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China’s isolation grows as virus toll reaches 259

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Photo: For illustration purposes only - (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP)

by Eva XIAO

China faced deepening isolation over its coronavirus epidemic on Saturday as the death toll soared to 259, with the United States leading a growing list of nations to impose extraordinary Chinese travel bans.

With Britain, Russia and Sweden among the countries confirming their first infections, the virus has now spread to more than two dozen nations, sending governments scurrying to limit their exposure.

The United States toughened its stance Friday by declaring a national emergency, temporarily barring entry to foreigners who had been in China within the past two weeks.

“Foreign nationals, other than immediate family of US citizens and permanent residents, who have travelled in China within the last 14 days will be denied entry into the United States for this time,” Health Secretary Alex Azar said.

That follows similar steps by countries including Italy, Singapore, and China’s northern neighbour Mongolia.

The United States, Japan, Britain, Germany and other nations already had advised their citizens not to travel to China.

– ‘Unkind’ –
Beijing, which insists it can contain the virus, began to show impatience over the growing ostracism, with the foreign ministry calling Washington’s earlier advice against travel to China “unkind”.

“Certainly it is not a gesture of goodwill,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said.

The US emergency declaration also requires Americans returning from the ground zero Chinese province of Hubei to be placed in mandatory 14-day quarantine, and health screening for US citizens coming from other parts of China.

The virus emerged in early December and has been traced to a market in Hubei’s capital Wuhan that sold wild animals.

It then jumped to humans and spread globally on the wings of a Lunar New Year holiday rush that sees hundreds of millions of Chinese people travel domestically and overseas.

With public anger mounting in China, Wuhan’s top official admitted late Friday that authorities there had acted too slowly.

– Mea culpa –
“If strict control measures had been taken earlier the result would have been better than now,” Ma Guoqiang, the Communist Party chief for Wuhan, told state media.

Ma said he was “in a state of guilt, remorse and self-reproach.”

Wuhan officials have been criticised online for withholding information about the outbreak until late December despite knowing of it weeks earlier.

China finally lurched into action more than a week ago, effectively quarantining whole cities in Hubei and tens of millions of people.

The rest of the country has been essentially put on a war footing.

The unprecedented safeguards imposed nationwide include extending the holiday, postponing school restarts and tight health screening on travellers nationwide.

But the toll keeps mounting at an ever-increasing pace, with health authorities on Saturday saying 46 more people had died in the preceding 24 hours, all but one in Hubei.

Another 2,102 new infections also were confirmed, bringing the total to nearly 12,000 — far higher than the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome outbreak of 2002-03.

SARS, which is similar to the new coronavirus and also originated in China, killed 774 people worldwide, most in China or Hong Kong.

The World Health Organization declared the outbreak a global emergency on Thursday but did not advise international trade or travel restrictions.

It warned Friday that closing borders was probably ineffective in halting transmission and could accelerate the virus’s spread.

But authorities around the world pressed ahead with preventive measures.

– ‘Latent racism’ –
Citing a likely “sharper rise” in infections, Singapore on Friday barred arrivals and transit passengers from mainland China.

Mongolia on Saturday toughened earlier restrictions by implementing a ban on any arrivals from its huge southern neighbour until March 2.

Impoverished Papua New Guinea went so far as to bar all visitors from “Asian ports” last week.

Adding to concerns over combatting the contagion, Thai health officials on Friday said a taxi driver became the kingdom’s first case of human-to-human transmission.

Thailand joins China, Germany, Japan, France and the United States with confirmed domestic infections.

The health crisis has dented China’s international image, putting Chinese nationals in difficult positions abroad, amid complaints of racism.

In one striking example, more than 40,000 workers at a vast Chinese-controlled industrial park in Indonesia — which also employs 5,000 staff from China — were put under quarantine, the facility said on Friday.

No one can enter or leave with out permission, said Pt Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park on Sulawesi island.

World markets tumbled again on Friday due to the uncertainty hovering over the world’s second-largest economy, a key driver of global growth.

Growing numbers of major airlines have suspended or reduced China flights, while corporate names ranging from Toyota to McDonald’s and Starbucks have shut down Chinese stores or production lines.

Countries have scrambled to evacuate their nationals from Wuhan, with hundreds of US, Japanese, British, French, South Korean, and Indian citizens evacuated so far, and more countries planning airlifts.

