WHO Recommends Nations Lift or Ease COVID-19-Related Travel Bans

The World Health Organization this week recommended nations lift or ease their existing COVID-19-related travel restrictions, saying they could exacerbate economic and social stress related to the pandemic.

The new recommendation was made Wednesday by the WHO’s International Health Regulations Emergency Committee on COVID-19 following its most recent meeting.

The report says countries should lift the bans and restrictions because the committee found “they do not provide added value and continue to contribute to the economic and social stress experienced” by citizens.


The report said such travel restrictions failed to limit the international spread of the omicron variant of the virus that causes COVID-19, which, the committee said, demonstrates the ineffectiveness of such measures over time.

The report went on to say other travel safety measures such as masking, testing, isolation/quarantine, and vaccination should be based on risk assessments to avoid placing an excess financial burden on international travelers.

Meanwhile, the WHO this week recommended two new drugs for treating COVID-19.

The first drug, baricitinib, is strongly recommended for patients with severe or critical COVID-19. The drug is taken orally and usually used to treat rheumatoid arthritis. The WHO recommends that it be given with corticosteroids.

The WHO has also conditionally recommended the use of the monoclonal antibody drug sotrovimab for treating mild or moderate COVID-19 in patients who are at high risk of hospitalization. That includes patients who are older, immunocompromised, having underlying conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and obesity, and those unvaccinated.

With COVID-19 cases surging throughout the America’s, and COVID-19 test kits in short supply, Pan American Health Organization Director Carissa Etienne on Wednesday called on countries to prioritize rapid antigen tests for those with symptoms who are most at risk of spreading the disease.

Etienne told reporters at a briefing that 7.2 million new COVID-19 cases were reported in the region over the past week, and countries must “expand testing at the community level to relieve pressure on hospitals, which are working overtime.”

Given the current shortage of rapid antigen tests, Etienne said countries need to advise those without symptoms who have been exposed to COVID-19 to quarantine where possible and follow public health measures.

Source: Voice of America

US Jobless Benefit Claims Increase Sharply

WASHINGTON — First-time claims for U.S. unemployment compensation increased sharply last week to their highest level since October 2021, suggesting that some employers may be laying off workers as the omicron variant of the coronavirus surges throughout the country and curtails business operations.

The Labor Department said Thursday that 286,000 jobless workers filed for benefits, up 55,000 from the week before, surpassing the 256,000 figure recorded in mid-March, 2020, when the coronavirus first swept into the United States and businesses started laying off workers by the hundreds of thousands.

In recent weeks, the U.S. has been recording 750,000 or more new cases of the coronavirus every day, largely because of the highly transmissible omicron variant. In some instances, that has played havoc with sectors of the world’s biggest economy.

For the most part, employers have been retaining their workers and searching for more as the United States continues its rapid economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. The country’s unemployment rate dropped in December to 3.9%, not far above the five-decade low of 3.5% recorded before the pandemic took hold.

Many employers are looking for more workers, despite about 6.9 million workers remaining unemployed in the United States.

At the end of November, there were 10.4 million job openings in the U.S., but the skills of available workers often do not match what employers want, or the job openings are not where the unemployed live. In addition, many of the available jobs are low-wage service positions that the jobless are shunning.

U.S. employers added only 199,000 new jobs in December, a lower-than-expected figure. But overall, 6.3 million jobs were created through 2021 in a much quicker recovery than many economists had originally forecast a year ago.

The U.S. economic advance is occurring even as President Joe Biden and Washington policymakers, along with consumers, are expressing concerns about the biggest increase in consumer prices in four decades — 7% at an annualized rate in December.

The surging inflation rate has pushed policymakers at the country’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, to move more quickly to end the asset purchases they had used to boost the country’s economic recovery, by March rather than in mid-2022 as originally planned.

Minutes of the Fed board’s most recent meeting showed that policymakers are eyeing a faster pace for raising the benchmark interest rate that they have kept at near 0% since the pandemic started.

The Federal Reserve has said it could raise the rate, which influences the borrowing costs of loans made to businesses and consumers, by a 0.25 percentage point three times this year to tamp down inflationary pressures.

Meanwhile, government statistics show U.S. consumers are paying sharply higher prices for food, meals at restaurants, gasoline and for new and used vehicles.

 

Source: Voice of America

Muslims on Edge as Ethnic Group Bids for Power in Rakhine State

YANGON, MYANMAR — For them, a recent series of ethnically charged incidents — including the murder of a local official — is bringing back memories of conflict between the two communities in 2012, when people were killed, houses and religious buildings were set on fire, and more than 30,000 people were forced from their homes.

