Brunei Recorded 83.6 Percent Decrease In Average Daily COVID-19 Cases

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN– Brunei logged a daily average of 283 new COVID-19 cases in the past week, the Health Ministry said, yesterday.

According to the ministry’s weekly briefing, 59,328 Antigen Rapid Test (ART) results were uploaded to the government platform within one week, with 3.3 percent of them being positive. This means that, the average number of daily cases has decreased by 83.6 percent from the peak of the fourth wave of the pandemic, in the middle of July last year.

Currently, one hospitalised case is held in intensive care unit and three cases require assisted breathing, according to the ministry.

As of Aug 21, 76.6 percent of Brunei’s population have received three doses of COVID-19 vaccines, while 9.0 percent have taken the fourth dose.

Source: Nam News Network

Its Largest Lake is So Dry, China Digs Deep to Water Crops

With China’s biggest freshwater lake reduced to just 25% of its usual size by drought, work crews are digging trenches to keep water flowing to irrigate crops.

The dramatic decline of water coverage in Poyang Lake in the landlocked southeastern province of Jiangxi had otherwise cut off irrigation channels to neighboring farmlands in one of China’s key rice-growing regions.

But the crews using excavators to dig the trenches only work after dark due to the daytime heat, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

High temperatures have sparked mountain fires that have forced the evacuation of 1,500 people in southwest China, and factories have cut production as hydroelectric plants reduce their output amid drought conditions.

The drought and heat have wilted crops and shrunk rivers including the giant Yangtze, disrupting cargo traffic and reducing power output.

Fed by China’s major rivers, Poyang Lake averages around 3,500 square kilometers (1,400 square miles) at high season, but has contracted to just 737 square kilometers (285 square miles) amid the recent drought.

As determined by water level, the lake officially entered this year’s dry season Aug. 6, earlier than at any time since records began being taken in 1951. Hydrological surveys before then are incomplete, although it appears the lake may be at or around its lowest level in recent history. Along with providing water for agriculture and other uses, the lake is a major stopover for migrating birds beginning to head south for the winter.

A wide swath of western and central China has seen days of temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), in summer heat waves that have started earlier and lasted longer than usual.

In the hard-hit city of Chongqing, department stores have delayed their opening to 4 p.m. Residents have been seeking respite from the heat in air raid shelters dating from World War II.

That reflects the situation in Europe and elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere, with high temperatures taking a toll on public health, food production and the environment in general.

Source: Voice of America

Car Crashes Left Over 1,730 Dead In Myanmar In First Seven Months

YANGON– Over 3,533 car crashes occurred in Myanmar in the Jan-Jul period, resulting in 1,730 deaths and 4,841 injuries, the state-run, the Global New Light of Myanmar, reported yesterday.

The media quoted the Road Transport Administration Department (RTAD) as saying that, the chart of collisions, the dead and injured came from most of the states and regions in Myanmar.

According to the RTAD, in the past year, there were 4,158 vehicle collisions in the country, leaving 5,460 injured and 2,075 dead.

Source: Nam News Network

Indonesia’s Sumatra Checks for Damage from 6.3 Magnitude Earthquake

Indonesia’s disaster agency is assessing the impact of a strong earthquake that hit off the southern coast of Sumatra island late Tuesday, it said in a statement, noting there had been no reports of damage or casualties by near midnight.

The 6.3 magnitude quake struck at 21:31 local time (1431 GMT), the country’s meteorology and geophysics agency (BMKG) said, with its epicenter 80 kilometers south of the town of Manna in Bengkulu province, at a depth of 52 kilometers.

Manna is about 600 kilometers northwest of the capital Jakarta.

The tremor was felt for 2 to 6 seconds by residents along the southern coastline of Sumatra, prompting some to run out of their homes, disaster agency BNPB said in a statement.

“It was quite strong,” a Bengkulu agency official, Septi, said.

Indonesia straddles the so-called “Pacific Ring of Fire,” a seismically active zone, where different plates on the Earth’s crust meet and create a large number of earthquakes and volcanoes.

In February, a magnitude 6.1 earthquake killed more than 10 people when it struck inland near the western coast of Sumatra.

Source: Voice of America