Category: World

  • Saudi Arabia to bar arrivals from abroad to attend the haj

    The number of coronavirus cases in Saudi Arabia has exceeded 1,60,000, with 1,307 deaths

    Reuters

    Saudi Arabia said on Monday it will bar arrivals from abroad to attend the haj this year due to the coronavirus, allowing only a limited number of Saudi citizens and residents to make the pilgrimage with social distancing measures enforced.

    The announcement means this will be the first year in modern times that Muslims from around the world have not been allowed to make the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, which all Muslims aim to perform at least once in a lifetime.

    Makkah’ grand mosque during Haj. File
    Makkah’ grand mosque during Haj | File Photo | Photo Credit: AP

    “This decision is taken to ensure Hajj is performed in a safe manner from a public health perspective while observing all preventative measures and the necessary social distancing protocols to protect human beings from the risks associated with this pandemic and in accordance with the teachings of Islam in preserving the lives of human beings,” the Ministry that oversees pilgrimages said in a statement.

    The number of coronavirus cases in Saudi Arabia has exceeded 1,60,000, with 1,307 deaths, following a rise in new infections over the past two weeks.

    Some 2.5 million pilgrims typically visit the holiest sites of Islam in Mecca and Medina for the week-long haj. Official data show Saudi Arabia earns around $12 billion a year from the haj and the lesser, year-round pilgrimage known as umrah.

    The kingdom halted international passenger flights in March and asked Muslims in March to put haj plans on hold until further notice. International arrivals for umrah pilgrimages have also been suspended until further notice.

    Earlier this month, Malaysia and Indonesia both barred their citizens from travelling to Saudi Arabia for the pilgrimage, citing fears of the coronavirus.

  • WHO Director Warns World Leaders Not to ‘Politicize’ Coronavirus Pandemic

    AP

    Dubai, United Arab Emirates: World leaders must not politicize the coronavirus pandemic but unite to fight it, the head of the World Health Organization warned Monday, reminding all that the pandemic is still accelerating and producing record daily increases in infections.

    The comments by Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has faced criticism from U.S. President Donald Trump, came as the number of reported infections soared in Brazil, Iraq, India and southern and western U.S. states, straining local hospitals.

    It took over three months for the world to see 1 million virus infections, but the last 1 million cases have come in just eight days, Tedros said during a videoconference for the Dubai-based World Government Summit.

    Tedros never mentioned Trump’s name or the fact that he is determined to pull the United States out of the U.N. health agency but warned against “politicizing” the pandemic.

    “The greatest threat we face now is not the virus itself, it’s the lack of global solidarity and global leadership,” he said. “We cannot defeat this pandemic with a divided world.”

    Trump has criticized the WHO for its early response to the outbreak and what he considers its excessive praise of China, where the outbreak began, as his administration’s response in the U.S. has come under scrutiny. In response, Trump has threatened to end all U.S. funding for the WHO.

    Nearly 9 million people have been infected by the virus worldwide and more than 468,000 have died, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Experts say the actual numbers are much higher, due to limited testing and asymptomatic cases.

    “The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated that, indeed, the world was not prepared,” Tedros said. “Globally, the pandemic is still accelerating.”

    Companies around the world are racing to find a vaccine to counter COVID-19 and there is a fierce debate about how to make sure that vaccine is distributed fairly.

    Speaking later in the conference, WHO’s special envoy on COVID-19, Dr. David Nabarro, said he believed it would be “2 1/2 years until there will be vaccine for everybody in the world.”

    “Even if there’s a candidate by the end of the year, the safety and efficacy tests will take some time,” the British physician said. “And then the effort has to be put into producing large amounts of vaccine so everyone in the world can get it and then organizing the vaccination programs.”

    He added: “I would love it to be proved wrong.”

    In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said “everything needs to be done” to control an outbreak linked to a large slaughterhouse has infected over 1,300 people. Authorities started mass testing of all workers at the Toennies meat plant in the western Guetersloh region and have put thousands of people into quarantine. Authorities have dispatched virologists, contact tracing teams and the German army to help.