Russia said it would evacuate more than 2,500 of its citizens holidaying on China’s Hainan island, far from the epicentre.

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© Agence France-Presse

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Online, jetsetting and monitored: How life in China has changed since SARS

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A man wearing a protective mask takes pictures on the promenade of the Bund along the Huangpu River in Shanghai on January 21, 2020. - The number of people in China infected by a new SARS-like virus jumped to 291 on January 21, according to authorities. There have been nearly 80 new confirmed cases of the virus that has so far killed four people, with over 900 still under medical observation, said the National Health Commission. (Photo by HECTOR RETAMAL / AFP)

A new coronavirus originating from central China has killed 259 people and infected thousands others, stirring memories of the SARS outbreak nearly two decades ago.

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome — which also began in China — killed almost 800 people worldwide in 2002-03, with the Chinese government drawing condemnation for attempting to cover up the outbreak.

But dramatic lifestyle changes mean this epidemic is shaping up differently. Here are five ways life in China has changed since SARS:

– Travel boom –
Rising incomes have turned China into the world’s biggest source of outbound tourists over the past decade, according to the World Tourism Organization, and Chinese tourists are a huge source of revenue for many countries.

They made almost 150 million trips abroad in 2018 — nearly ten times the 16.6 million made in 2002, according to tourism ministry figures.

The travel boom has complicated efforts to control the spread of the novel coronavirus, with Chinese authorities urging citizens on Tuesday to delay trips abroad.

– Social media –
China’s online population grew from 68 million in 2003 to 829 million in 2018, according to the country’s cyberspace authority.

The popularity of social media platforms Weibo and WeChat has fuelled misinformation and memes alike, with users heading online to share bogus remedies for the virus and shame inept local officials.

The internet has also become a battleground between authorities keen to maintain stability and citizens alleging a cover-up.

Eight people were reprimanded by Wuhan police for allegedly publishing untrue claims on WeChat that SARS had re-emerged in the city, while hundreds of other people across the country have received punishments for “spreading rumours”, according to rights group Chinese Human Rights Defenders.

But China’s top court later admonished Wuhan for its heavy-handed response to the rumours, saying the city might have benefited from greater alarm earlier in the crisis.

– Migrant nation –
China became a majority urban country in 2011, with the country’s population of internal migrants nearly doubling from 2005 to 2018 to reach more than 240 million, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

Every year the world’s biggest travel rush takes place in China as workers head back home for the Lunar New Year from the cities where they work.

The timing of the coronavirus outbreak around the Spring Festival period has complicated efforts to control its spread. Authorities have set up temperature checkpoints at airports and train stations across the country and extended the long holiday by two days.

Millions of migrant workers are also locked out of public healthcare systems by strict urban registration rules.

– Surveillance –
With growing internet and smartphone use, Chinese people’s everyday actions are increasingly being mined for data by the government and corporations.

Beijing has come under increasing scrutiny for high-tech surveillance — from facial recognition-enabled security cameras to apps used by police to extract personal information from smartphones at checkpoints.

China’s railway authority on Thursday said it had set up a dedicated team to trawl through data and track down close contacts of infected train passengers.

– E-commerce –
At the time of the SARS outbreak, Chinese consumers shopped almost exclusively at brick-and-mortar stores and malls, with only 0.07 percent of shopping in 2003 done online, according to the UN Industrial Development Organization.

Now, e-commerce and local delivery apps have become commonplace in Chinese cities, and citizens worried about the coronavirus can choose to shop online instead of stepping foot in crowded stores.

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© Agence France-Presse

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Wuhan girl left heartbroken after mother dies of coronavirus on CNY

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Photos: The hospital where her dad is warded, her mom with flowers after her operation, and her mother's hospital bed/News Monger Facebook

The Wuhan coronavirus has claimed at least 213 lives in China and continues to spread  around the world. While the news of deaths and new cases is heartbreaking, the reality is almost unbearable for those who have lost loved ones.

The website of a Chinese television network, Phoenix Television, shared one Wuhan girl’s story of how she lost her mother to the coronavirus on the first day of Chinese New Year, a day meant to symbolise newness, hope, and happiness. As if that were not distressing enough, her brother and father are also infected and are battling for their lives.

