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Daily Archives: September 8, 2021
Chamber Of Commerce Frustrated With Tariffs But Sees Trade Progress – Forbes
Posted: September 8, 2021 at 10:11 am
Containerized cargo is stacked high on a China Shipping Line freighter at Miami Beach, Florida. ... [+] (PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP via Getty Images)
So far, the Biden administrations trade policy has not been much different than the America First trade policy championed by Donald Trump. That may surprise some observers, given that economists viewed the Trump trade policy as imposing significant costs on consumers and businesses while unsuccessful in achieving its aims. To better understand the views of the business community on the Biden administrations approach to trade, I interviewed John Murphy, senior vice president for international policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Stuart Anderson: The Biden administration has launched a comprehensive review of U.S. trade policy and set the goal of making it worker-centric. Whats your impression of this approach to date?
John Murphy: Its early, but theres both progress and frustration for the business community. The administration has pledged to restore regular order to trade policy by working more closely with Congress and the private sector, and theres good dialogue today. U.S. Trade Representative Tai deserves kudos for ending the long-running U.S.-EU trade dispute over aircraft subsidies and rejecting unwarranted tariffs on imports from Vietnam.
As for that worker-centric approach, its evident in the outreach to organized labor. This has led the administration to focus on issues such as union organizing rights in Mexico, for example. From our perspective, though, the U.S. needs to get back on offense on trade: Other countries are charging ahead with their own trade negotiations while the U.S. has not entered into a major new market-opening trade agreement in a decade. Forty million American jobs depend on trade: A worker-centric trade policy should open markets for their exports.
Anderson: Does business support this trade policy review?
Murphy: Yes, but as a country we need to expedite it, and we shouldnt get bogged down on questions that are pretty straightforward. Theres no reason the U.S. shouldnt move ahead with the trade negotiations with the UK and Kenya, for example. Declaring we have to address domestic economic priorities first isnt an answer: Trade is one of the best tools to strengthen our domestic economy.
Anderson: What about the tariffs Biden inherited from Trump?
Murphy: The business communitys frustration with the tariffs is growing. Theyre costly, they cover hundreds of billions of dollars of imports, and theyre still there. American families and companies are paying these taxes, as they have from the beginning.
Take the steel tariffs: Steel prices have soared by more than 300% in the past year, and six million American workers are employed by manufacturers that use steel as a critical input. Turning the U.S. into an island of expensive steel puts Americas most innovative and fastest growing manufacturers at a disadvantage relative to their global competitors. And steel imported from allies in Europe, Japan or Korea presents no threat to U.S. national security, which is the focus of the Section 232 statute. Tariff relief is an urgent priority.
Anderson: Were there costs to the Trump administrations trade policy?
Murphy: The Trump administration made tangible progress in select areas like digital trade, as we saw in a U.S.-Japan agreement and USMCA (United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement). The structural reform commitments in the U.S.-China trade deal represent tangible progress. But the repeated threats to withdraw from trade agreements and the imposition of tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of imports imposed real costs. By 2019, the drag on investment was visible, FDI (foreign direct investment) declined and U.S. manufacturing fell into a recession; for agriculture, it would have been a depression absent government support. The reason folks dont talk about it more today is the coronavirus pandemic hit and produced an even bigger disruption. We should learn from this record.
Anderson: What are the Chambers priorities on trade policy in 2021 and 2022?
Murphy: In addition to rebooting a market-opening trade agenda and untangling the tariffs, we want to establish the foundation of a trade policy that supports growth in tomorrows industries to ensure continued innovation, growth and job creation here at home.
For example, the idea of negotiating a digital trade agreement with partners in the Asia-Pacific and elsewhere presents real opportunity. New digital trade tools are allowing huge numbers of small businesses to tap foreign markets. Services trade is now growing twice as fast as merchandise trade, thanks to digital tools. But protectionist barriers to digital trade are also spreading, so an agreement to keep the digital trade lanes open is important.
Its equally important to avoid self-inflicted wounds. The pursuit of an intellectual property waiver for Covid-19 vaccines at the WTO (World Trade Organization) not only wont help increase vaccine productionwhich is growing rapidly by any accountbut threatens to divert limited supplies of critical inputs away from the facilities best prepared to manufacture these complex medicines. Creating industry partnerships is the path forward, not breaking patents.
Anderson: What role would you like to see Congress play in trade policy?