In recent months, Rakhine has remained relatively peaceful despite rising violence elsewhere in Myanmar, where the military – known as the Tatmadaw – is facing popular resistance to its seizure of power in a Feb. 1, 2021, coup.

That has left an opening for a bid for power by a mainly Buddhist ethnic group known as Rakhines or Arakans, led by an armed militia known as the Arakan Army which has been fighting the central government since 2009, demanding self-determination for the Rakhine people.

Since the middle of last year, the Arakan Army has been establishing itself as an alternative government in Rakhine, inviting the public to come to it with complaints and to settle legal issues including theft, robbery and land disputes.

“We are running a sort of administration in Rakhine. Our judicial system has also been built up there. We have established a tax system,” said Arakan Army chief General Twan Mrat Naing during a Dec. 19 interview published in the Bangladeshi news outlet Prothomalo Alo.

“This is nothing new in Burma,” he added using an alternative name for Myanmar. “Almost all the ethnic groups involved in armed struggle run their own administration in their respective areas.”

Khaing Kaung San, executive director of the Wan Lark Foundation, which works to improve relations among groups in Rakhine, said the Arakan Army has been able to take advantage of a lack of effective rule in the province by the junta, made up mainly of the nation’s ethnic majority Burmese.

“No one trusts them. So most people rely on AA when something goes wrong. AA is also capable of controlling different communities to prevent getting worse when having an issue among them,” he said.

The Arakan Army is increasing efforts to gain credibility with locals. In the Prothomalo Alo interview, Twan Mrat Naing, discussing the Rohingyas and the Buddhist Rakhines, said the Arakan Army’s position is “as we are all on one side against the Burmese, we want all in Arakan to remain together.”

Most Rakhines are optimistic about the Arakan Army’s performance in Rakhine state, but some Muslims say they do not fully trust it and are concerned about a power struggle between the Arakan Army and the junta.

Village administrators and village elders from Muslim villages have been warned by the junta not to deal with the Arakan Army. Locals say the military council often arrests locals for suspected links to the insurgent force and prosecutes them under anti-terrorism laws.

Many Muslims are also worried by a wave of recent incidents, including the murder of a local government official for which a 14-year-old Muslim boy is being held. Other incidents include allegations of a plot by two Muslims to rape a Rakhine woman, and destruction of property of both Rakhines and Muslims in November and December.

In November, an Islamic school and a dormitory inside a school were burned down.

According to official figures, 13 fires broke out in Maungdaw district, which borders Bangladesh and has a large Rohingya population, between January and Nov. 25 last year. Eleven of those were in Muslim villages.

“Rakhine state seems stable. In reality, it is like a bomb that can explode at any time. There are a lot of invisible problems,” said Phone Pyae Phyo, who chairs the Arakan Students’ Union. He spoke to VOA from Sittwe township.

The violence has sparked memories of clashes between the two communities in 2012 after three Muslim men raped a Burmese woman, Thida Htwe, in the town of Kyaukphyu. Violence and vandalism spread throughout the state, including the capital, Sittwe.

Leaders of the Arakan Army and its political wing, the United League of Arakan, have denounced the recent violence as “an attempt to create fears and anxieties among people.” In a formal statement, the group did not assign blame for the incidents, but promised to investigate and provide security for locals.

A similar note was sounded by U Tun Aung Kyaw, a member of central executive committee of another Rakhine-based group, the Arakan National Party.

“People from both sides are on high alert not to have sectarian violence like that in 2012. No one wants to get into trouble again,” he told VOA. “Now, unscrupulous people are using incidents to try to cause trouble again. Fortunately, leaders of both communities have tried to maintain stability.”

Despite the recent friction, for many Muslims the greater threat is from the Tatmadaw, which perpetrated the 2017 massacres and still strictly limits their movements.

They say the military has set up checkpoints at township entrances and exits and requires government permission slips, with multiple approvals, to travel beyond their townships. Muslims also say they are barred from traveling to other states and regions.

“So far, we have spent at least 250,000 kyats [$141] to get permission to go to another township in Rakhine state. We are being blocked from visiting other places,” said Maw Lawi Tun, a Muslim resident of the state capital, Sittwe.

Adul Malein, a Muslim living in Buthidaung township, said Muslims’ living conditions were deteriorating year by year. Many cannot find work and have relied heavily on International Committee of the Red Cross food assistance.

“AA came to our village and persuaded us to cooperate with them. They told us that if they succeed and completely control the state, we would have a chance and would enjoy equal rights,” Adul Malein said.