    “This is an outbreak that needs to be taken very seriously,” Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert said.

    India’s health care system has been slammed by the virus. The country’s caseload climbed by nearly 15,000 Monday to 425,282, with more than 13,000 deaths.

    After easing a nationwide lockdown, the Indian government ran special trains to return thousands of migrant workers to their villages in recent weeks. Nearly 90% of India’s poorest districts have cases, although the outbreak remains centered in Delhi, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu states, which are home to major cities.

    In Pakistan, infections are accelerating and hospitals are having to turn away patients, with new cases up to 6,800 a day. The government has relaxed pandemic restrictions, hoping to salvage a near-collapsed economy as the number of people living in poverty has risen to 40% of the population of 220 million people.

    In Iraq, masked workers were setting up makeshift coronavirus wards in Baghdad’s vast exhibition grounds as a long-dreaded spike in infections strained its overstretched hospitals.

    More than two-thirds of the new deaths of late have been reported in the Americas. The coronavirus has killed about 120,000 people across the U.S., over 50,000 in Brazil and nearly 22,000 in Mexico.

    U.S. authorities have reported more than 30,000 new infections a day recently but in New York City, once the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak, Monday was a key day for lifting many coronavirus lockdown restrictions.

    Yet Eve Gonzalez, a food industry worker in New York whose job hasn’t yet resumed, feels it’s too soon to relax restrictions.

    “I’m dying to go out, but people’s health is more important,” said Gonzalez, 27.

    Infections have slowed in China and South Korea, suggesting some progress in stemming their newest outbreaks. South Korea reported 17 new cases, the first time its daily increase fell to under 20 in nearly a month and Beijing’s increase was in single digits for the first time in eight days.

    The U.N. AIDS agency, meanwhile, warned that the pandemic could jeopardize the supply of AIDS drugs in developing countries.

    UNAIDS said lockdowns and border closures adopted to stop the spread of COVID-19 were affecting both the production and distribution of the medicines, which could result in higher costs and deadly shortages in the next two months. As of last year, UNAIDS estimated more than 24 million people were on life-saving anti-retroviral drugs.


    Associated Press journalists from around the world contributed.

  • Kathmandu on its side, China now woos Bangladesh

    Amid tensions with India, China offers Bangladesh tariff exemption for 97% of exports from Dhaka

    PTI

    Dhaka: China has provided a huge trade boost to Bangladesh by announcing tariff exemption for 97 per cent of Bangladeshi products effective from July 1.

    The decision has come one month after Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a discussion to upgrade their bilateral relations during Covid-19.

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh announced on Friday that 97 per cent of items would be exempted of Chinese tariffs.

    As part of the government’s economic diplomacy and the outcome of exchange of letters between Bangladesh and China, Tariff Commission of the Chinese State Council issued a notice recently on granting zero treatment to 97 per cent of tariff products of Bangladesh, a daily reported, quoting the ministry’s statement.

  • US invites China to arms control talks with Russia

    Washington and Moscow diplomats to meet in Austria on Monday and Tuesday

    Reuters

    Washington: U.S. Special Presidential Envoy Marshall Billingslea will travel to Austria on Monday and Tuesday to discuss “mutually agreed topics related to the future of arms control” with Russian Deputy Foreign Sergei Ryabkov, the U.S. State Department said on Friday.

    “The United States has extended an open invitation to the People’s Republic of China to join these discussions, and has made clear the need for all three countries to pursue arms control negotiations in good faith,” the State Department said.

    A view of a test missile launch in California | Photo Credit: Reuters

    U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly called for China to join the United States and Russia in talks on a nuclear arms control agreement to replace the 2010 New START accord.

    New START, which imposes the last remaining limits on U.S. and Russian deployments of strategic nuclear arms to no more than 1,550 each, expires in February.