This Facebook post is a translation of the girl’s touching story:

"My Mom Passed Away in an Isolated Ward in Wuhan." – A retelling of a Wuhan resident so powerful The article is from…

Posted by The Newsmonger on Wednesday, January 29, 2020

In early January, the excitement to welcome the Year of the Rat was palpable across China, including in Wuhan, Hubei province, ground zero of the coronavirus.

Qian Qian, the girl at the heart of our story, shares that her mother was at a hospital in Wuhan, having just undergone lung surgery on Jan 17.

Photo: Her mother received flowers from Qian Qian after her lung surgery/News Monger Facebook

On Jan 21, Qian Qian and family were shocked to hear that her mother had contracted the new virus, which posed complications to her recovery from the surgery.

“The hospital where Mom underwent surgery was not in Hankou, and none of us had visited the Huanan seafood market where the virus reportedly originated,” she wrote.

Qian Qian and her brother tried to visit their mother, but their dad insisted that they stay away, for fear of infection.

“I was still worried and wanted to go see her. I just had this thought that I had to see Mom and Dad and that I had to make sure that they are there because I had no idea what was happening. We were just gone for a day, how did it come to this? I was afraid, afraid that I might not see them again,” she shared.

Qian Qian’s father had not been diagnosed at the time, so he volunteered to take care of his wife. But Qian Qian and her brother had their misgivings.

“Should Dad go take care of Mom? If not, Mom will not be able to go to the bathroom, won’t be able to eat by herself. After Mom was put in an isolation ward, the hospital had forbidden takeout food and stopped supplying food, and my brother would be at risk if he was the one to deliver food. But if he didn’t, Mom will starve. How do we choose?”

On Jan 22, Qian Qian’s dad went for tests to see if he was infected with the coronavirus. When the results came out negative, the family was ecstatic. But, sadly, he had misread the results — he was indeed infected with the virus.

“He was devastated and absolutely would not stay in the same room as me … We have always been so close, and now we had to sit in 2 separate cars talking to each other not knowing where to go.”

With her father and mother both infected and warded in isolation rooms in hospitals, Qian Qian and her brother were at a loss as to what to do. Qian Qian shared that she made calls, “asking what the government is doing about it (the outbreak)”. She called the Mayor’s hotline, Women’s Federation, the Red Cross and even the National Health Commission.

“None of the calls I made were of any use,” she wrote.

As if things were not devastating enough, Qian Qian’s brother, too, tested positive for the virus, but no hospital would take him in.

On the night of Jan 24, just before the city lockdown, Qian Qian drove to Hankou to purchase some immunoglobulin (antibodies that aid in the destruction of bacteria and viruses), which was exorbitantly priced at ¥800 (S$157.5) a bottle.

“On the way home, I drove very fast so I could get back before the lockdown. I checked my watch and it was 12, the Year of the Rat and the Spring Festival had officially arrived. But there was nothing festive in Wuhan.

“I called Brother to wish him ‘Happy New Year’ and thought to myself that this new year had not been so bad, now that I had  got the meds for Dad, lots of them. Mom got herself day care as well. Our family will be together soon,” said Qian Qian.

Despite the lack of celebrations and the desolation in Wuhan on what was supposed to be the most festive season of the year, Qian Qian still had hopes for her family.
Those hopes were dashed the next day when, on the first day of the Chinese New Year, Qian Qian received news of her mother’s passing.

She had gone to the hospital to deliver medicines to her dad and mom. What happened next was heartbreaking.

“I put the meds in a corner of the isolated hospital building and walked away so my Dad could come and pick them up,” wrote Qian Qian. “Before he went back to the ward, he said ‘Mom might not make it’, which shocked me.”

Qian Qian’s dad said the hospital had called 10 minutes earlier and informed him that his wife’s organs were failing.

Qian Qian, still full of hope and determination, texted back: “She will make it. Mom has always been strong, have faith in her.”

“She won’t,” replied her dad. “The doctors are just going through the motions.”

Qian Qian knew it was true when the hospital called to inform them of her mother’s death from respiratory failure caused by the new coronavirus. She then called her brother, who had been lining up for hospital checkups for three days straight, from as early as 5am, but he was told he wouldn’t be able to see a doctor until 2.30 pm.

Qian Qian did not want to break the news to her brother, but she had to tell him:

“We don’t have our Mom anymore,” she said.