“Many are still watching the situation, even if we do not fully trust the Arakan Army,” he said, adding that they will go with the side that can create a better situation for them.

“We are afraid of both sides [AA and junta] and follow their orders because we have nowhere to go,” Adul Malien said.


With Myanmar’s ruling military preoccupied elsewhere, leaders of a Buddhist ethnic minority in western Rakhine state are establishing themselves as the effective government and security force in the state and persuading at least some Muslims that they are a better alternative than the junta.

But the development is worrying other Muslims in the state, the scene of a murderous 2017 rampage by government troops that left thousands dead and drove more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to safety in neighboring Bangladesh.

 

Source: Voice of America

China Says it Warned Away US Warship in South China Sea

BEIJING — Chinese forces followed and warned away a U.S. warship that entered waters near the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea, the country’s military said Thursday, in the latest uptick in tensions in the disputed waterway.

The Southern Theatre Command of the People’s Liberation Army said the USS Benfold “illegally” sailed into Chinese territorial waters without permission, violating the country’s sovereignty, and that Chinese naval and air forces tracked the ship.

“We solemnly demand that the U.S. side immediately stop such provocative actions, otherwise it will bear the serious consequences of unforeseen events,” it added.

The U.S. Navy rejected the idea that the Benfold was warned away but appeared to confirm the ship was operating in the area, saying the mission reflected the U.S. Navy’s commitment to defend freedom of navigation.

“The PRC’s statement about this mission is false,” 7th Fleet spokesperson Mark Langford said in a statement. The 7th Fleet is part of the U.S. Navy’s Pacific force.

The Benfold was conducting what the navy called a freedom of navigation operation “in accordance with international law,” the statement said. The ship then “continued on to conduct normal operations in international waters.”

The U.S. Navy frequently carries out such missions in the South China Sea to challenge Chinese territorial claims.

“The United States is defending every nation’s right to fly, sail, and operate wherever international law allows, as USS Benfold did this week. Nothing the PRC says otherwise will deter us,” the statement further added.

China has established military outposts on artificial islands in the waters, which are crossed by vital shipping lanes and also contain gas fields and rich fishing grounds.

The South China Sea has become one of many flashpoints in the testy relationship between China and the United States, with Washington rejecting what it calls unlawful territorial claims by Beijing.

China claims vast swaths of the South China Sea. Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines all have overlapping claims.

Source: Voice of America

Myanmar’s Junta Arrests More Journalists

Three journalists at Dawei Watch, an independent news website in Myanmar, were arrested this week on unspecified charges, an editor at the publication said.

The editor, who asked to remain anonymous for his own safety, said the arrests occurred Tuesday and Wednesday in the southern city of Dawei, where the website is based. He said the reason for the arrests remained unclear.

“Family members were allowed to send food and medicine. We do not know what will happen next,” the editor told VOA Burmese. “Families were not allowed to sit down and talk with them — just to look at them.”

The journalist said none of those detained showed signs of being beaten. “They are fine and stable, according to family members,” he said.

The first to be arrested was Moe Myint. The 35-year-old journalist, who has three children, was detained Tuesday. Two of her colleagues, journalist Ko Zaw and web designer Thar Gyi, were arrested the following day.

Respect, but with rules

The junta has said that it respects the role of media but will not allow reporting that is false or incites unrest.

“There is no reason to arrest, charge or jail media personnel if they do their media job,” military spokesperson Major General Zaw Min Tun told VOA Burmese recently.

He said that foreign and local journalists are working in Yangon, Naypyidaw and Mandalay and that journalists are invited to press briefings.

“They can freely move,” Zaw Min Tun said. “However, if those media personnel encourage or instigate or involve in terrorist’s activities, action would be taken as criminals, as I have said it before.”

The Dawei Watch editor has called for his colleagues to be released.

“It is getting worse for journalists being arrested like this,” he said. “The main thing is that all of our reporters have the right to report on what is really happening on the ground.”

Opposition activists in Dawei have come under pressure. In late December, more than 30 people, including student activists, were sentenced to prison, some for up to 19 years, according to local reports.

Media crackdown

Since seizing power in a coup in February 2021, the junta has revoked broadcast licenses and arrested dozens of journalists. At least one journalist died in military custody in December, and two others have been killed.

One of those, Khonumthung Media Group founder Pu Tuidim, had fled to neighboring India from Chin state but was arrested when he returned. His body was found on January 9, two days after being taken by the military, along with those of nine others, according to reports.

Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) described the recent deaths of journalists as “a sign of the absolutely unacceptable practices increasingly employed by the junta.”