Murphy: The Constitution gives Congress the exclusive authority to regulate foreign trade and levy tariffs, and too much of this authority has been delegated to the executive. We strongly support legislation to ensure that Congress always has a say in the imposition of tariffs. And further down the road, we hope to see Trade Promotion Authority restored to ensure that Congress sets the priorities for trade negotiations and is consulted in trade talks.
Anderson: What would be the Chamber of Commerces ideal trade policy for the United States?
Murphy: A trade policy utopia . . . doesnt utopia mean a place that doesnt exist? But as an organization that represents businesses of every size, sector and state, we are leery of proposals that would impose costs on the many to advantage the fewand usually a well-connected few at that. This is too common in trade policy, across history and around the world. Historically, America has gotten this right much of the time, more than many other countries, and Im optimistic we can do so in the future.
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Chamber Of Commerce Frustrated With Tariffs But Sees Trade Progress - Forbes
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Gail Omvedts anti-caste vision – The Indian Express
Posted: at 10:11 am
Gail Omvedts anticaste writings have a unique influence on the Dalit-Bahujan movement in Post-Independent India. Her intellectual activism was organised around a critique of inequality and the struggle for social justice in India. We know that Omvedt was influenced by Buddha, Kabir, Phule, and Ambedkar. Her work clearly outlines the vision of a casteless, classless, and democratic just society, and reflects the important ways in which the non-brahmin movement and the dissenting religious imagination produce the anti-caste intellectual thought in India. Indeed, Omvedts literature reminds us of the radical bhakti movements in the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries as a society of equalitarianism and the rejection of the traditional brahminic hegemony.
In 2012, when I was in the first year of my Bachelors degree, back in Nagpur I came across her writings. I read her first seminal book The Cultural Revolt in a Colonial Society: The Non-Brahman Movement in Western India. It took me one whole day to finished her book. After finishing it, my interest in Omvedts work increases in great detail. The second book which caught my attention was We Will Smash This Prison: Indian Women in Struggle. Her scholarly writings shown the concrete problem of organising autonomous womens movement in India. For her, womens liberation from daily caste experience and patriarchy was important for social emancipation.
Omvedts commitment to democracy as well as her superb writings provide a rich account of the socio-cultural meaning of the Dalit movement. In many ways, her contribution to Dalit literature emerged as a strong voice of the oppressed caste in the state of Maharashtra and later in other states. Interestingly, Omvedt suggested that Dalit protest was a key factor in shaping the discourse of rights and constitutional safeguard. It is worth noting that her intellectual activism focused on the agency of the Dalits and challenged the limits of the politics of the left and Hindutva impulses to rediscover India.
My friend had gifted me Omvedts book Seeking Begumpura: The Social Vision of Anticaste Intellectual. The book acquires significance because it traces the cultural movement of depressed classes and their social experiences. She offers a critical understanding of Indian history. In contrast to Gandhis village utopia of Ram Rajya, she emphasises the relevance of Dalit-Bahujan anti-caste intellectuals in the era of globalisation.
Omvedt grasped the importance of morality as a movement from a Phule-Ambedkarite perspective. She charted the utopian vision and underlined the new social and political project against communalism. She deeply engaged with the unequal and culturally diverse society through her numerous writings and activism. While rejecting orientalist, nationalist, and Hindutva imaginations of India, she undoubtedly gave a distinct development turn to it by avowing egalitarianism, Buddhism to reconstruct the world.
Although I did not Omvedt personally, but her rare blend of work brings together the Dalit-Bahujan history, politics, culture, a religious movement, and of lives that had been buried under long Brahmanic tradition in India. Being a social thinker, she provided deep insights into the grassroots level of Dalit leadership like Dadasaheb Sambhaji Tukaram Gaikwad who played a revolutionary role in organising the Mahad Satyagraha in 1927. Omvedts scholarship is valuable for researchers, activists, farmers and all those who are engaged in progressive social movements in India.
Besides being active in the social and cultural movement, Omvedt was significantly involved in the social transformation of Dalit women. She presents a social world where caste humiliation and class exploitation and gendered violence exist as a fact of the everyday life of the marginalised section. In fact, Omvedts valuable work asks for forging democratic solidarity among all the marginalised sections to reinvent India. In todays higher learning education, Dalits-Bahujan students actively face caste discrimination, and anti-caste literatures have been withdrawn from the university syllabus. This needs to be challenged.
