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Malaysian minister forced to climb fence to escape “gangster” group that gatecrashed Johor event

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Photo: Facebook screengrab/ @Yusrizat Idris

Johor Baru – Malaysia’s Youth and Sports Minister had to climb a fence to escape a large group of men who gatecrashed an event organise by his political party on Friday (Jan 31).

 

According to The Star Online, Mr Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman was at that time having a meeting in Ulu Tiram, Johor, with his Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia’s (PPBM or Bersatu) Armada youth wing and Srikandi women’s wing. Bersatu Chairman is Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.

 

However, the peaceful meeting descended into chaos when a group of about 200 uninvited men dressed in black gatecrashed the event.

 

Mr Syed Saddiq shared his experience on his Facebook profile. “They screamed rude remarks, insults and foul words,” he posted. “Their actions were aggressive and threatening.”

 

The group, who looked and acted like “gangsters”, demanded that the Youth and Sports Minister apologise to the Johor Crown Prince. Mr Syed Saddiq, who at 27 is the youngest-ever Cabinet minister, said he could not comprehend the reason for such a demand.

 

The aggressive behaviour of the group forced the minister to escape from the premises. He added in his post that he, together with a Melaka Executive Councillor and the Johor Bersatu party chief, were “forced to escape the scene through a backdoor route and climb over a fence – like criminals”.

 

Mr Syed Saddiq expressed concern for the safety of the women and children at the event.

Armada lodged a police report on Friday evening.

 

On Saturday (Feb 1), Inspector-General of Police Abdul Hamid Bador released a statement that two individuals suspected to be the “masterminds” of the incident had been arrested.

 

“We view this provocation and threats against the minister seriously,” he said. “The incident was committed by certain irresponsible parties who failed to respect the laws of Malaysia.”

The Inspector-General added that a special task force had been established to investigate the incident.

 

Video footage of the event, including those who were involved in the commotion, has been shared by the minister on Twitter. The recordings will be provided to the police to help the investigation, he said.

Mr Syed Saddiq’s Facebook post quickly garnered more than 13,000 comments. Many wanted action to be taken against the men who disrupted the event, while some criticised the minister for fleeing and for not facing up to the group. /TISG

Malam ini, saya dan Armada Johor berkumpul di Ulu Tiram, Johor. Kami rancang untuk duduk semeja, sembang santai dan…

Posted by Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman on Friday, January 31, 2020

DPM Heng: Govt will support firms and workers hit by economic slowdown from Wuhan virus outbreak

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Photo: Heng Swee Keat FB

Singapore — The Government will be providing targeted support to sectors that have been directly affected by the Wuhan virus outbreak, according to Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat.

On Saturday (Feb 1), Mr Heng visited Shangri-La’s Rasa Sentosa Resort & Spa with National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) Secretary-General Ng Chee Meng.

The hotel’s guests were Singapore’s first and third confirmed cases of the Wuhan virus.

While it was less crowded, Mr Heng was “glad to see that the staff were in good spirits”. Along with some photos posted on his Facebook page, Mr Heng included preliminary details on how the Government will address the virus outbreak’s effects on the economy.

“Safeguarding the well-being of our people remains our top priority,” he said. “The Multi-Ministry Taskforce has stepped up precautionary measures in the past week to reduce the risk of both community spread and the risk of more imported nCoV (Novel Coronavirus) cases.”

With the situation “rapidly evolving”, the Government is expecting a “knock-on impact” on related industries and firms such as those in the aviation, tourism and transport sectors.

press release issued by the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Trade and Industry on the same day noted that the Government has strengthened its 2020 Budget to address the possibility of a broad and intense economic slowdown.

“A package of measures to help viable companies stay afloat and help workers stay in their jobs” will be included in the Budget.

It said measures include helping firms with their short-term cash flow needs and supporting firms retain and train their workers during this period. This includes “providing some support for part of their wage costs”.

The Government will also continue to work together with tripartite partners to “restructure the economy, build new enterprise capabilities, and upskill our workers for the future”, the ministries added.

Mr Heng mentioned that the economic impact of the outbreak is understandably weighing on people’s minds. “But with this, we are prepared to do more. We will continue to monitor this closely and implement decisive measures as needed.”

“We can emerge stronger as long as we continue to work together,” he added in his post.

Details of the relief measures will be announced in the Budget Statement on Feb 18.

