Singapore Reports 2,664 New COVID-19 Cases

SINGAPORE – Singapore reported 2,664 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, bringing the total tally to 1,247,671.

Among the new cases, 2,602 were local transmissions and 62 were imported cases.

Of the local cases, 282 cases were detected through PCR (polymerase chain reaction) tests, and 2,320 through ART (antigen rapid test), according to the statistics released by the Ministry of Health.

A total of 275 cases are currently warded in hospitals, with eight cases in intensive care units.

One death was reported from COVID-19 yesterday, bringing the total death toll to 1,367, according to the ministry

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Japan To Open Up For Small-Scale Tours From Four Countries As Trial

TOKYO – Japan will accept vaccinated tourists in small groups from the United States, Australia, Thailand and Singapore later this month, as a trial towards the full-scale opening up for foreign visitors planned for June, the Japanese government said yesterday.

Since the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Japan has closed its borders and prohibited the entry of foreign tourists.

As the situation improved, Japan has been relaxing its travel restrictions in phases, since March, accepting businesspeople, technical interns and students.

“International travel is extremely important for economic activities and regional revitalisation,” Tourism Minister, Tetsuo Saito, said, at a press conference.

During the trial phase later this month, fixed package tours will be provided to small groups, who would be allowed to go to limited areas, where prefectural governments have agreed to the trial, to manage the tourists’ activities.

Only visitors who have had three COVID-19 vaccination shots will be able to participate, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism said.

Currently, 10,000 people a day are allowed to enter Japan, and the government is considering doubling the limit to 20,000 a day in June.

Amid COVID-19 travel restrictions, the number of foreign visitors to Japan in 2021 plunged 99.2 percent, compared to the pre-pandemic year of 2019, to a record-low of 245,900.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Wage hike set in Ilocos, Cagayan, Caraga

Minimum wage earners in the Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, and Caraga regions will soon get higher pay after their respective Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Boards (RTWPBs) issued wage orders increasing their respective minimum wage.

The latest development on wage increase was announced by Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, even as he also thanked the three region’s wage boards for heeding his call to expedite the review of their current minimum wage and for taking the extra mile in resolving with dispatch the petitions for wage adjustments in their jurisdictions.

The new minimum wage in the National Capital Region and Western Visayas, meanwhile, will take effect on June 3 after their separate wage orders were affirmed by the National Wages and Productivity Commission on Tuesday. Bello chairs the commission.

The RTWPB I unanimously issued Wage Order No. RB1-21 on May 16, providing wage increases ranging from P60 to P90 in two to three tranches. After full implementation of the tranches, the minimum wage rate in the region will range from P372 to P400 from P282 to P340 under the previous Wage Order.

The Board also unanimously issued Wage Order No. RB1-DW-03 granting P500 and P1,500 monthly wage increases for domestic workers in cities and first-class municipalities and for other municipalities, respectively, bringing the new monthly wage rate to P5,000.

Meanwhile, RTWPB II unanimously issued Wage Order No. RTWPB-02-21 on May 17, granting wage increases ranging from P50 to P75 in two to three tranches. After full implementation of the tranches, the minimum wage rate in the region will range from P400 to P420 from P345 to P370 in the previous Wage Order.

Lastly, RTWPB XIII issued Wage Order No. RXIII-17 also on May 17, which integrated the P15 COLA to the P305 basic salary under the previous Wage Order and granted a P30-wage increase bringing the new daily minimum wage rate in the region to P350.

The new daily minimum wage rate of P350 shall take effect upon the effectivity of the Wage Order for private establishments and their workers in Butuan City and the provinces of Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, and Surigao del Sur.

However, for private establishments and their workers in the provinces of Dinagat Islands and Surigao del Norte, including Siargao Islands, the wage increase of P20 shall take effect upon the effectivity of the Wage Order and another P10 shall take effect on September 1, 2022.

The new Wage Orders will be submitted to the NWPC for review and shall take effect fifteen days after publication in a newspaper of regional circulation.

Under the Omnibus Rules on Minimum Wage Determination, however, retail/service establishments regularly employing not more than ten workers and establishments affected by natural calamities and/or human-induced disasters, including the pandemic, may apply for exemption from compliance with the issued Wage Orders.

Source: DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT REPUBLIC OF PHILIPPINES

Report tracks China’s assertiveness at sea over the decades

China is the source of destabilization in the South China Sea and has been for the last couple decades, but Beijing’s assertiveness has less to do with its rivalry with the United States than is commonly assumed, a new report says.

In the report “Dynamics of Assertiveness in the South China Sea” published by the National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR), an U.S. non-profit research institution, U.K.-based academic Andrew Chubb examines maritime disputes and the changes in state behavior of the most active claimants including the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the Philippines and Vietnam.

The report is based on based on data that measures the year-on-year changes in assertive behavior by the three countries between 1970 and 2015.

Chubb identified four types of assertiveness which states are demonstrating while pursuing their interests in the South China Sea, ranging from verbal claim assertions via statements and diplomatic notes to threats of punishment and the use of force.