Both then went to their mother, although their dad and Qian Qian’s sister-in-law had insisted that it would be too dangerous. At the hospital, the doctor would not let them near her body. Her brother rushed into the ward anyway and screamed to the doctors that their mother still had a heartbeat! But it was not so.

“Brother was crying so uncontrollably in the ward he couldn’t breathe,” wrote Qian Qian. “I was worried about his exposure to the environment so I tried my best to pull him out.”

Photo: Her mother’s hospital bed/News Monger Facebook
Amidst the grief and pain of loss, there is some hope and determination left in Qian Qian.

“Let’s go bring the meds for Dad,” she told her brother, as they mourned their mother’s passing. “The rest of us have to live through this, we can’t lose anyone else.”

And so the father and brother, like many, many other individuals, continue their battle with the Wuhan coronavirus. /TISG

Bill Gates’ daughter is engaged

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Jennifer Gates just got engaged to Nayel Nassar. Picture: Instagram

IT tycoon Bill Gates’ daughter, Jennifer Gates just got engaged to Nayel Nassar, an equestrian athlete. Gates and Nassar shared on Wednesday that Nassar asked her for her hand in marriage and Gates, 23 said yes. Gates and Nassar uploaded photos of the diamond ring as well as the announcement to their fans on Instagram.

Gates wrote that Nassar is a stand-out and that he deeply inspired her the past weekend, astonishing her at a location that was important to the both of them.

She added that she cannot wait to spend the remainder of their lives learning, developing, laughing and adoring each other and she said her answer was yes a million times over.

Nassar likewise wrote in his Instagram account about his life partner.

Bill Gates’ daughter Jennifer Gates just got engaged. Picture: Instagram

According to him, she said yes and he feels like the most fortunate and most joyful man on the planet at the present time. He said that she is all that he envisioned in a life partner and more.

He said he cannot wait to continue developing together through this excursion called life and he can’t imagine his life without her any longer. He expressed his gratitude towards her for causing each and every day to feel like a fantasy to him. He finished with ‘here’s to forever!’

Gates is a medical student and an equestrian athlete. 2020 appears to be a bustling year for her. Bill Gates and spouse Melinda Gates presently have yet to say anything regarding the engagement yet but the couple recently celebrated their anniversary. January 1 marks 26 years of marriage for Bill and Melinda Gates.

Melinda posted on Instagram that New Year’s Day will be extra special for her as it marks a fresh year and opportunity to celebrate being married to Bill Gates. She said today makes 26 and she is still marvelling at how full a heart can get. She wished a happy anniversary to the man who keeps her dancing through life.

 

Probation for teenage e-scooter rider who crashed into woman, causing spinal fracture

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Fb screengrab/e-scooter.sk (Photo used for illustration purposes only)

Singapore—A nineteen-year-old man who was riding an e-scooter when it collided with a woman, which caused her to suffer from a spinal fracture, has been sentenced to one year of probation for his part in the accident.

Mohamad Danial Akid Mohamad Imran pleaded guilty last year to causing grievous hurt by a negligent act.

The woman whom his e-scooter collided into, 69-year-old Madam Cheng Joon Yin, experienced pain in her lower back every day for three months after the accident, according to TODAY Online.

Aside from his year under probation, Mr Danial is also required to serve 80 hours of community service.

Additionally, the teenager’s mother has posted a bond in the amount of S$5,000 to ensure his good behaviour.

Madam Cheng had been walking on the sidewalk close to 329 Jurong East Avenue 1 on her way to Jurong Polyclinic on March 11, 2019.

According to Mansoor Amid, the Deputy Public Prosecutor on the case, “As she was walking along the pavement, she turned her head, as a matter of habit, to check for cyclists or e-scooter riders. When she turned to face the front again… she saw that the accused and his e-scooter was already very close to her.”

Although she was startled, she managed to raise both hands in an attempt to stop Mr Danial, but the impact of the e-scooter bumping into her caused her to fall backwards.

Madam Cheng went to the accident and emergency department of the National University Hospital’s for medical treatment immediately after the collision. She was diagnosed with a lumbar spine fracture due to her fall when Mr Danial bumped into her, and was discharged the following day.

Madam Cheng said that in June of last year, her back hurt so much that she needed to sit down after standing for two hours.