Read related:

PM Lee visits NCID, thanks staff for their work during Wuhan virus outbreak

Visited Shangri-La's Rasa Sentosa this afternoon to meet with frontline workers, together with Ng Chee Meng 黄志明 and…

Posted by Heng Swee Keat on Saturday, February 1, 2020

Wuhan virus outbreak: Whole of nation, not just whole of government, approach

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Photo: Airport travellers and flight crew. (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP)

So far there is a certain calm in the way Singapore takes the Wuhan coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak in its stride. No doubt, the experience gained from tackling SARS in 2002 has helped. The very fact that both originated from China – SARS in Guangdong  and coronavirus in Wuhan city in central China – does not make things easier, given the close links and high volume of human traffic between China and Singapore.

This perspective has to be borne in mind always.  There is hardly any distance between the two countries because of ease of travel and social and business intermingling. The World Health Organisation may have declared the outbreak a Global Public Health Emergency on January 20. But a casual scan of the top news headlines in the West over the weekend showed interest mainly on Brexit,  the Donald Trump impeachment trial, deaths of basketball superstar Kobe Bryant and his daughter and 18-year-old multiple Grammy awards winner Billie Eilish.  Not that much attention was paid to the Wuhan virus.

Somehow, Asia has to be on its own. The Wuhan virus may be our equivalent of Aids. Between the early 1980s and 2018, that pandemic killed an estimated 32 million deaths worldwide, with a huge number of fatalities in Africa. Handling the 2019n-CoV crisis may well be some kind of defining moments for both Singapore and China.

I just had an interesting conversation with a well-travelled young Singaporean, who has worked in Shanghai for more than a decade, on Thursday Jan 30. He saw the Wuhan virus crisis as an important opportunity for the Beijing government, or rather the Chinese Communist  Party, to strengthen its legitimacy. He said: “The last time, during SARS, it was a bit of struggle. China wasn’t all that ready. But since then, as with most things in the country, Beijing has accumulated enough experience and developed all the necessary templates to deal with such a crisis. It knows that not only are the eyes of its citizens but also the attention of the world is on how it goes about stopping the spread.

“This whole thing is not about window-dressing or putting up a coming-of-age party like during the 2008 Beijing Olympics. It is about applying all the necessary best practices to make a statement that it is as responsible a government as any elsewhere.”

I agree with him, up to a point. Speed of action and transparency are vital in today’s Internet world. The social media in China was already grumbling about the situation in the early stage. The Communist Party chief of Wuhan Ma Guoqiang said that the impact of the virus on the rest of China and on the world “would have been less” if the containment measures had been come sooner.  He added: “The measures we took on Jan 23 to suspend flights, high-speed railway, ferries and to restrict cars could have yielded  better results if we had taken them earlier, perhaps on Jan 12 and 13…Right now, I’m in a state of guilt, remorse and self-reproach.”

Beijing will deal with its problem in its own way but it certainly cannot afford to act like it is still a closed society or can continue to depend on a wait-for-instructions party machinery to move heaven and earth. Better to be safe than sorry. Here is the chance for it to get its act right, so that the public gets the proper information to understand and help cope with the outbreak. If it does not, there are political, social and life-threatening consequences far, far greater than simply having to apologise for incompetence.

In Singapore, the situation seems less scary on the ground than during SARS but the calibrated measures being taken do not mean that everything may not get worse as, according to National Development Minister Lawrence Wong on Friday Jan 31,  “The situation remains fluid, it’s constantly changing and we do not rule out taking further measures.” He was announcing the ban from Feb 2 on new visitors of any nationality with recent travel history to mainland China. These visitors will also not be allowed to transit in Singapore. Those with Chinese passports, with the exception of Singapore permanent residents and long-term pass holders, will also not be allowed to enter Singapore.

Far more important to the ordinary Singaporeans is: what exactly is the coronavirus , how does it spread and what can they do to prevent its spread? Of course, many would have already read the news and learnt through the media the answers to the three questions. They can also check out this authoritative WHO link:  https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-coronaviruses

There is now a whole-of-government action plan to contain the outbreak. No doubt, the government will have put in place all the best practices it has developed since SARS. These would include: zero-error entry point checks for air, sea and land, comprehensive quarantine procedures and facilities, state-of-the-art medical treatment and counselling and so on.

Right at the heart of the containment strategy must be public education. It may seem obvious. It is not. It is not enough to disseminate information through mainstream and traditional channels or to believe that the standard establishment grassroots outlets will automatically see it as their duty to explain because they themselves need to be educated in the first place.

I would suggest a whole-of-nation approach.