    China, estimated to have about 300 nuclear weapons, has repeatedly rejected Trump’s proposal.

    Billingslea had said last week that he had agreed with Ryabkov on a time and place for the negotiations in June.

  • MMR vaccine might offer protection against worst COVID-19 complications: Scientists

    PTI

    Washington: The administration of a vaccine unrelated to the novel coronavirus, such as the one used for measles, mumps, rubella, or MMR, may serve as a preventive measure against the worst disease complications of COVID-19, scientists say.

    Researchers, including those from the Louisiana State University in the US, said live attenuated vaccines, which are made using weakened strains of a disease causing pathogen, provide nonspecific protection against lethal infections.

    They said these vaccines can induce “trained” innate immune cells for improved host responses against subsequent infections.

    In the study, published in the journal mBio, they said vaccination with MMR in immunocompetent individuals may be effective for health care workers who can easily be exposed to COVID-19.

    MMR vaccine might offer protection against worst COVID-19 complications, scientists say
    Representative image

    The researchers speculated that adults who had received the MMR vaccine in childhood likely still possess antibodies against the targeted viruses which at the very least would provide added protection against measles, mumps, and rubella for older adults.

    With the added induction of the immune system’s trained innate cells, they believe MMR vaccination could also provide protection against the “worst sequelae of COVID-19.”

    “In direct support of this concept, it was recently reported that the milder symptoms seen in the 955 sailors on the U.S.S. Roosevelt who tested positive for COVID-19 may have been a consequence of the fact that MMR vaccinations are given to all U.S. Navy recruits,” the scientists wrote in the study.

    The researchers have called for a clinical trial with MMR in high-risk populations, suggesting it may provide a “low-risk- high-reward” preventive measure in saving lives during the pandemic.

  • China charges 2 Canadians with espionage

    Their arrests in 2018 had followed the detention of Huawei executive by Canada

    Reuters

    Chinese prosecutors said on Friday they have charged two detained Canadians for suspected espionage, indictments that could result in life imprisonment, in a case that has driven a diplomatic wedge between Ottawa and Beijing.

    Former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor were arrested in late 2018 on state security charges, soon after Canadian authorities arrested Huawei Technologies Co’s chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, in Vancouver on a U.S. warrant. While China maintains the detentions are not linked to Ms. Meng, former diplomats and experts have said they are being used to pressure Canada.

    For their freedom: People seeking the release of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig in Vancouver last year.
    For their freedom: People seeking the release of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig in Vancouver last year. | Photo Credit: LINDSEY WASSON

    China has repeatedly called for Ms. Meng’s release, and has warned Canada that it could face consequences for aiding the United States in her case.

    ‘Stealing state secrets’

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a regular briefing on Friday that the indictments were “of particularly serious circumstances which violated Article 111 of the Criminal Law of the Peoples Republic of China,” which pertains to espionage and state secrets. Under that article, a conviction can carry a sentence of from 10 years to life imprisonment “when circumstances are particularly serious”. The charges mean a formal trial can begin.

    Canada has called the arrests “arbitrary”. The Canadian Embassy in Beijing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The ruling Communist Party’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission said last year that Mr. Kovrig is accused of “stealing and spying on sensitive Chinese information and intelligence.” It said Mr. Spavor provided Mr. Kovrig with intelligence.

    Mr. Kovrig works for the International Crisis Group, a non-governmental organisation that focuses on conflict resolution. Mr. Spavor, 44, is a businessman with deep ties to North Korea.

    Last month, Huawei’s Ms. Meng, the daughter of the founder of the telecoms giant, lost a legal bid to avoid extradition to the United States to face bank fraud charges, dashing hopes for an end to her house arrest in Vancouver.

  • U.S. following India-China face-off ‘closely’: envoy

    Secretary of State Pompeo condoles death of Indian soldiers

    A top U.S. diplomat on Thursday said China’s actions along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with India could be a negotiating tactic or a manoeuvre to demonstrate its superiority.