The writer is a PhD Scholar at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai
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Welcome to New Zealand | Official site for Tourism New Zealand
Posted: at 10:10 am
Now that the world is standing still, what are you dreaming of?
Across NewZealand, you can find everything from untamed wilderness to rich culture. Find inspiration in towering mountains and mist-cloaked fjords. Serenity in golden beaches curled around quiet bays. New friends in small towns with big doses of laid-back charm.
When the world starts to move again, find your dream destination here.
See all things to do|North Island destinations | South Island destinations
Now that the world is standing still, what are you dreaming of?Across NewZealand, you can find everything from untamed wilderness to rich culture. Find inspiration in towering mountains and mist-cloaked fjords. Serenity in golden beaches curled around quiet bays. New friends in small towns with big doses of laid-back charm. When the world starts to move again, find your dream destination here.
See all things to do|North Island destinations | South Island destinations
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Welcome to New Zealand | Official site for Tourism New Zealand
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New Zealand police shoot dead ‘ISIS-inspired extremist …
Posted: at 10:10 am
The attacker had been a "person of interest" since 2016, police said.
September 3, 2021, 8:57 AM
4 min read
New Zealand is reeling from a knife-wielding rampage at a busy Auckland supermarket that left six fighting for their lives and the assailant dead. Authorities have called it a terror attack.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern confirmed that the man behind Friday's terrorist attack in Auckland, who was shot dead by police after he stabbed six people in a supermarket, was inspired by ideologies of the Islamic State militant group.
"A violent extremist undertook a terrorist attack on innocent New Zealanders," Ardern said at a briefing Friday afternoon.
Three of the six victims were critically injured, one is in serious condition and two are in moderate condition, police said.
The attacker, who cannot be identified under local laws, was a Sri Lankan national who arrived in New Zealand in 2011. He had been a "person of interest" and under heavy surveillance by the New Zealand police and Special Tactics Group since 2016, Ardern said.
Police stand outside the site of a knife attack at a supermarket in Auckland, New Zealand, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. New Zealand authorities say they shot and killed a violent extremist after he entered the supermarket and stabbed and injured six shoppers. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described Friday's incident as a terror attack. (AP Photo/Brett Phibbs)
The attack took place at LynnMall in the district of New Lynn on Friday afternoon. Officers, who were closely following the man, watched as he entered the Countdown supermarket.
Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said they believe the man took a knife from one of the supermarket shelves. The officers on the scene "challenged the man and diverted his attention." Police shot and killed him within one minute of beginning the attack.
"We were doing absolutely everything possible to monitor him and indeed the fact that we were able to intervene so quickly, in roughly 60 seconds, shows just how closely we were watching him," said Coster during Friday's briefing.
A parking lot of a supermarket that was the site of a knife attack sits empty in Auckland, New Zealand, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. New Zealand authorities say they shot and killed a violent extremist after he entered the supermarket and stabbed and injured six shoppers. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described Friday's incident as a terror attack. (AP Photo/Brett Phibbs)
Coster said the attacker was a "lone actor" and authorities are confident there is no further threat posed to the public.
When asked why police resisted arresting or deporting the attacker in recent years, despite "his interest in extremist ideology," Ardern said authorities did everything they could, within the legal means, "to keep people safe from this individual."
"What happened today was despicable. It was hateful. It was wrong," Ardern said.
"It was carried out by an individualnot a faith, not a culture, not an ethnicity, but an individual personwho was gripped by ideology that is not supported here by anyone or any community," she added. "He alone carries the responsibility for these acts. Let that be where the judgment falls."
New Zealand has been on high alert for terror attacks since early 2019, when a white supremacist gunman killed 51 people at two mosques in Christchurch. This May, four people were stabbed in a supermarket in Dunedin on the country's South Island.
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New Zealand to rethink plan to reopen borders amid Delta outbreak – The Guardian
Posted: at 10:10 am
New Zealands plans to reopen its borders to the world early next year will have to undergo a complete reworking, the government has warned, as the country races to stamp out an outbreak of the highly infectious Delta variant.
The nation recorded 15 new cases of coronavirus in the community on Wednesday, bringing the total number in the outbreak to 855.
It was the fifth day in a row that case numbers have been at or below 21, in an encouraging sign the country is on its way to stamping out the virus. But how the virus got into the community in the first place remains a mystery.
All of the new cases were in Auckland, which remains in a level 4 lockdown until next week, and all but two were epidemiologically linked to existing cases. There were 25 unlinked cases in total. Three-quarters of the recorded cases were in isolation throughout the period they were infected.