Do not exclude. Rope in all the social media platforms to pass the message. There is a whole new universe out there of people who do not now read newspapers or watch “national TV”. The government is worried about fake news. It should be equally worried that being turned off by MSM really means not tuning in to conventional media.

Finally, if it is not too late, the whole exercise of handing out masks is actually the best opportunity to educate everyone on everything that they ought to know and do about the Wuhan virus. Don’t waste it.

Tan Bah Bah, consulting editor of Theindependent.SG, is a former senior leader writer with The Straits Times. He was also the managing editor of a local magazine publishing company.

China exempts US imports from tariffs for virus fight

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Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead

Beijing announced Saturday that US imports that can be used in China’s fight against a deadly new virus will be exempted from retaliatory tariffs imposed in the trade war.

The decision comes as China is scrambling to contain the spread of the virus which has overwhelmed hospitals and caused shortages of medical supplies in the worst affected city, Wuhan.

The US and China have been engaged in a bruising trade conflict for around two years, although both sides came to a ceasefire last month with Beijing agreeing to buy a further $200 billion of US products in a partial trade deal.

But tit-for-tat levies remain on goods worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

On Saturday, China announced that it would “implement more preferential import tariff measures from January to March 2020, to step up support for prevention and control of the (ongoing) epidemic”.

Authorities added that “tariffs that have been levied (on goods used in the fight against the virus) can be refunded.”

Beijing said it would relax its rules on tariff exemptions, and this would extend to goods such as disinfectants, protective supplies and emergency command vehicles.

The new coronavirus has killed more than 250 people and infected nearly 12,000 across the country.

bys/lth/mtp

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Morning brief: Wuhan coronavirus update for Feb 2, 2020

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The latest updates on the Wuhan coronavirus. Infographic: The Independent SG (*The total death count now stands at 304)

As of 5am, Feb 2, 2020:

CHINA: There are 13,831 confirmed cases of infection in China, 4,033 more than this time yesterday. The death count of the virus has risen to 304 people—91 more than yesterday—and no deaths have yet been reported outside of mainland China. China has asked the European Union for assistance with procuring medical supplies, as the country is struggling to keep up with demands. In Wuhan, two purpose-built hospitals were built in under a week—with some 2,500 beds in total—and will begin taking in patients on Monday (Feb 3) and Thursday (Feb 6), respectively. In different cities and villages in China, flying drones are patrolling the streets and admonishing persons who are not wearing masks. Macao has reported no new cases, maintaining its count at seven cases of the Wuhan coronavirus. In Hong Kong, which now has 13 cases, thousands of medical staff vote to strike on Monday (Feb 3) for border closure with mainland China.

SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Health (MOH) on Saturday (Feb 1) confirmed two new imported cases of the Wuhan coronavirus, increasing the country total to 18 cases. The 17th case is a 47 year-old female Singapore citizen who travelled to Wuhan. The 18th case is a 31-year-old female Chinese national who arrived in Singapore from Wuhan on Jan 22. Both are currently warded in isolation rooms at NCID.

ASEAN: Thailand now has 19 cases, Singapore has 18, Malaysia has eight, Vietnam has six, and the Philippines and Cambodia both have one case each.

ASIA: Sri Lanka, which has one case, evacuated students from Wuhan on Saturday (jan 31). Taiwan confirmed new cases, with its total number now reaching 10. India currently has one case, and the country evacuated 324 of its citizens from Wuhan on Saturday (Feb 1). Japan has 20 cases, Nepal has one, South Korea has 12 and the United Arab Emirates has four cases.

EUROPE: The World Health Organization reminded the public of the importance of facts in the fight against the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak. The European Union will grant US$11 million (S$15 million) toward research on the coronavirus. Russian and Chinese foreign ministers have made vows to work together to fight the virus. Spain reported their first confirmed case of the coronavirus on Friday (Jan 31).

NORTH AMERICA: The United States confirmed its eighth case of the virus. The US Defense Department announced that it will be providing housing for around 1,000 persons who may be need to be placed under quarantine upon arrival in the country. Canada has four cases.

AUSTRALIA: Australia confirmed new cases, bringing the country total to 12. The patients are in isolation at the Royal Adelaide Hospital. The country announced a ban on that all foreign nationals who travelled to mainland China—they would not be allowed entry into the country.

AFRICA: As of yet, no confirmed cases of the Wuhan coronavirus have been reported in the region.