One of the findings is that increasing Chinese assertiveness has been continuous in the South China Sea, with the PRC making assertive moves in most years since 1970.

Furthermore, the PRC’s coercive actions, or those that involve the threat or use of punishment, became much more frequent after 2007, the year that marked the beginning of a rapid expansion of Chinese patrols and massive land reclamation efforts.

China’s assertive actions have most frequently targeted the Philippines and Vietnam, the study found, and were generally not driven by dynamics in Sino-U.S. relations – although Washington, which is not a claimant in the South China Sea, has in the past decade become increasingly vocal about China’s behavior. More recently, it has also stepped up freedom of navigation operations and military drills in those waters.

Deterrence strategy

The study also draws conclusions about the stance of the China’s rival claimants. On Vietnam, it finds that as early as the 1990s, virtually every assertive move by Hanoi in the South China Sea concerned its disputes with China. Meanwhile, Vietnam remained a target for around 80 percent of PRC assertive actions through the 2000s.

But by 2010, after three years of sustained Chinese advancements, Vietnam could no longer keep up with the PRC and from mid-2011 on, new Vietnamese assertive activities were mostly verbal declarations, as Hanoi switched its focus toward diplomacy, according to the study.

Manila’s behavior in the South China Sea, on the other hand, has been more sporadic and inconsistent than that of the other claimants, and more likely to be one-off incidents rather than ongoing actions.

Serious U.S. concerns only started in March 2009 when the U.S. surveillance ship USNS Impeccable, believed to have been conducting hydrographic surveys, was harassed by Chinese maritime militia while operating near Hainan island in the South China Sea.

The study finds that PRC’s assertive policy in the South China Sea has not been driven by its great-power competition with the U.S. China’s policy gathered steam about a decade before the sharp downturn in Sino-U.S. relations from 2017.

The author says it is challenging for Washington to formulate a response to Bejing’s assertiveness while continuing to be seen as a stabilizing force in the region.

“Given the protracted nature of the PRC build-up, it definitely means that the U.S. has a lot of challenges if it wants to use policy tools to try to deter the PRC from engaging assertive moves,” Chubb said.

The author looked into “the idea of trying to counter the PRC’s strategy by deliberately raising the risk of escalation … that has been advocated by a number of influential policy thinkers over the years.”

Chubb advised against it, saying that one of the greatest strengths of the U.S. in the region is being seen as a stabilizing force.

“Looking at the situation over the past couple decades, it’s quite clear that the PRC is the source of destabilization and the U.S. presence has been by and large a stabilizing one.”

“Deterrence strategy should focus on economic measures such as trade negotiations rather than actions that raise the risk of military escalation,” he said.

ASEAN countries could also do more to send a “subtle but loud deterrence signal” that will force Beijing to make concessions or at least give it incentives for moderation.

“Over the past couple decades, the intra-ASEAN disputes have been neutralized, ASEAN countries are no longer advancing claims against each other in an active manner,” Chubb said.

But he noted that even “symbolic gestures would be taken very seriously by the PRC as a sign that countries in the region are forming a united front against China.”

Radio Free Asia Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036

MAN ARRESTED FOR A SERIES OF THEFT CASES

The Police have arrested a 62-year-old man for his suspected involvement in a series of theft cases.

On 7 May 2022, the Police were alerted to a theft case at a food centre along Queen Street where a victim reported that her bag was stolen.

Through ground enquiries and follow-up investigations, officers from Central Police Division established the identity of the man and arrested him on 17 May 2022. The man is believed to be involved in other similar cases reported at another food centre along New Market Road.

The man will be charged in court on 19 May 2022 with theft, punishable under Section 379 of the Penal Code 1871. The offence carries an imprisonment term of up to three years, a fine, or both.

Source: Singapore Police Force

Indonesia, Flooding in Bolaang Mongondow Timur (Sulawesi Utara) (16 May 2022)

Sulawesi Utara, Indonesia

Event Date : Mon, 16 May 2022

AHADID : AHA-FL-2022-000564-IDN | GLIDE Number :

Impact Update Date : Mon, 16 May 2022 04:00:00

AFFECTED AREA/S

Bolaang Mongondow Timur

DESCRIPTION

Chronology : Triggered by rain with high to moderate intensity with a long enough duration on Monday, May 16, 2022, 04:00 WITA

Location :

– District. Kotabunan : Ds. Buyat Induk, Ds. Buyat Tengah, Ds. Buyat Selatan, Ds. Bulawan Dua

– District. Tutuyan : Ds. Togid

– District. Motongkad : Ds. ]Motongkad Selatan

Impact: ±103 families affected

Material Losses:

± 103 units of submerged houses (data collection)

Water Level reaches ± 30-50 cm

Efforts: BPBD Kab. Bolaang Mongondow Timur conducted a quick survey and coordinate with relevant agencies

Source: Staff. BPBD Kab. Bolaang Mongondow Timur Mr. Devianto Maani Via WA

(081244242797) & Head of BPBD Bolaang Mongondow Timur Mr. Elvis Via WA

(085298569524)

Source: ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance