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Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 12:02 pm
by HHTel
1,300 active cases spread around 16 provinces.
Just to correct that out of date info. It's spread across 68 provinces, the majority with extremely low figures.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 1:16 pm
by Nereus
Thousands cancel handout requests

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... t-requests

Virus aid applicants fear fraud charges

More than 610,000 people who registered for the 5,000 baht cash handout granted by the government to ease the impact of the Covid-19 have cancelled their registrations out of fear they will face legal action for providing fake information.

Charnkrit Dejvitak, an assistant attached to the PM's Office, said the Finance Ministry on April 4 added a cancel button on the website www.เราไม่ทิ้งกัน.com ["You will never be left behind"] so people who registered and "had no intention to give false information" can have a chance to withdraw their registrations.

"As of yesterday, more than 610,000 people cancelled their applications, or 76,000 per day, which was a high number," Mr Charnkrit said.

"This is mainly because the Finance Ministry is pursuing legal action against those who gave fake personal information by instructing its legal team to conduct urgent checks on applicants' information."

The ministry has filed complaints with the Technology Crime Suppression Division, asking it to take legal action against five people who posted fake information about the cash handout on social media, Mr Charnkrit said. He said this prompted the number of cancellations to rise to 5,000 in two hours between 8pm-10pm on Saturday.

The Finance Ministry also set up another legal team to track down improper posts about financial aid on social media.

Some who received the aid boasted they did so by cheating, and the ministry will actively seek out these posts and cancel the next monthly payment to those responsible as well as recall the first 5,000-baht payment from them without taking legal action.

For those claimed they received the cash handout, but they actually did not, this is tantamount to causing public a disturbance and they will be prosecuted for inputting false information to the internet in violation of the Computer Crime Act, said Mr Charnkrit.

According to the executive decree on 1 trillion baht in borrowing recently approved by the cabinet, 600 billion baht will go to health-related plans and financial aid to affected people, including the 5,000-baht monthly handouts to an estimated 9 million self-employed and laid-off people, which will be extended to six months from three months.

Those who give fake information to trigger the 5,000 baht cash handout will be prosecuted for fraud under the Criminal Code and are liable to a jail term of up to three years, a fine of up to 60,000 baht, or both, Mr Charnkrit said.

Lavaron Sangsnit, director-general of the Fiscal Policy Office, said the next payment of the 5,000 baht cash handout is due tomorrow and Tuesday for a total of 600,000 eligible applicants.

He said the number of people who registered for the 5,000 baht cash handout scheme rose to 26 million on Saturday.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 2:37 pm
by Big Boy

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 2:42 pm
by Big Boy
Today's numbers (will replace with better version if/when it is published) - updated:
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(267.37 KiB) Downloaded 548 times

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 2:49 pm
by HHTel
April 6th - 51 cases (a reduction of 50% over the previous day)
April 7th - 38 cases (a reduction of 25.5%)
April 8th - 60 cases (an increase of 36%)
April 9th - 54 cases (a reduction of 10%)
April 10th - 50 cases (a reduction of 7.5%)
April 11th - 45 cases (a reduction of 10%)
April 12th - 33 cases (a reduction of 27%)

It was said on the Irish video that 'social distancing must be adhered to even when staying at home!

At this rate, the rest of the world will be recovered and Thailand will have imposed even stricter measures.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 6:59 pm
by HHTel
I've just read that in contrast to Trump putting blame on the WHO and threatening to freeze any funding (We give more to the WHO than any country in the world) The Uk have just pledged 200 million quid to the WHO for their help.
Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust, gave the warning on Sunday as the UK Government pledged £200m to the World Health Organisation to help the fight against a second global wave of the virus.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/coronavi ... li=BBoPWjQ

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 7:22 pm
by HHTel
An excellent video on the development of a vaccine for covid-19, or any other virus. I found it very interesting and very much an eye-opener. A 'must watch' by Trump.
Produced by the Telegraph:


Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 7:48 pm
by HHTel
How China muzzled its Bat Woman: Beijing authorities hushed up the findings of a scientist who unlocked the genetic make-up of the coronavirus within days of the outbreak - which is vital for tests and vaccines
Another interesting article by the Daily Mail. It focuses on the 'Bat Woman'( who has just been released from lockdown) in the headline but then goes on to say that it's very possible the virus 'escaped' from one of the experimental labs close by. (Funded by the US government!!)