 

/TISG

Joanne Peh stays in China with her children amidst Wuhan outbreak, urges everyone to stay strong

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Photo: Instagram screengrab/ @joannepeh

Guangzhou, China – Amidst growing concerns for the Wuhan coronavirus epidemic, Joanne Peh has decided to stay in China with her children for personal matters.

On January 28, Tuesday, the Singaporean actress took to Instagram to share some first-hand experience of life in China during the Wuhan outbreak.

The actress began by describing this year’s Chinese Lunar New Year to be “unlike any other year.” Due to the widespread fear caused by the virus, people are choosing to stay indoors instead of celebrating the holiday, said Joanne.

She added that protective measures such as face masks and antibacterial sprays are sold out. Restaurants could be seen “peddling raw ingredients outside their premise because no one is patronizing,” the actress commented.

To lift everyone’s spirits, the 36-year-old A Tale of 2 Cities star shared that the weather in Guangzhou was “beautiful, sunny and pretty cold.”

“Even though our hearts are burdened by the uncertain nature of what’s happening, my husband and I squeezed out time to take a walk, just the two of us.”

The actress continued her post by saying that she and her children will remain in Guangzhou for personal matters while her husband will return to Singapore.

“To all who are separated from your loved ones, it isn’t a great feeling but stay strong, be safe and keep the light shining in your heart,” wrote Joanne.

An Instagram user asked the actress why she wasn’t sending her kids back to Singapore, where it’s safe while Joanne finished her business matters. She replied that the unfinished affairs involved her children and they didn’t make it in time before the CNY break.

The actress also revealed through an AsiaOne report, that she has been “stitching up” adult face masks to fit her kids and expressed her gratitude toward a fan from Shanghai for sending the items.

To further protect her family and herself, Joanne has established a “calm and predictable” routine which involves staying warm and hydrated, limiting exposure, and wearing masks outside to prevent virus contamination. The mother of two is teaching her children the importance of handwashing and limiting any hand contact on their face, nose and mouth.

Meanwhile, many on Instagram sent their best wishes to the actress and her family. /TISG

View this post on Instagram

This Chinese New Year is unlike any other year. The Wuhan virus has caused widespread fear as people stay indoors and avoid visiting; masks, antibacterial sprays are sold out; restaurants are peddling raw ingredients outside their premise because no one is patronizing. While I am thankful that family is together in spite of the circumstances, my spirits are dampened by what we are hearing and watching in the news. Today’s weather in Guangzhou is beautiful, sunny and pretty cold, so even though our hearts are burdened by the uncertain nature of what’s happening, my husband and I squeezed out time to take a walk, just the two of us, because tomorrow, he’d be flying back to Singapore while I remain here with the children to finish up some personal matters. To all who are separated from your loved ones, it isn’t a great feeling but stay strong, be safe and keep the light shining in your heart ?. #qitravelmoments

A post shared by Joanne Peh (@joannepeh) on

Impeachment trial paused, top Democrats rush to Iowa for 11th hour campaigning

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Facebook screengrab/Donald J. Trump

by Elodie Cuzin

Four US senators running for president paused their impeachment trial duties Friday to dash to Iowa, joining top rivals for a final weekend of campaigning before the state’s all-important vote launches the Democratic Party’s nomination contest.

After a Senate vote Friday paved the way for President Donald Trump’s acquittal of charges of abuse of power and obstruction of justice, the impeachment trial was put on hold, allowing all candidates to enjoy a breathless final 72 hours of campaigning before the Iowa caucuses.

Polls show a tight contest in the heartland state, where former vice president Joe Biden this week has been taking his “Soul of the Nation” bus tour to all corners in hopes it will help him cross the finish line in the top spot on Monday.

Former Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg, who is running in the same moderate lane as Biden, is also on the ground, arguing it is time to turn the page to more forward-looking, galvanizing leadership.

Biden, 77, “is making the case that this is no time to take a risk on someone new,” Buttigieg, who at 38 is less than half Biden’s age, told a crowd at the Masonic Temple in the town of Clinton, Iowa.

“I would argue, this is not the time to take the risk of falling back on the familiar or relying on an old playbook that helped get us to this point,” Buttigieg said.

The contest to see who challenges Trump in November’s election is a months-long slog, and those with minimal support have been peeling off. Former congressman John Delaney dropped out Friday.

Eleven contenders remain in the race, and several have pitched up seeking to woo undecided Iowa voters, snatch a victory here, and claim the all-important momentum going forward to the next contests, starting with New Hampshire on February 11.