The rest of the country was in level 2, although some restrictions remained on gathering size and using masks in some public places.
The likelihood of New Zealand reopening its border to the world any time soon is looking less promising. The country has had strict border measures in place since the pandemic started.
Hipkins told parliament on Tuesday night that the governments reopening plan, unveiled just days before the outbreak would have to be completely re-worked.
Part of that strategy included risk-profiling of other countries, so places with high rates of vaccination and low levels of Covid-19 could be treated differently to places where the virus was rampant.
We were looking at a situation where you could stratify countries based on risk, and I think in the Delta environment, we actually have to consider whether, in fact, thats an appropriate thing to do, recognising that all countries, all people coming into the country at this point, have a degree of risk associated with them, Hipkins said.
At Wednesdays media briefing, Hipkins added that talks of a Trans-Tasman bubble were ongoing but that it would be a while before the bubble could resume.
Of the total cases in New Zealand, 215 people had recovered from the virus. There were 37 people in hospital, with 6 people in intensive care and 4 on ventilators.
Most of the 855 people in the outbreak had not had a vaccine, while 115 people have had one dose and 38 were fully vaccinated.
As of Wednesday, more than 38,000 close contacts had been identified, with 87% of those having had at least one test. There were more than 72,800 vaccine doses administered on Tuesday, bringing the total number of doses given out to 4,032,710. More than 60% of the eligible population (12 years and older) have now had their first dose, with a third of that population fully vaccinated.
Hipkins said on Wednesday that a significant investigation into the Crowne Plaza, a managed isolation quarantine facility in Auckland, shed no light on how the virus was transmitted into the community.
The first community case was epidemiologically linked to a traveller who had recently returned to New Zealand from Sydney, and who stayed at the facility. An atrium in the hotel and a public walkway were narrowed down as possible sites of transmission, but Hipkins said the exact chain had not been established.
Audits showed that ventilation at the Crowne Plaza met the relevant infection prevention and control standards and there was a less than 1% chance that it came via someone standing in the lobby.
On Tuesday, the health ministry confirmed 29 staff at Middlemore hospital were close contacts of a Covid-19 case and have been stood down for 14 days, after a person who tested positive for the virus showed up to the emergency department on Saturday with abdominal pain. Four wards were closed to any new admissions and all patients were being managed under strict infection and prevention control measures.
The man denied having knowledge of being in contact with the virus or being in a location of interest and did not have any other symptoms.
The three patients who initially shared a room with the case are now in isolation. One has been discharged to a managed isolation facility and the other two will stay in isolation rooms at the hospital as they continue receiving treatment.
Hipkins encouraged everyone who could be vaccinated to do so, adding that the supply was not going to run out. There were roughly 629,000 doses currently in the country, he said.
The prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, announced on Tuesday the country was finalising arrangements to secure extra doses of the Pfizer vaccine in order to keep up with the increased pace of its rollout.
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New Zealand to Lift Many COVID-19 Restrictions – VOA Asia
Posted: at 10:10 am
New Zealand is easing the coronavirus lockdown for nearly the entire country first imposed last month after the Pacific nation reported its first confirmed COVID-19 case in six months.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Monday that the nationwide alert level will be lowered to Level 2, allowing schools, businesses and offices to reopen.
The new orders will not apply to Auckland, New Zealands largest city and the epicenter of the current outbreak that began when a 58-year-old man tested positive for the delta variant of COVID-19 in mid-August. The nation has posted 821 confirmed COVID-19 cases during the current outbreak, including 20 new cases on Monday.
Auckland will remain under strict stay-at-home orders until September 14, keeping all schools, offices and businesses shut down with only essential services remaining operational.
Prime Minister Ardern has embraced a strategy of totally eliminating COVID-19, saying it was necessary to go hard with the strict lockdown in order to prevent a widespread outbreak. New Zealand imposed a strict lockdown in the early days of the pandemic that has led to just 3,814 confirmed infections and just 27 deaths among its five million citizens.
Only 25 to 30 percent of all New Zealanders have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Officials say the government is nearing a final agreement to secure more doses of the two-shot Pfizer vaccine within days.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced Tuesday that beginning September 15, travelers from mainland China and the nearby enclave of Macao will be allowed to enter the semi-autonomous city without a mandatory quarantine. Lam told reporters that it will allow a total of 2,000 travelers from both places on a daily basis, but they will be required to show proof of a negative COVID-19 test prior to arrival.
Lam also said Hong Kong residents will be allowed to return to the city from the mainland without undergoing quarantine, so long as they did not travel to any high-risk areas.
The new changes are part of the governments new Come2HK program aimed at reviving the citys tourism industry, which sustained major losses during the first year of the pandemic as Hong Kong pursued a zero-Covid elimination strategy. But the city will continue to impose travel restrictions on travelers from foreign countries, prompting growing frustration among Hong Kongs business community.
Some information for this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters.
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New Zealand banks, post office hit by outages in apparent cyber attack – Reuters
Posted: at 10:10 am
SYDNEY, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Websites of a number of financial institutions in New Zealand and its national postal service were briefly down on Wednesday, with officials saying they were battling a cyber attack.
The country's Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) said it was aware of a DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack targeting a number of organisations in the country.
It was "monitoring the situation and are working with affected parties where we can," CERT said on its website.
Some of the affected websites affected by the attack according to local media reports included Australia and New Zealand Banking Group's (ANZ.AX) New Zealand site and NZ Post.
In a Facebook post, ANZ told customers it was aware some of them were not able to access online banking services. "Our tech team are working hard to get this fixed, we apologise for any inconvenience this may cause," the post said.
Representatives for ANZ did not immediately return requests for comment.
NZ Post said the "intermittent disruptions" on its website were due to an issue at one of its third-party suppliers.
Several customers resorted to social media to report outages at Kiwibank, a small lender partly owned by the NZ Post. Kiwibank apologised to customers in a Twitter post and said it was working to fix "intermittent access" to services in its app, internet banking, phone banking and website.
In DDoS attacks, the servers of high-profile institutions are crowded out by incoming traffic from superfluous requests that try to overload the system and drown legitimate requests.
In January, a cyber-attack led to a serious data breach at New Zealand central bank, which followed several attacks on the operator of New Zealand's stock exchange a year ago.
A group of hackers also targeted hospitals in May. read more
Reporting by Paulina Duran in Sydney; Editing by Lincoln Feast.
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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The Latest: Most of New Zealand to end virus lockdown – ABC News
Posted: at 10:10 am
UNDATED -- The resurgence of COVID-19 this summer and the national debate over vaccine requirements have created a fraught situation for the United States' first responders, who are dying in larger numbers but pushing back against mandates.
Its a stark contrast from the beginning of the vaccine rollout when first responders were prioritized for shots.
The mandates affect tens of thousands of police officers, firefighters and others on the front lines across the country, many of whom are spurning the vaccine. That is happening despite mandates consequences that range from weekly testing to suspension to termination even though the virus is now the leading cause of U.S. law enforcement line-of-duty deaths.
According to the Officer Down Memorial Page, 132 members of law enforcement agencies are known to have died of COVID-19 in 2021. In Florida alone last month, six people affiliated with law enforcement died over a 10-day period.
Despite the deaths, police officers and other first responders are among those most hesitant to get the vaccine and their cases continue to grow. No national statistics show the vaccination rate for Americas entire population of first responders but individual police and fire departments across the country report figures far below the national rate of 74% of adults who have had at least one dose.
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MORE ON THE PANDEMIC:
European Union regulator pondering whether to recommend Pfizer booster shots for 16 and older
Two anchors of COVID safety net ending, affecting millions in US
Volunteers help poorest survive Thailands worst COVID surge yet
Hospitals in crisis in Mississippi, the least-vaccinated US state
Want to attend Hamilton? Not unless you meet virus protocols
Find more AP coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic and https://apnews.com/hub/coronvirus-vaccine
HERES WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:
AMSTERDAM The European Medicines Agency says it has started an expedited evaluation on whether to recommend use of a booster dose of the coronavirus vaccine made by Pfizer-BioNTech.
In a statement Monday, the EU drug regulator says it is considering whether a third dose of the vaccine should be given six months after people over age 16 have received two doses to restore protection after it has waned.
EMAs experts are carrying out an accelerated assessment of data submitted by Pfizer and BioNTech, including results from an ongoing research trial in which about 300 healthy adults received a booster dose about six months after their second dose.
Pfizer has already submitted an application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administer for authorization of a third dose and the U.S. government said last month boosters would likely be available in late September. Israel has already started administering booster doses and the plan is under consideration in other countries for vulnerable populations, including France and Germany.
The Amsterdam-based agency said it expects to make a decision in the next few weeks.
DETROIT Five federal courthouses in eastern Michigan will fully reopen Tuesday for the first time since COVID-19 restrictions were put in place in March 2020.
Lawyers, news reporters, jurors and court spectators will be required to answer questions about their health and have their temperature checked at courthouse entrances. Masks will be required.
Courthouse employees who have not been vaccinated will be required to share the results of two weekly COVID-19 tests at their own expense.
The court is doing everything in its power to make sure that everyone who uses our facilities are protected, said Chief U.S. District Judge Denise Page Hood.
The main courthouse is in downtown Detroit, but there are other federal courthouses in Flint, Bay City, Ann Arbor and Port Huron. Remote video access will be provided for some hearings in civil lawsuits. But nearly all criminal cases will be conducted in person at the courthouses.
SANTIAGO, Chile Chiles Public Health Institute has approved the Chinese-developed Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine for children older than 6, though the health minister must approve the plan before shots enter arms.
The panel of senior physicians, including presidents of the associations of pediatrics and infectology, analyzed a Chinese study of 500 children aged 3 to 17, all of whom produced antibodies. A similar study of 4,000 children is being organized in Chile.
Brazils health regulatory agency, however, recently rejected a similar request by Sinovac, and asked for data involving a larger study.
Chile already had authorized vaccinations for children as young as 12, though only with the Pfizer vaccine. Supply shortages have stalled that effort.
Chilean officials plan to vaccinate 15.2 million of the countrys 19 million people. So far they have given a full double dose regimen to 86% of those now eligible. The country last month also began giving AstraZeneca booster shots to fully vaccinated people people older than 55.
ROME Life expectancy for men in some of Italys worst-hit provinces in the pandemic dropped by more than four years.
ISTAT, Italys national statistics bureau, in a report on Monday said that compared with 2019, nationwide life expectancy for those born in 2020 dropped by 1.2 years.
In 2020, the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and the sharp increase in the risk of mortality that derived from it abruptly interrupted the increase of life expectancy at birth that had marked a trend up to 2019, ISTAT said.
The pandemic first erupted outside Asia in northern Italy, and much of the north reeled with confirmed COVID-19 deaths in the initial wave of cases. In the northern provinces of Bergamo, Cremona and Lodi, life expectancy for men decreased by some 4.3 to 4.5 years. For women in those provinces, the reduced expectancy ranged from 3.2 to 2.9 years.
For a child born in 2020, male life expectancy nationwide is 79.7 and female life expectancy is 84.4, ISTAT said.
PHOENIX -- A program announced by Arizonas Republican governor last month giving private school vouchers to students whose parents object to school mask requirements has seen a surge of applications.
More than 2,700 applications have been started or completed in less than two weeks. Thats twice as many as can be funded with the $10 million in federal coronavirus relief cash earmarked for the program.
Gov. Doug Duceys plan will give $7,000 a year to each student to pay for private school tuition.
School voucher opponents worry they will permanently get vouchers and some Republican lawmakers say they hope thats the case.
ROME Italys health minister says a two-day meeting of his G-20 counterparts yielded resolve to help poor nations obtain more COVID-19 vaccines.
Minister Roberto Speranza told reporters in Rome on Monday that achieving that includes vaccine production in less developed nations. The goal is to bring vaccines to every corner of the world, said Speranza. He described the meetings unanimous final document as a departure point.
Stronger nations, starting with the G-20, are committing to more resources and to sending vaccines to the more vulnerable countries, he said, adding that efforts like COVAX need to be strengthened.
We want to build on conditions so that production can be brought to the countries. Its not enough merely to transfer doses, Speranza said.
COVAX is an international mechanism created in part to share vaccines so that poorer wouldnt have to rely on donations. But in some cases, wealthy nations have received doses through COVAX.
COPENHAGEN, Denmark Danish health authorities say they are offering jabs in supermarkets as they are aware of differences in the vaccination pattern even though more than 80% of people over 12 have had two shots of vaccine.
It is especially young people who have not received the first jab, said Soeren Brostroem, head of the Danish Health Agency.
On Saturday, vaccines will be offered in two of Denmarks largest supermarket chains, Bilka and Foetex, No appointments are needed.
We want to ensure that the offer of vaccination is as accessible as possible, so that, for example, it is possible to get a shot while shopping, Brostroem said, adding there are many young people working in retail.