“We appeal to the international community to toughen the sanctions imposed on the junta’s members in order to end this headlong escalation in terror,” RSF Asia-Pacific desk head Daniel Bastard said in a statement.

At least 115 journalists have been detained since the February 1 coup, with 44 still behind bars, according to Reporting ASEAN, a Southeast Asia media advocacy group.

The Dawei Watch editor defended the work of the news website’s staff.

“Our reporters are not doing anything wrong. They are doing their job covering the ground situation,” he said.

 

Source: Voice of America

Daily blackouts in Myanmar disrupt livelihoods of rural, urban dwellers

Daily power outages across Myanmar have had a devastating effect on business owners as well as ordinary citizens in recent months. 

Since October, residents of nearly every township have endured power shortages of one form or another, including in Myanmar’s major urban centers, and sources told RFA’s Myanmar Service that the outages occur at random.

Some observers question whether the junta is using the blackout to punish its opponents, but the country’s electric ministry said high gas prices and damage to the nation’s network of power lines are to blame.

Residents say the one thing they know is that blackouts have become a much more common occurrence and have been forced them to invest in costly alternatives such as generators to meet their daily power needs.

A restaurant owner in Ayeyarwady region’s Myaungmya township said that businesses had suffered because of the blackouts.

“We currently endure power outages in Myaungmya day and night, every day,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“It happens between seven and 12 times a day on average, so all businesses that rely on electricity are having a hard time. People with generators can carry on working but those without them just have to wait for the power to come back.”

The restaurant owner added that prices for basic foodstuffs that require cold storage have skyrocketed because of the extra costs to use generators.

The owner of a grocery store in Ayeyarwady’s Nyaungdon township said he had to buy a generator to keep his business operating.

“There’s never a day that passes without a power outage. We don’t know whether the power cuts are scheduled for each ward or not,” he said.

“It can happen anytime of the day, and we never know what time it will come back on, so people who can afford it have to buy generators to run things like welding tools, ice-making machines and glass cutters.”

The grocer, who also declined to be named, said the price of power generators, which used to be around 300,000 kyats (U.S. $170) each, had recently risen to more than 500,000 kyats (U.S. $280) because of the high demand.

Urban centers affected

The current outages are not only affecting small towns and rural areas of the country, but also large cities such as the commercial capital Yangon and Myanmar’s second largest urban area, Mandalay, which are densely populated and home to foreign embassies and large companies.

One businessman in Yangon told RFA that blackouts could “sometimes last half a day or even a whole day,” causing severe disruptions for his cast iron and aluminum works.

“We can’t do anything but just sit and wait until it comes back on because we don’t have a generator,” he said, adding that he would be forced to find one if the situation was not resolved.

A Mandalay-based private instructor who teaches children online said her classes are interrupted by outages daily.

“There’s not a single day without a power failure. Sometimes it takes three-and-a-half to four hours for the power to come back, so I have to keep power banks and an extra laptop to do my coaching work,” she said, adding that she expects the situation to become worse during the summer, when heat waves put additional strain on the electric grid.

But the instructor said that residents are increasingly wondering whether the junta is turning off access to power to punish its opponents, many of whom have taken part in nationwide protests and boycotts against its rule.

“Some people are saying the junta deliberately cuts the power supply because people were not paying their power bills and it is trying to teach them a lesson,” she said.

She noted that in the past, residents were able to contact the main power supplier — Electric Power Corporation — in case of an outage, but there is no longer anyone answering service calls.

Cause of blackouts

The junta’s Ministry of Electricity said in a statement on Jan. 6 that power generation has declined nationwide due to rising global gas prices, the renovation of a major domestic gas project, and the destruction of power transmission towers. The statement said that the public could expect “temporary power outages” between 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. daily.

Attempts by RFA to contact junta Deputy Information Minister Zaw Min Tun for comment on the accusations went unanswered on Wednesday.

However, an official from the Ministry of Electricity in the capital Naypyidaw, who did not want to be named for security reasons, dismissed claims that the power outages were being used by the junta to punish opponent.

Instead, he suggested they are the result of the ministry’s failure to pay private electricity providers amid the government’s broader mismanagement of the economy, as well as the destruction of power supply towers by anti-junta armed groups. The source warned that the situation would likely worsen.

Of Myanmar’s approximately 11 million households, around 7 million have access to electricity. The country’s power grid had improved steadily during the 10 years of civilian rule prior to the Feb. 1, 2021 coup, and sources have told RFA they expect it will worsen dramatically under military rule.

Reported by RFA’s Myanmar Service. Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.