Far-left Senator Bernie Sanders, who has a narrow lead in Iowa over Biden and Buttigieg, progressive Senator Elizabeth Warren, who is in fourth place in polling, and fifth-place Senator Amy Klobuchar were jetting in from Washington to mount their 11th hour pushes for support.

Trump’s Senate impeachment trial has effectively tethered them to Washington, but the proceedings adjourned Friday after the chamber’s Republican majority rejected Democratic efforts to subpoena witnesses and documents.

Closing arguments will be made Monday, with a final acquittal vote Wednesday.

– ‘Down to the wire’ –
For two weeks, the senator candidates have been campaigning with one hand tied behind their back, sending surrogates including relatives and high-profile lawmakers to campaign in their stead.

Among them is Sanders, 78 and the oldest candidate in the race, who enjoys strong support from young voters.

His team organized a campaign concert featuring indie rock band Bon Iver on Friday near Des Moines.

Sanders phoned in from Washington, rallying supporters to “do everything you can” to boost caucus turnout.

The senator is set to host a similar show featuring Vampire Weekend on Saturday in Cedar Rapids.

Warren is scheduled to attend a Friday night Get-out-the-Caucus rally in Des Moines, while Klobuchar is lined up for four events Saturday, at a brewery, a music venue, a women’s club and a school.

Nearly half of Democratic Iowa voters said they remained undecided before Monday’s caucuses, the local meetings where participants align behind their candidates in one of the country’s quirkier voting systems.

Among them is Stephanie Hull, a 21-year-old student who came to see Biden in the small town of Burlington.

“It’s a possibility” that President Barack Obama’s White House wingman earns her vote, she told AFP.

“I have a few other favorites right now, so it’s going to be down to the wire.”

Biden, whose global experience is unmatched among the candidates, has declared Trump a danger to America due to his erratic foreign policy.

“The next president of the United States is going to inherit a country that’s divided and a world in disarray,” Biden told attendees in his half-hour stump speech.

“There’s going to be no time for on-the-job training.”

Biden’s blue-collar roots and his uncanny ability to connect personally with voters are huge assets in a state used to face-to-face encounters with candidates, although his Iowa speeches have lacked the passion that animates some rivals.

Despite the agonizing over which political approach to take — revolution or realism — in the 2020 election, Iowa’s Democratic Party chairman Troy Price said voters have unified around one goal.

“There’s a lot of people that want to make sure that we defeat Donald Trump,” Price said.

Retired teacher Pat Carr, 69, thinks Buttigieg — a millennial gay military veteran — is best-suited to do that.

In an era of hyper-partisanship, he said, “I think Pete’s a person who might be able to unite a little better than some of the others.”

elc-mlm/to

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Hangings of Delhi bus gang-rapists postponed

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A policeman walks past as people hold a candlelight vigil in support of sexual assault victims (Photo by Manjunath Kiran / AFP)

The hanging of four men scheduled for Saturday for a notorious gang-rape and murder on a Delhi bus in 2012 has been postponed “until further orders,” a court ruled Friday.

The brutal attack on Jyoti Singh sparked weeks of demonstrations and shone a spotlight on the alarming rates of sexual violence and the plight of women in India.

Four men were convicted in 2013 and were due to be hanged simultaneously on Saturday at 6:00 am in India’s first execution since 2015.

A fifth, the suspected ringleader, was found dead in jail in a suspected suicide, while a 17-year-old accomplice spent three years in a juvenile detention centre.

The delay was because some of the men still have legal options to appeal their sentences including “mercy petitions” with the Indian president.

All are however widely expected to fail, with support for their execution appearing to be overwhelming within Indian society and among political parties.

Ahead of their executions, the media have been full of gory details including that the nooses will be smeared with banana to soften them.

Hangman Pawan Kumar, whose father and grandfather were also executioners, has given multiple interviews ahead of what will be his first job.

Singh, 23, was returning home from the cinema with a friend on a Sunday evening in December 2012 when they boarded a Delhi bus, thinking it would take them home.

The five men and one juvenile knocked the friend unconscious and dragged Singh to the back of the bus and raped and tortured her with a metal rod.

The physiotherapy student and the friend were then dumped on the road. Singh died 13 days later in a Singapore hospital from massive internal injuries.

Widespread horror sparked nationwide demonstrations and led to tougher sentences for sexual crimes.

Convictions though remain rare with victims scared to come forward and cases get stuck for years in India’s clogged-up criminal justice system.

Singh’s mother Asha Devi said Friday after the postponement that her “hopes were dashed” but that she would continue to fight for justice for her daughter.

stu/mtp

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

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

/AFP