An examination of Mr Danial’s e-scooter by the Land Transport Authority showed that the device was compliant. However, a probe into the accident revealed that the teen had not kept a watchful eye out for pedestrians and that he should have reached his speed while using his e-scooter on the sidewalk.

The maximum penalty for causing grievous hurt by a negligent act carries two years’ jail and a S$5,000 fine.

The accident occurred a few months before the ban on using e-scooters was announced in Parliament last November, in the interest of public safety.

At that time, Senior Minister of State at the Ministry of Transport Lam Pin Min wrote in a Facebook post, “Singapore is land-scarce, and with many competing needs, it is practically impossible to dedicate separate paths for PMDs everywhere.

Despite major efforts to educate safe and gracious riding, irresponsible riding and accidents involving e-scooters have risen over the past few years, leading to injuries and even loss of lives.

After a month-long review, e-scooters will be prohibited on all footpaths with effect tomorrow, 5 Nov. What this means is that e-scooter users will have to dismount and push their devices on the footpaths, before they get to the cycling and Park Connector Networks where e-scooters are still allowed.

It has not been a straightforward nor a easy decision, but public safety always comes first and should never be at the expense of the young and elderly amongst us.” -/TISG

Causing grievous hurt by a negligent act carries a maximum punishment of two years’ jail and a fine of S$5,000. -/TISG

Read also: LTA reports issuing 3,444 warnings to PMD users since e-scooter ban was announced

LTA reports issuing 3,444 warnings to PMD users since e-scooter ban was announced

 

Angelababy and husband donate more money after criticism from netizens

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Angelababy and her husband received backlash for their donation to the Wuhan virus outbreak. Picture: Instagram

Since the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, celebrities everywhere have been lending a hand by donating money and goods to help those in need in the capital of Central China’s Hubei province.

Actress-model Angelababy and her husband Huang Xiaoming reportedly donated money to buy masks for medical staff in Wuhan.

News Straits Times reported that netizens were not happy with the initial donation from the Chinese power couple.

The Siyuan Poverty Alleviation Fund disclosed their act of kindness on Weibo last week and netizens criticised the amount of the donation by Huang, 42 and Angelababy, 30 (whose real name is Angela Yeung Wing).

Huang and Angelababy donated 200,000 yuan which was not enough according to netizens.

A commentator wrote that the couple could spend 200 million yuan (39,352,283 SGD) for their wedding but when China faces a crisis, they can only donate 200,000 yuan (39,352 SGD).

After being criticised, the couple donated another 800,000 yuan, totalling the amount to one million yuan.

Angelababy and her husband got married in 2015 and they share a son together.

Angelababy’s marriage was rumoured to be on the rocks.

The speculation came after news of Huang was embroiled in a stock price manipulation controversy last year.

After six years of courtship, the couple tied the knot in 2015 and had a baby in 2017.

Angelababy and Huang Xiaoming top up Wuhan donation. Picture: Instagram

They first met through a mutual friend in 2009 at a karaoke bar.

Their wedding was attended by 600 people including prominent guests such as Ni Ni, Li BingBing, Wang Jianlin and Jack Ma.

Huang proposed to Angelababy in the United States with a Chaumet Josephine Aigrette Imperiale ring and it is worth over $8 million dollars.

He also surprised Angelababy on her 25th birthday with flowers and a HK$2.3 million Lamborghini.

Before dating Huang, Angelababy was in a four-year relationship with celebrity William Chan.

She was also linked to K-pop star G-Dragon.

Huang announced their wedding by posting their marriage certificate on Weibo. /TISG

US declares virus ’emergency,’ bans travelers from China

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Photo: YouTube screengrab, US Health Secretary Alex Azar

by Issam AHMED

The US said Friday it was declaring a public health emergency and temporarily banning the entry of foreign nationals who had travelled to China over the past two weeks to contain the spread of a deadly new virus.

Sweeping new restrictions will also be imposed on American citizens, with those returning from the province at the disease’s epicentre placed in facilities for mandatory 14-day quarantines, said Health Secretary Alex Azar.

US citizens coming from other parts of China will undergo health screening at ports of entry and then be placed under monitored self-quarantine at home.

“I have today declared that the coronavirus presents a public health emergency in the United States,” said Azar during a briefing at the White House, adding the directives would take effect on February 2 from 5:00 pm eastern time (2200 GMT).

