ressa said. “We are going to keep making sure our public sees the facts, understands it. We are not going to be harassed or intimidated into silence.”

Source: Voice of America

China Restricts Abortions to Counter Shrinking Population

After three decades of abortions during the one-child era, the procedure advertised in China as “safe, quick and painless” at bus stops, in magazines and on flyers is now facing restrictions.

In the newly issued Guidance on Women’s Development 2021-2030 by China’s State Council, the phrase calling for “reducing non-medically necessary abortions” caught the public’s attention.

The notice, released September 27 with no specific details on enforcement, sparked discussion among netizens.

VOA Mandarin found 40,000 comments under an article on the directive published on China’s 163.com.

“I guess we have to draw lots to buy condoms in the future,” said one, referring to the government’s efforts that began earlier this year to encourage people to have three babies after the one-child policy strained a rapidly aging society.

Another read, “From forced abortion to forced childbirth, the government is using all tools to achieve its goal.”

“Don’t worry about abortion,” said a third. “I won’t have babies if you kneel down and beg me!”

Activists criticized the government’s interference with women’s reproductive rights.

Zhang Jing, the founder of Women’s Rights in China, a New York-based NGO, told VOA Mandarin that the reduction of non-medically necessary abortions is another example of how Beijing authorities interfere with women’s reproductive rights.

“Now that the Chinese government has noticed there’s a population shortage, they are reversing the policies to encourage people to have babies. I do believe this is going to be mandatory,” she told VOA Mandarin in a phone interview last week.

“From forced abortions in the one-child policy era, to forced childbirth in the three-child policy era, human rights, as well as women’s rights, were not taken into consideration in the formation of these population policies,” she added.

Chen Guangcheng, a Chinese civil rights activist and the author of The Barefoot Lawyer: A Blind Man’s Fight for Justice and Freedom in China, worried about whether the new policy meant China would soon ban all forms of abortion.

“The Chinese Communist Party changes its policies based on its own needs,” Chen, who fled China in 2012, told VOA Mandarin via phone. “I don’t think there’s any long-term consideration. … I think, essentially, this violates women’s reproductive rights.” Chen, a women’s rights advocate, spoke against forced abortions during the one-child era, which ended in 2016.

Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and author of Big Country With an Empty Nest, argued that the new guideline was a step in the right direction.

“Although China will regulate abortion, I don’t think the policy will be as strict as the ones in the U.S. or Australia,” he said in a phone interview. “Individuals will still have a lot of freedom to make decisions. I don’t think we should overinterpret this one-liner in the guidelines. The decline in fertility rate is a global trend. I think it’s necessary to explore ways to increase fertility rate.”

Struggling with an aging population and declining birth rates, the Beijing authority is trying to shift its population policies to avert a demographic crisis.

Census figures published in May by China’s National Bureau of Statistics showed that China’s population growth from 2011 to 2020 was the slowest since the 1950s. The birth rate fell for four consecutive years after Beijing abandoned the one-child policy in early 2016. And in 2020, only 12 million babies were born, the lowest number since 1961.

In a major policy shift this May, China announced that married couples may have up to three children in order to boost the country’s birth rate.


Meanwhile, the census showed in 2020 that 264 million people were age 60 or older and that 191 million were age 65 or older, constituting 18.7% and 13.5% of the total population, respectively. In about 25 years, one-third of China’s population will be retirees, and their living and health care expenses will eat up a quarter of Beijing’s GDP.


While the country is facing a shrinking labor force, China’s abortion rates remain high, following a pattern established during the 30-plus years of one-child policy when forced abortions and sterilization were widespread.

According to an article published by the government’s China Population and Development Research Center, part of the National Health Commission of China, Chinese public hospitals performed an average of 9 million abortions annually from 2005 to 2017. The article pointed out the real number was closer to 13 million annually because the previous number didn’t include statistics from private hospitals and clinics.

In 2017, China performed 9.6 million abortions, accounting for over 17% of the total abortions performed worldwide, according to the article. Among those who had abortions, 55.9% of the women had more than two abortions, according to the article.

Yi from the University of Wisconsin-Madison said it’s time for China to regulate abortions.

“When China implemented the one-child policy, abortions were literally everywhere. I think that’s a disrespect of women’s reproductive rights,” he said. “Now as the population policy changes, I’m seeing a change of attitude from ‘too many lives is a burden’ to ‘respect lives,’ and this change will lead to more regulation in terms of abortion procedures.”

Yi continued, “I think this is a change that should be respected and welcomed by the international community, rather than being criticized.”

 

Source: Voice of America