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Taiwan warned Taiwanese businesses operating in Myanmar on Monday of a “highly risky situation” in the country, which has been embroiled in turmoil triggered by a military coup on Feb. 1.
“According to information received by OCAC a day earlier, the situation there has deteriorated, and some Taiwanese businesses have been affected,” Taiwan's Overseas Community Affairs Council (OCAC) Minister Tung Chen-yuan told reporters, the Focus Taiwan news website reported.
A Taiwan-invested company along with many Chinese companies were targeted Sunday by anti-coup demonstrators in Myanmar. The company was damaged in a fire.
At least 32 Chinese-invested factories were vandalized in “vicious attacks” in Yangon city, China’s Global Times newspaper reported Monday. Two Chinese employees were injured.
It added that property worth $36.89 million belonging to the companies was damaged during the attacks.
Buddhist-majority Myanmar has been witnessing mass protests since last month after the country’s armed forces, officially known as the Tatmadaw, overthrew the government after launching pre-dawn raids and arresting members of the ruling National League for Democracy Party (NLD).
The junta imposed martial law in many towns including the industrial zone of Hlaing Tharyar Township, after violence peaked a day earlier.
More than 100 people have been killed by the military junta, which aims to break up the anti-coup demonstrations.
Call for special UNGA session
The ongoing suppression of anti-coup protests has prompted calls for a special UN General Assembly session to discuss the situation in the country.
“The Myanmar military poses a threat to peace, and its ongoing attack is grave, dire and massive in scope,” said Matthew Smith, chief executive officer of the human rights organization Fortify Rights.
“The people of Myanmar are desperate for action, and the UN Security Council has persistently failed them. Now is the time for an Emergency Special Session at the General Assembly, where China and Russia have no veto power,” he added.
The targeting of Chinese investments comes amid accusations that Beijing is backing the junta. China, however, has denied such claims.
“China is closely following the situation and is very concerned about the safety of Chinese institutions and personnel,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian told a news conference in Beijing. “China hopes Myanmar will take measures to protect the safety of Chinese citizens.”
“Your question is very funny,” Zhao responded when asked whether China was interfering in Myanmar's affairs by urging the police to protect Chinese nationals.
“It is normal for embassies to ask the local government and police to protect their citizens when they are in danger,” he added.
Meanwhile, Taiwan’s Overseas Community Affairs Council Minister Tung Chen-yuan asked Taiwanese businessmen in the area to “remain on high alert.”
Taiwan's representative office in Myanmar has also asked Taiwanese companies to “fly the Taiwan flag to distinguish them from Chinese companies,” Taiwan News reported.
China considers Taiwan a “breakaway province,” but Taipei has insisted on its independence since 1949 and has diplomatic relations with at 16 countries and regions./aa
Brazil has named its fourth health minister since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.
The country’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, announced Monday evening that General Eduardo Pazuello will be replaced by cardiologist Marcelo Queiroga, who is currently president of the Brazilian Society of Cardiology.
Queiroga’s appointment was confirmed by Bolsonaro in a conversation with his supporters in front of his official residence in Brasilia.
“[He] has everything, in my opinion, to do a good job, continuing everything Pazuello has done until today,” the president declared. “It is [a] continuity. There is no break,” he said.
According to Bolsonaro, there will be a “one or two-week” transition period.
Pazuello has led the Health Ministry since last May. He took over after Bolsonaro had disagreements with two other ministers, Luiz Henrique Mandetta and Nelson Teich, both doctors. They were in favor of social distancing as a measure to slow the spread of the virus, were against “early treatment,” which includes drugs whose effectiveness against COVID-19 has never been proven, and advocated for vaccination. Teich was in office for only 29 days.
Bolsonaro, by contrast, has ferociously attacked vaccines, having only more recently adopted a different stance. The president has also acted deliberately to delay the purchase of vaccine doses, which has resulted in a messed up national plan with a lack of doses in many places across the country. He has been an advocate for drugs like hydroxychloroquine and has attacked decisions by governors and mayors to close businesses to reduce the circulation of people.
Bolsonaro has been under much pressure as the pandemic has worsened in Brazil, with successive record numbers of deaths. On Saturday, the country recorded its 15th consecutive day of a record in the daily average of deaths, with 1,824. It was also the 52nd consecutive day with a death toll above 1,000. Last Wednesday, Brazil recorded 2,349 deaths, the highest number ever. Last week was the pandemic’s worst, with more than 12,000 deaths. To date, the country has registered more than 278,300 deaths and 11.5 million cases.
Vaccination in the country is still very slow, with only 6% of the population having received their first dose and only 2.2% the second. Only one fifth of the population in priority groups have been vaccinated so far. Pazuello, the current minister, said that by the end of 2021, the entire population will be vaccinated. According to experts, however, at the current rate, the country may take about two and a half years to immunize the entire population over 18, and only with the first dose.