Denmark has a target of reaching 90% of people above the age of 12 by Oct. 1.
As of Sept. 10, the digital pass a proof of vaccination or a negative test which was required to enter nightclubs becomes the last COVID-19 safeguard to fall.
PRISTINA, Kosovo --- Kosovos Health Ministry said it has received half a million Pfizer vaccines Monday sent from the United States.
Kosovos 1.8 million people have faced a surge in new infections during the last month. On Monday there were 28 deaths and 489 new cases.
The ministry said it had received 503,100 Pfizer shots from the United States through the COVAX program. It strongly called on people older than 16 years old to take the jabs as the only way to prevent further spread of the coronavirus.
About 17% of Kosovo's people have gotten both shots of the vaccine so far.
SEOUL, South Korea South Koreas daily increase in coronavirus infections has exceeded 1,000 for the 62nd consecutive day as officials are raising concerns about another viral spike during this months Chuseok holidays, the Korean version of Thanksgiving.
The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency said more than 940 of the 1,375 new cases reported Monday were from Seoul and the nearby metropolitan region, where a rise in infections have been linked to the reopening of schools and people returning from summer vacations.
While the virus has slowed outside the capital area in recent weeks, KDCA official Kim Ki-nam said transmissions could worsen nationwide during the Chuseok break, which starts on Sept. 20, a time when millions usually travel across the country to meet relatives.
Officials are enforcing the countrys strongest social distancing rules in the greater capital area, where private social gatherings of three or more are banned after 6 p.m. unless all are fully vaccinated.
A slow vaccine rollout has left less than 35% of South Koreans fully vaccinated as of Monday.
HANOI About 23 million Vietnamese students have started a new school year, most of them in virtual classrooms, amid a COVID-19 lockdown to contain a virus surge in the country.
Since April, when the latest wave of the virus spread in the country, Vietnam closed down schools and education institutes in pandemic areas and move learning activities to online platforms.
Millions of students spent their summer break at home as more than half of the country is in lockdown. In hard-hit provinces, schools have been converted into quarantine facilities and field hospitals.
In Ho Chi Minh city, the epicenter of Vietnams worst virus outbreak, teachers and students observed a minute of silence to pay tribute to those who died of COVID-19 and honor front-liners before opening classes Monday.
WELLINGTON, New Zealand Most of New Zealand will move out of lockdown Tuesday except for the largest city of Auckland, which will remain in the strictest type of lockdown until at least next week, the government announced Monday.
The nation has been battling an outbreak of the delta variant of the coronavirus since last month. All recent cases have been found in Auckland, including 20 that were found on Monday.
There have been a total of 821 cases found in the outbreak. The government is pursuing an unusual strategy of trying to eliminate the virus entirely.
JERUSALEM -- Israel says it will soon reopen its gates to foreign tour groups even as it battles one of the worlds highest rates of coronavirus infections.
The countrys Tourism Ministry on Sunday said it will begin allowing organized tour groups into the country beginning Sept. 19.
Tourists will have to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, present a negative PCR test before their flight and undergo both PCR and serological testing upon arrival. Visitors would have to quarantine in their hotels until the test results come back -- a process expected to take no more than 24 hours.
Tourists from a handful of red countries with high infection rates -- including Turkey and Brazil -- will not be permitted to visit for the time being.
Israel launched a similar program in May after vaccinating most of its population early this year. But the program was suspended in August as the delta variant began to spread.
In recent weeks, the country has begun administering booster shots to anyone who was vaccinated over five months ago.
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Extremist abused and attacked officers in New Zealand prison – ABC News
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New Zealand corrections officers say that during the time an Islamic State-inspired extremist was incarcerated, he was moved to a maximum security prison after punching officers and repeatedly throwing feces and urine at them
By NICK PERRY Associated Press
September 7, 2021, 7:43 AM
3 min read
WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- During the time an Islamic State-inspired extremist was incarcerated in New Zealand, he was moved to a maximum security prison after punching officers and repeatedly throwing feces and urine at them, corrections officials said Tuesday.
Ahamed Samsudeen, 32, was shot and killed by police Friday after he grabbed a knife at an Auckland supermarket and began stabbing shoppers, injuring seven.
Some 30 officers had been following Samsudeen around the clock for 53 days since his release from prison, worried he was primed to launch a terror attack at any moment.
Since the attack, the condition of his victims has improved each day. Police said Tuesday that two victims remain hospitalized in intensive care units while two more are in general wards, and all are now in stable condition. The other three victims are recovering at home.