    David Stilwell, the U.S.’s top diplomat for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, also said the U.S. was following the India-China conflict “ very closely”.

    Later in the day, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted a message of condolence about the Indian soldiers who were killed in this week’s conflict.

    US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. File
    US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo | File Photo | Photo Credit: Reuters

    “We extend our deepest condolences to the people of India for the lives lost as a result of the recent confrontation with China. We will remember the soldiers’ families, loved ones, and communities as they grieve,” Mr. Pompeo said.

    Twenty Indian soldiers were killed in clashes with Chinese soldiers in the Galwan valley of Ladakh earlier this week.

    Past disputes

    “What we’re doing… we’re obviously watching the India-China border dispute very closely. It… this activity is similar to activity we’ve seen in the past on border disputes with the PRC [People’s Republic of China] and again, I would point you to those,” Mr. Stilwell said.

    He was speaking during a briefing with reporters on U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s meeting with Chinese Communist Party Politburo member Yang Jiechi.

    “The PLA invaded this contested area deeper and longer, with more people, than ever before historically. Again, whether that was a negotiating tactic or a … just a punch in the nose to demonstrate their superiority, I don’t know. But then we saw the Doklam issue down near Bhutan, where we saw similar concerns. I wish I knew. Again, we don’t have a lot of visibility and we don’t have a lot of open dialogue with our Chinese counterparts, and honestly I’d like to see more of that if we can,” Mr Stilwell said.

    His comments were in response to a question on whether there was a coherent policy behind Chinese fighters approaching Taiwan recently, China’s legislative actions in Hong Kong and the India-China border clash.

    “The actions that we’ve seen out of the PRC of late … have been not really constructive as we look at India, the South China Sea, Hong Kong issues, and just go around the perimeter,” Mr. Stilwell added.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Russia begins discreet moves to defuse India-China tension

    Russian diplomatic sources say that Moscow has “high stakes” at a global level, in the early resolution of tensions between the two Himalayan neighbours.

    A Russia has launched an energetic behind-the-scenes effort to defuse military tensions between India and China, ahead of hosting a trilateral RIC video conference, which includes External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, and Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, on Tuesday.

    Russia’s diplomatic activism began on June 17, when Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov discussed regional security, “including developments on the Line of Actual Control on the border between India and China in the Himalayas,” with Indian ambassador to Russia, D. Bala Venkatesh Varma. The meeting took place in the backdrop of the clash between Indian and Chinese troops in the Galwan valley, in which 20 Indian and an undeclared number of Chinese troops were killed.

    The Russian foreign ministry did not give any further details about the conversation, but Russian diplomatic sources told The Hindu that Moscow has “high stakes” at a global level, in the early resolution of tensions between the two Himalayan neighbours.

    “Good relations between India and China are central to the rise of Eurasia and the emergence of a multipolar world order, which is not dominated by a single pole,” the diplomat said. He pointed to the “centrality” of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), which includes India, Pakistan, Russia and China as well as most of the Central Asian Republics as the anchor of a “post-west” global system.

    “The persistence of tensions between India and China will not only have a huge negative impact on the SCO but also on the rise of the emerging economies under the Brazil Russia India China South Africa (BRICS) grouping,” the source said.

    But the diplomat pointed out that Russia would only like to play a constructive behind-the-scenes role, as both India and China were fully capable of resolving their differences.

    On Wednesday, Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of Russian President Vladimir Putin said reports from the China-India border were “very alarming”.

    “Certainly, we are watching with great attention what is happening on the Chinese-Indian border… But we consider that the two countries are capable of taking necessary steps to prevent such situations in the future and to ensure that there is predictability and stability in the region and that this is a safe region for nations, first of all, China and India,” Mr. Peskov observed.

    The Russian side has also spotlighted the importance of the RIC group, amid speculation that meeting of the three foreign ministers was being postponed on account of the ongoing border friction between India and China.