Queiroga was Bolsonaro's second choice to be health minister. Ludhmila Hajjar, also a medical doctor, was the first choice, but she refused, claiming “technical reasons.” She was threatened on social media by Bolsonaro’s supporters after a meeting with him on Sunday. She also has diverging views from Bolsonaro in relation to the conduct of the pandemic./agencies
China will exempt foreigners applying for visas to enter the country via Hong Kong who have received a Chinese vaccine from providing health certification, the state-owned CGTN news channel reported Monday.
Those who are administered non-Chinese vaccine doses will be required to produce negative nucleic acid tests and a health and travel declaration form, CGTN said.
The new rule was announced last week to facilitate cross-border entry as the world begins to enhance physical movement in view of the ongoing pandemic.
China began issuing health certificates for international travel last Monday.
Meanwhile, China’s National Health Commission (NHC) said Monday that close to 65 million people have been administered vaccines since January last year.
“As of March 14, 64.98 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered in China,” said Li Bin, the deputy head of the NHC, addressing a live-streamed news conference in Beijing.
The health official added that China is studying various measures taken by different countries regarding international travel for inoculated groups and is considering further policy adjustments.
China has reported at least 90,049 confirmed cases of COVID-19 including 4,636 deaths since the first such cases were detected in Wuhan city in December 2019. Five new cases were reported Monday, all of whom were imported.
Last week, China’s Foreign Ministry said that Beijing has donated or is donating COVID-19 vaccines to 69 developing countries in urgent need and is exporting vaccines to 43 countries.
It added that at least 60 countries have authorized the use of Chinese vaccines./aa
Bangladeshi migrants in Saudi Arabia and their families back home have hailed the Gulf state’s landmark reform of its labor law in which it amended the 70-year-old controversial ‘kafala’ sponsorship system.
The Arabian country enacted the amendment Sunday, according to a report on the Saudi Gazette website.
The reform will allow tens of thousands of foreign workers in the country to switch jobs without the permission of their employers.
“The landmark Labor Reform Initiative (LRI) that came into force on Sunday gives a major fillip to improving considerably the contractual relations between employers and employees in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” said the report.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Jannatul Ferdous, a Bangladeshi migrant working at a construction site in Saudi Arabia, said this is great news, as it will help foreign workers break free from the grip of greedy recruiters who frequently force them to work for low wages for years.
“I am now hopeful that I can prove my ability and bargain with other employers for implementing fair wages,” Ferdous said.
Fatema Begum, the mother of a Bangladeshi migrant worker in Saudi Arabia living in the remote area of Dohar in Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka, told Anadolu Agency that Saudi Arabia has made a good decision that will benefit millions of poor workers there.
However, all expatriate workers in the private sector with the exception of those in five categories -- private driver, home guard, domestic worker, shepherd and gardener or farmer -- have been kept out of the new amendment, raising concerns over the law’s partiality.
In November last year, Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development said it would implement the new amendment in March 2021.
Concerns of rights defenders
International rights watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) welcomed the declaration for making changes to the “abusive” and “notorious” kafala system, but it also expressed concern over excluding huge numbers of oppressed migrants from the benefits of the reform.
“The 3.7 million domestic workers excluded from the labor law are also excluded from these modest changes. Many face serious abuses including long working hours without a day off, forced confinement, and physical and sexual abuse,” HRW said in a statement issued in late February this year.
There are also frequent reports of the torture of Bangladeshi female migrant workers in Saudi Arabia.
According to Bangladesh-based BRAC, one of the world’s largest nongovernmental organizations, the bodies of 200 Bangladeshi female migrants, mostly domestic workers, have been repatriated to their home countries in the last five years from Saudi Arabia
Most of them were allegedly tortured by their Saudi recruiters. Around 2 million Bangladeshi migrants are currently employed in Saudi Arabia.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Shariful Islam Hasan, head of BRAC’s migration program, said all migrant workers should be included under the new amendment.
“Otherwise, a great number of oppressed employees will be deprived of this amendment and the real target of the reform can’t be gained,” he said.
Issues to be noted
The new amendment stipulates that an employer will have a period of 10 days to inquire about the exit and reentry visa application submitted by their worker.
“If the employer does not respond within the time limit, the worker will be able to issue a single visa for a period of 30 days within five days since the expiry of this deadline,” said the Saudi Gazette report.
The amendment also records that the worker will not be able to issue either an exit or reentry visa upon the expiry of the work contract with the employer or issue a multiple exit and reentry visa.
“It is also not allowed for the employer to revoke the exit and reentry visa issued by the expatriate worker."/aa
The head of a major Turkish aid agency met Monday with Syrian children living in Istanbul as the world marked the 10th anniversary of the beginning of Syria’s civil war.
Kerem Kinik, head of the Turkish Red Crescent, or Kizilay, visited the children in their classroom at the Sancaktepe Community Center.
Kinik also played and sang songs with the children during his brief visit.
“Today, we can talk about more than 1 million babies born outside their homes as refugees, born and raised without seeing their country,” he said, speaking to reporters.
“Unfortunately, we see that despite all efforts, the international system has not been able to establish peace, and unfortunately, there is still no light at the end of the tunnel,” he added.