It mentions that animals after they are no longer useful in experiments 'may' have been sold to the Wuhan wet market.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/h ... li=BBoPWjQ

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 8:04 pm
by HHTel
Boris Johnson has been discharged from hospital, but on the same day Tim Brook-Taylor dies with covid-19.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 9:12 pm
by caller
HHTel wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2020 6:59 pmThe Uk have just pledged 200 million quid to the WHO for their help.
Pledged. not given. And I hope it is given with strings attached, such as not sucking up to China when China needed to be challenged over it's response to the virus. rather than the Director General attacking Taiwan instead. In fact, making the money available on condition of the DG resigning wouldn't be a bad thing either. Anyone that makes Mugabe a goodwill advisor isn't the full ticket.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 10:12 pm
by dtaai-maai
caller wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2020 9:12 pm
HHTel wrote: Sun Apr 12, 2020 6:59 pmThe Uk have just pledged 200 million quid to the WHO for their help.
Pledged. not given. And I hope it is given with strings attached, such as not sucking up to China when China needed to be challenged over it's response to the virus.
I don't see how the UK, or any other national government of consequence, can be too preachy in regard to Taiwan without recognising it as a sovereign state. People travelling on Taiwanese passports will be refused entry to the UK on the basis that they are stateless. Why? Because we're all sucking up to China!
Currently fifteen states recognise Taiwan as the ROC (and thus do not have official relations with Beijing): Belize, Guatemala, Haiti, Holy See, Honduras, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Nicaragua, Palau, Paraguay, St Lucia, St Kitts and Nevis, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Swaziland and Tuvalu

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 12:41 am
by HHTel
That is also a reason why Taiwan was not a member of the WHO. It wasn't for the want of trying but for Taiwan to be a member, it had to be agreed by the other member countries, and around 180 or so didn't recognise Taiwan. The reason of course is the One China principle operated by the PRC.
To afford diplomatic relations with the PRC, governments MUST surrender any recognition of the ROC. They get away with this because of their economic prowess.
Even the UN recognise Taiwan as 'Taiwan, Province of China'. Therefore, the member countries of the UN are all 'sucking' up to China.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 5:51 am
by handdrummer
In other words, they all suck.

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 6:56 am
by PeteC
Beijing tightens grip over coronavirus research, amid US-China row on virus origin

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/04/12/asia ... index.html

Hong Kong (CNN)China has imposed restrictions on the publication of academic research on the origins of the novel coronavirus, according to a central government directive and online notices published by two Chinese universities, that have since been removed from the web.

Under the new policy, all academic papers on Covid-19 will be subject to extra vetting before being submitted for publication. Studies on the origin of the virus will receive extra scrutiny and must be approved by central government officials, according to the now-deleted posts.

A medical expert in Hong Kong who collaborated with mainland researchers to publish a clinical analysis of Covid-19 cases in an international medical journal said his work did not undergo such vetting in February.

The increased scrutiny appears to be the latest effort by the Chinese government to control the narrative on the origins of the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed more than 100,000 lives and sickened 1.7 million people worldwide since it first broke out in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December.

Since late January, Chinese researchers have published a series of Covid-19 studies in influential international medical journals. Some findings about early coronavirus cases -- such as when human-to-human transition first appeared -- have raised questions over the official government account of the outbreak and sparked controversy on Chinese social media.

And now, Chinese authorities appear to be tightening their grip on the publication of Covid-19 research.

A Chinese researcher who spoke on condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation said the move was a worrying development that would likely obstruct important scientific research.

"I think it is a coordinated effort from (the) Chinese government to control (the) narrative, and paint it as if the outbreak did not originate in China," the researcher told CNN. "And I don't think they will really tolerate any objective study to investigate the origination of this disease."

CNN has reached out to China's foreign ministry for comment.

Increased scrutiny

According to the directive issued by the Ministry of Education's science and technology department, "academic papers about tracing the origin of the virus must be strictly and tightly managed."

The directive lays out layers of approval for these papers, starting with the academic committees at universities. They are then required to be sent to the education ministry's science and technology department, which then forwards the papers to a task-force under the State Council for vetting. Only after the universities hear back from the task-force can the papers be submitted to journals.

Other papers on Covid-19 will be vetted by universities' academic committees, based on conditions such as the "academic value" of the study, and whether the "timing for publishing" is right.

The directive is based on instructions issued during a March 25 meeting held by the State Council's task-force on the prevention and control of Covid-19, it said.

The document was first posted Friday morning on the website of the Fudan University in Shanghai, one of China's leading universities.

When CNN called a contact number left at the end of the notice, a staff member of the education ministry's science and technology department confirmed they had issued the directive.

"It is not supposed to be made public -- it is an internal document," said the person, who refused to reveal his name.

A few hours later, the Fudan University page was taken down.

The China University of Geoscience in Wuhan also posted a similar notice about the extra vetting on Covid-19 papers on its website. The page has since been deleted, but a cached version of it remains accessible.

The Chinese researcher who spoke to CNN said the notice was issued a few days ago, adding that only Covid-19 research was subject to the additional checks.

David Hui Shu-cheong, a respiratory medicine expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said he did not encounter any additional vetting when he and a team of mainland Chinese researchers published a clinical analysis of Covid-19 cases in the New England Journal of Medicine in February.