“Foreign nationals, other than immediate family of US citizens and permanent residents, who have travelled in China within the last 14 days will be denied entry into the United States for this time,” he added.

The restrictions apply to people who have travelled to the designated areas in the two weeks prior to their attempted entry.

There have been seven confirmed US cases of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus, which originated in a live seafood market in Wuhan, in Hubei province, in December.

The World Health Organization has already declared the epidemic a global emergency, and the Chinese death toll has risen to 259 while total infections reached nearly 12,000, surpassing the SARS epidemic of two decades ago.

Three US airlines, American, Delta and United said they would soon suspend all flights to China.

– First federal quarantine in 50 years –
Earlier, officials imposed mandatory 14-day quarantine orders on 195 Americans who were air evacuated from Wuhan, the first time a federal directive of this kind was issued for more than 50 years. The last case involved a person who was evaluated for smallpox in the 1960s.

A plane carrying the repatriated citizens, who include diplomats and their families, touched down at the March Air Reserve Base in Riverside, California, on Wednesday and officials initially said the passengers would be asked to voluntarily isolate themselves for up to 72 hours.

Early signs were good, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared that none of the individuals showed symptoms of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus.

One of the individuals tried to leave the base and was placed under quarantine by the state of California, said CDC official Marty Citron, before the federal action.

– Questions over test accuracy –
The repatriated group submitted samples for testing at the CDC headquarters in Atlanta — but officials now say they are not certain about the accuracy of their diagnostic tools.

“We are seeing in the cases that are in the hospital, we’ve seen people who had detectable virus, and they didn’t have the technical virus, and then three days later they had detectable virus,” said Robert Redfield, the CDC’s director.

Given that the extent of asymptomatic transmission was not yet clear, a negative test was not being used as a release criteria.

“It isn’t like it’s a horrible test, but it is not a test that’s absolute,” added CDC immunologist Anthony Fauci.

Despite the seemingly drastic actions, the US public “should not let fear or panic guide your actions,” said senior CDC official Nancy Messonnier, but instead exercise normal precautions for stopping the spread of respiratory viruses.

These include washing your hands thoroughly for at least 20 seconds, disinfecting surfaces, staying home when sick and covering your cough or sneeze with a tissue and then throwing it in the trash.

“We do not currently recommend the use of facemasks for the general American public,” said Messonnier. “This virus is not spreading in your communities.”

“Please do not assume that just because someone is of Asian descent that they have this new coronavirus,” she added, noting there are four million Chinese Americans in the United States.

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© Agence France-Presse

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Chan Chun Sing: Hoarding masks will “destroy the system”

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Photo: from Facebook / Lawrence Wong

With the total count of confirmed novel coronavirus cases in Singapore going up to 16 this week, people have gone to extreme measures such as hoarding masks.

According to Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing on Thursday (Jan 30) who addressed this problem, he said that saying that doing such things out of fear and panic will do nothing but “destroy the entire system.”

With fear hanging in the air, people have gone to drastic measures in order to secure protective face masks amid the growing concern over the Wuhan outbreak. Recently, long queues outside stores selling masks have become quite a common sight in Singapore–not to mention unreasonably high prices re-sellers have listed them for online. Online prices have gone as high up as S$288 for a box of 20 N95 masks.

Read related: Stores run out of masks, prices online reach S$288

In order to help meet the need of the growing demand, in the past nine days, the Government took 5 million masks from its stock and gave them to retailers. However, only after a few hours of the release, stocks were depleted. The Government bases its management of Singapore’s national mask stockpile by taking into consideration the current number of masks in its stockpile, the rate at which Singaporeans are consuming this stockpile, and the rate and quantity of its resupply. However, with some people resorting to rather selfish methods of ensuring their safety, Mr Chan says that the equation has been upset.

“We understand that when people are fearful, there’s a tendency to panic buy or hoard. But this is not very useful to the entire system,” he reminded.

On Thursday (Jan 30), Minister for National Development Lawrence Wong, who is co-chair of the multi-ministry task force for combating the Wuhan outbreak, said that Singapore would best be prepared for the implications of the banning of mask exportation in countries worldwide. “The current rate of consumption of masks in Singapore is not sustainable… especially with the global shortage and the likely export bans,” he said.