According to Kinik, the Syrian crisis should be reviewed by focusing on the establishment of peace with policies on protecting people, human rights and dignity.
Syria has been in a civil war since early 2011, since the Bashar al-Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests with unexpected ferocity.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million others displaced over the last decade, according to UN officials.
Turkey hosts some 3.6 million Syrian refugees -- more than any other country in the world./agencies
Although several more countries have suspended AstraZeneca vaccines' use as a precautionary measure, it does not necessarily mean these events are linked to vaccination, the World Health Organization (WHO) head said Monday.
"Several more countries have suspended the use of AstraZeneca vaccines as a precautionary measure, after reports of blood clots in people who had received the vaccine from two batches produced in Europe," said WHO director-general Tedros Gebreyesus.
"This does not necessarily mean these events are linked to vaccination, but it's routine practice to investigate them, and it shows that the surveillance system works and that effective controls are in place," he said, speaking at a twice-weekly WHO webinar.
European countries, including Germany, France, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Norway, have suspended the use of AstraZeneca in recent weeks after reports of people developing blood clots after receiving the jab.
Tedros said the WHO's Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety has been reviewing the available data and is in close contact with the European Medicines Agency and will meet Tuesday.
WHO's chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan said: "We would, for the time being, recommend that countries continue vaccinating with AstraZeneca."
She said the vaccines have been in use for a few months now, and even though they are so rapidly scaled up, 300 million people already have received at least one dose.
Swaminathan noted that 2.6 million people have died of COVID-19, but after all those vaccination doses had been given to people across the world using different vaccines, "there is no documented death that's been linked to a COVID vaccine."
She said there is naturally the need "to continue to be very closely monitoring this," but said, "we do not want people to panic."
Tedros said that the greatest threat that most countries face now is a lack of access to vaccines.
"Almost every day, I receive calls from senior political leaders around the world, asking when their country will receive their vaccines through COVAX," said the WHO chief, referring to the WHO-led process through its partners to ensure an equitable distribution of jabs globally.
"Some of them are frustrated, and I understand why. They see some of the world's richest countries buying enough vaccines to immunize their populations several times over, while their own countries have nothing."/agencies
The European Medicine Agency (EMA) convened on Monday to discuss possible side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca.
According to Belgian media, EMA is expected to made a statement on the safety of the vaccine following the meeting or on Thursday.
European countries, including Germany, France, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway, have suspended the use of AstraZeneca in recent weeks, after reports of people developing blood clots after receiving the jab.
AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine is used to prevent the COVID-19 infection in people aged 18 years and above. It has been designed to prepare the immune system to identify and combat the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 causing COVID-19./aa
At least 138 protesters, including women and children, have been killed in Myanmar since the Feb. 1 power seizure of military, the UN said Monday.
"This includes 38 people who were killed yesterday, the majority in the Hlaing Thayer area of Yangon, while 18 people were killed on Saturday," said Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in his daily press briefing.
"We saw a weekend filled with bloodshed," said Dujarric.
Guterres "strongly condemns this ongoing violence against peaceful protesters and the continuing violation of the most basic human rights of the people of Myanmar," he continued.
Dujarric said the secretary-general reiterates his call on the international community to show solidarity with the people of Myanmar and their democratic aspirations.
Despite the growing brutality of the military junta, there has been no letup in demonstrations against the Feb. 1 coup across Myanmar.
More than 2,000 detained throughout the country so far./agencies
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (AA) – The Netherlands has suspended the use of COVID-19 vaccines developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University after reports of blood clots that developed in some people after receiving the jab.
According to the country's Health Ministry late Sunday, the decision came following the recommendations of the Dutch medicines council CBG.
The ministry said the suspension will take two weeks, until March 28, and vaccine appointments in the country will be canceled.
AstraZeneca issued a statement Sunday reiterating the safety of its COVID-19 vaccine based on scientific evidence amid concerns over reports of people developing blood clots after receiving it.
The company said safety was of paramount importance for them and that they continually monitor the safety of the vaccine.
Last week, Denmark and Norway suspended the rollout and use of the Oxford vaccine after reports of a small number of blood clots. Austria and Italy quickly followed suit.
Amid concerns over side effects and suspension of its use in several countries, the World Health Organization on Friday said the AstraZeneca vaccine is “excellent” and the world should continue using it.
The US will soon administer 100 million COVID-19 vaccines in the time since US President Joe Biden assumed office in January, he said on Monday.
The US has already administered 109 million vaccine doses since they began rolling out in December, but about 16 million were given under former President Donald Trump.
Describing the looming milestone of his presidency as one of two "giant goals," Biden said the US would also be sending out 100 million coronavirus stimulus checks within the next 10 days.
"Shots in arms and money in pockets, that's important," he said. "The American Rescue Plan is already doing what it was designed to do: make a difference in people's everyday lives, and we're just getting started."
Biden was alluding to the massive $1.9 trillion spending package he crafted, and which passed the federal legislature before Biden signed it into law last week./aa