"The process was really simple then," he told CNN over the phone.

Hui said he was still revising the draft of the paper until 3 a.m. on the day it was due for submission, and the paper was sent to the NEJM by midday.

"There was completely no restriction at all," he said.

"I don't know if it is because some researchers published something that is considered sensitive domestically in China. (I'm) not sure if it is because of the controversy about the origin of the virus later, and the non-sensitive stuff becomes sensitive too."

Origin of the virus

In late December, Wuhan reported the first cases of the coronavirus, linked by authorities to a seafood market in the city. Scientists in China and the West have said the virus is likely to have originated in bats and jumped to humans from an intermediate host -- just like its cousin that caused the SARS epidemic in 2002 and 2003.

However, parts of Chinese social media and even the country's government appear to have launched a concerted campaign to question the origin of the virus.

Chinese officials and state media have repeatedly stressed that there has been no conclusion on the exact origin of the virus. Last month, Zhao Lijian, a spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, promoted a conspiracy on Twitter that the virus had originated in the US and was brought to China by the US military.

In China, research papers on the coronavirus are already subjected to layers of vetting after they are submitted to Chinese academic journals, according to an editor at a Chinese medical journal.

Wang Lan, the editorial director of the Chinese Journal of Epidemiology, said all Covid-19 papers have to go through an approval process for "major topics" after being submitted to her journal.

"It has always been the case," she told CNN. "They have to be approved by three levels of organizations. It's a long process."

The Chinese researcher who requested anonymity said under the new restrictions, however, coronavirus research that contradicted the official narrative could be suppressed by Beijing.

"I think the importance is that the international scientific community must realize that any journal or manuscripts from (a) Chinese research institution has kind of been double-checked by the government," said the researcher. "It is important for them to know there are extra steps between independent scientific research and final publication."

Re: Coronavirus (Covid-19) News

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 8:41 am
by buksida
I found this opinion article very good ...

LET’S NOT GET CORONAVIRUS-HYSTERICAL
Some Thais have found new scapegoats to demonize in coronavirus-Thailand – fellow Thais who returned from abroad.

They are the new pariahs, accused of importing and spreading coronavirus to the kingdom, deliberately or not. And the past week has been rather ugly and disgraceful for Thailand.

Last weekend, many local media and social media users turned toward vigilantism and posted the names and contact numbers of 158 Thais who returned from abroad but left Suvarnabhumi Airport without being put under state quarantine for 14 days.

The quarantine is parts of the latest government measures to contain the spread of the virus.

The Thai returnees who landed home on the night of April 3 were originally supposed to be taken to be quarantined by the state. After more than five hours of being stuck at the airport without knowing what’s next, they got upset and unruly. Under pressure, a major general who heads the government team at the airport relented and decided to let them leave the airport for homes.

The press claimed these people fled and within hours, a long list of all of the passengers with their contact details was posted online. The online witch hunt began, followed by the government’s demand that these people have to report themselves for 14-day state quarantine by 6pm of last Saturday evening. All of them eventually did, willingly or not.

These 158 Thais have been branded as irresponsible, a threat to not just public health but the public. Online vigilante brigade supports the government’s airport lockdown which since then extended to until April 18.

This led to dozens of Thais being stranded at airports in Tokyo, Amsterdam and Doha, putting themselves at higher risk of being infected.

Others who have yet made their way to airports are stranded abroad in countries across the world despite them having all the rights as Thai citizens to return to their home country.

The number of Thais wanting to return homes but told to wait until after April 18 is over 10,000 according to the government. Meanwhile, European embassies in Bangkok with much higher infections and fatalities have been busy getting social chartered flights to return homes as Thais abroad wait forlorn.

Coronavirus-phobia, or COVID19-phobia, rears its ugly head with the stigmatization of people who are suspected of being at high risk of infection as have never seen in Thailand since the early years of the spread of HIV AIDS decades ago.

Now anyone suspected of being at high risk of coronavirus infection, be it Thais who recently returned from abroad or stranded foreign tourists in Thailand are treated with not just fear and contempt but hatred. Ironically, this could lead to pushing them underground thus causing more infections.

Even at the same time some Thais fear tourists will spread the virus, the authorities until very recently subjected foreigners living in Thailand to a surreal visa extension ritual.

Throngs of foreign tourists densely queuing in places including Chonburi, Koh Samui and Koh Phangan for visa extensions became a common sight, thus risking mass infection when the government could have just offered automatic visa extensions without putting anyone at risk.

This is not just dumb but a disgrace to Thailand. It took the government until Wednesday afternoon to issue a blanket visa extension to these people, including migrant workers.

But thousands have unfortunately already been put at risks as a result of the government’s delay.

https://www.khaosodenglish.com/opinion/ ... ysterical/