Though many are following the advisory to stay calm and to remain vigilant, some have let fear get the best of them, leading them to hoard supplies. Mr Chan referred to such actions as “selfish” and “inappropriate.”

“Prepare for the long haul but never, never succumb to short-term fears and panic buying and hoarding behaviours, because this will destroy the entire system we have,” he said. He also urged people to be aware of the fact that Singapore is not the only country in need of such supplies, mentioning other crises around the world such as the Australia bushfires. “Collective defence is our strongest defence. We must all act in unison and not jeopardise the entire system by doing things that we think might benefit and protect ourselves, to the detriment of all else and everyone else in society,” he said.

On the other hand, with regard to resellers who seek to take advantage of the high demand for masks given the frightening situation, the Government is set to take action against such over-chargers.

Mr. Wong assures that if people will cooperate and act responsibly, then Singapore will not have to worry about an insufficient mask supply as there will be enough to go around. /TISG

Prince Harry “going through rough times” since stepping back from royal duties

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Prince Harry has been suffering since stepping down as a royal. Picture: Instagram

Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, has been going through rough times since stepping down from royal duties on Jan 8.

This was disclosed by a close friend of his, Nacho Figueras, in an ABC News documentary about the royals that was aired on Jan 29.

The moment Prince Harry and Meghan Markle announced that they were stepping down as senior royals, the news shook the world. Their announcement left the royal family rather unhappy as they did not inform anyone beforehand.

It was reported that his brother, Prince William, felt blindsided although he later reached out to the couple, that his father Prince Charles was incandescent with rage, and that his grandmother the Queen called it a complicated issue. The whole incident was a mess but nobody asked what Prince Harry and Markle were going through.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will “balance” their time between Canada and Britain. Picture: Instagram

Figueras was one of those who took notice of it. Insiders have shared that Markle was doing well in Canada. However, the whole incident has been quite rough on Prince Harry.

In the ABC News documentary, Royal Divide: Harry, Meghan and the Crown, Figueras revealed how Prince Harry had been faring. He had spoken to the prince a few days  earlier and found that he had suffered a lot from everything that had happened to him. He had also suffered from people judging him.

Furthermore, Figueras shared, the prince was getting scrutinised for trying to do what was best for his family. He said Prince Harry was being a father, and a guy who was trying to protect his cub and lioness no matter what.

The documentary, which interviewed royal experts and people who had written about the royal family, discussed the prince’s reasons for stepping down. Also under focus was the different treatment accorded by British tabloids to Markle and to Kate Middleton, the wife of Prince William. /TISG

Lyrics suggest Taylor Swift may be engaged

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Taylor Swift was spotted with a diamond ring. Picture: Instagram

Taylor Swift shared about her personal life in her new documentary Miss Americana. She also revealed a pear-shaped diamond on her ring finger. Could it be that the ‘Lover’ hitmaker is engaged?

While it may seem unexpected, there were some hints that something huge like an engagement could have happened, or is set to happen.

Rumours about her being engaged to boyfriend Joe Alwyn started last August when Swift launched her seventh album titled ‘Lover’.

The lyrics to hit single ‘Lover’ could be hints at her engagement.

Taylor Swift may be engaged. Picture: Instagram

Swift sings “I take this magnetic force of a man to be my lover” and “My heart’s been borrowed and yours has been blue.”

With fans speculating whether or not there was any truth to the matter, they added that only a diamond would count as proof.

Swift was discussing her disapproval of Tennessee-born Republican Senator-elect Marsha Blackburn in the documentary.

She was sitting with her parents and two team members who are male. That was the moment where the diamond was spotted.

Swift said she wants to be on the right side of history while showing off her ring.

Although she has not said about it yet, it is possible that Swift may be engaged.

In other news, Swift turned 30 on Dec 13 last year saying she is feeling a bit more secure about approaching her thirties.

Swift spoke about this in a video interview with British Vogue’s Editor in Chief Edward Enninful.

The singer also said that her age helped her analyse toxic messages about her body and improve her relationship with body positivity.

Swift said she is excited that she can now really recognise and diagnose toxic messages being sent to her by society and by culture about her body.

She said that she is a woman, not a coat hanger and that she needs to feel healthy in life. She needs to take pleasure in food and not to use her body as a tool to control her life when she feels out of control.
Taylor who started her singing career in her teens said believes the next decade will bring her more freedom and control with her music. /TISG