    “The existence of the RIC is an indisputable reality, firmly fixed on the world map. As for the current stage of the bilateral cooperation , there are no indications that it might be frozen,” Nikolay Kudashev, Russian ambassador to India Tweeted on June 17.

    In a separate Tweet , Mr. Kudashev welcomed “all steps aimed at de-escalation at the LAC, including the conversation between the two FMs (Foreign Ministers) and remain optimistic”.

    Regarding the RIC video conference, Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that the three foreign ministers will discuss the global political and financial trends following the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the opportunities to overcome the existing crisis.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov had earlier clarified in response to a question on whether the India-China standoff will be discussed at the RIC, that the trilateral format “does not include discussions on bilateral matters”.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • COVID19 | 1,50,000 new cases globally in a single day; World in a new and dangerous phase: WHO

    Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the world is entering a ”new and dangerous phase’.

    Reuters

    Geneva: The coronavirus pandemic is accelerating, with Thursday’s 1,50,000 new cases the highest in a single day and nearly half of them in the Americas, the World Health Organization (WHO) said.

    “The world is in a new and dangerous phase,” Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual briefing from WHO headquarters in Geneva. “The virus is still spreading fast, it is still deadly, and most people are still susceptible.”

    More than 80.53 lakh people have been reported infected by the novel coronavirus globally and 4,53,834​ have died, a Reuters tally showed as of 1900 IST on Friday.

    Tedros, whose leadership of the WHO has been severely criticized by U.S. President Donald Trump, urged people to maintain social distancing and “extreme vigilance.”

    As well as the Americas, a large number of new cases were coming from South Asia and the Middle East, Tedros added.

    ‘DRIVEN BY DATA’

    With many nations easing restrictions but fearful of a second wave of COVID-19 disease, WHO emergencies expert Mike Ryan urged a gradual and scientific approach.

    “Exiting lockdowns must be done carefully, in a step-wise manner, and must be driven by the data,” he said.

    “There is no specific definition of a second wave,” he added, saying new clusters did not necessarily mean a second wave while “second peaks” were also possible in one wave.

    Ryan praised Germany, China and South Korea for their handling of the pandemic.

    WHO epidemiologist Maria van Kerkhove said easing of lockdowns had to be accompanied with good public health measures. “It is about being able not only to lift these measures carefully but being able to reactivate them,” she added.

  • Malala Yousafzai, who was shot for going to school, now Oxford graduate

    London: Malala Yousafzai, the youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner who once took a bullet for campaigning for girls’ education in Pakistan, was over the moon on Friday after completing her degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Britain’s prestigious Oxford University.

    Ms Yousafzai, 22, who attended Oxford’s Lady Margaret Hall college, took to Twitter to share two pictures that show her celebrating the milestone with her family.

    “Hard to express my joy and gratitude right now as I completed my Philosophy, Politics and Economics degree at Oxford,” she said in the tweet, accompanied by two pictures – one showing her sitting with her family in front of a cake that says, ”Happy Graduation Malala”, and the other in which she is covered with cake smiling for the camera.

    In the tweet, the famed human rights activist also revealed her plans for the immediate future – Netflix, reading and sleeping.

    “I don’t know what’s ahead. For now, it will be Netflix, reading and sleep,” she wrote.

    Ms Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban terrorists in December 2012 for campaigning for female education in the Swat Valley in northeastern Pakistan.

    Severely wounded, she was airlifted from one military hospital in Pakistan to another and later flown to the UK for treatment.

    After the attack, the Taliban released a statement saying that they would target Malala Yousafzai again if she survived.

    At the age of 17, Ms Yousafzai became the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for her education advocacy in 2014 when she shared the coveted honour with India’s social activist Kailash Satyarthi.

    Unable to return to Pakistan after her recovery, she moved to Britain, setting up the Malala Fund and supporting local education advocacy groups with a focus on Pakistan, Nigeria, Jordan, Syria and Kenya.

    The Taliban, who are against girls’ education, have destroyed many schools in Pakistan. (PTI)