This is really encouraging and positive news, said assistant commissioner Lauano Sue Schwalger.
Samsudeen arrived in New Zealand ten years ago from Sri Lanka on a student visa and later claimed refugee status. He was first jailed in 2017 after he tried to fly to Syria to join the Islamic State insurgency.
He was held on various charges including fraud and distributing restricted material after police found Islamic State videos and a hunting knife at his apartment. He pleaded guilty to five charges in June 2018 and was released because of the time he'd already served.
Six weeks later, he was jailed again on new charges and remained in prison until July of this year. He spent his final year in the maximum security Auckland Prison with a small number of other prisoners identified as posing extreme risk.
Rachel Leota, the national commissioner at the Department of Corrections, said Samsudeen would often abuse staff and there had been multiple times when hed thrown feces and urine at them or threatened violence.
At first, Samsudeen was housed at a general prison, the Mt. Eden Corrections Facility. He was shifted to the maximum security prison after an incident in June 2020 when staff tried to move him to an exercise yard.
He argued with staff about which yard he was going to and his behavior escalated, Leota said. He was directed to return to his cell and he struck two officers.
She said he later assaulted another staff member.
Leota said they identified Samsudeen as having potentially violent extremist views but he refused help. She said he did meet twice with an imam from the local Muslim community but didn't engage with him in a meaningful way.
Samsudeen was eventually released from prison in July, and moved to an Auckland mosque after a leader there agreed to take him in.
He was a very, very difficult person to manage, and was increasingly openly hostile and abusive toward probation staff, Leota said.
The case has highlighted shortcomings in New Zealand's counterterrorism laws, especially the difficulty in prosecuting plots. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said she plans to pass new laws, which were already in the works, by the end of the month.
The case has also raised questions about why Samsudeen wasn't deported sooner after immigration officials in 2019 cancelled his refugee status on the basis he'd used fake documents. Samsudeen had been appealing a deportation ruling at the time he carried out his attack.
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Covid-19: New Zealand’s vaccine roll-out explained in 10 charts, and compared with the rest of the world – Stuff.co.nz
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More than half the country have now had a single dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, with tens of thousands getting a jab every day. But those numbers dont tell the full story. Kate Newton and Henry Cooke dig into the roll-out.
We have enough vaccines.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern isnt releasing details until Thursday, but was happy to say earlier in the week that a looming supply problem caused by huge demand for vaccines had been sorted. On Wednesday, new numbers showed the stockpile of jabs kept in reserve had also recovered.
RYAN ANDERSON/Stuff
A drive-through vaccination clinic.
But as our vaccine roll-out races ahead, massive inequities remain both across regions and ethnicities. And even with a world-beating speed, New Zealand remains behind much of the rest of the developed world.
Here's a deep look into the vaccine roll-out across New Zealand, and how it compares with the rest of the world.
Lets get these overall numbers out of the way if youre looking for how this compares with other countries, scroll down.
At midnight on Tuesday 2.7 million Kiwis have had at least one jab.
READ MORE:* Covid 19: Novavax expected to be first Covid-19 booster vaccine in New Zealand* Covid-19: The 1pm update review - where some vaccines fell off the back of a truck* Covid-19 NZ: Government 'finalising arrangements' for extra vaccines to maintain fast pace through September
Thats just over half the entire country: 52 per cent. But we have to remember that about 15 per cent of the country are aged under 12, and wont get the vaccine any time soon. So if we look at the 4.4 million people aged 12 or over, 61 per cent have got a single jab.
However, one jab gives only partial protection. New Zealand is focusing on these first jabs, while leaving a six-week gap before second jabs. The Government has only been giving out about half as many second jabs every day.
Just 1.4 million Kiwis have had both jabs and are considered fully protected. Thats 32 per cent of that 12+ population or 27 per cent of the entire population.
New Zealands vaccination story varies wildly based on where you live.
Three-quarters of those aged 12+ have had a jab in Nelson Marlborough, the best-performing district health board (DHB). For context thats a vaccination rate better than the United States.
Its closely followed by the Southern DHB who has also cracked 70 per cent.
But those rates compare with just over half of the 12+ population for Taranaki, the worst-performing DHB.
But the South Islands good fortune has not come to its major centre: Canterbury is the worst-performing of New Zealands three main cities on first doses, with 56 per cent of its population jabbed. Wellingtons DHBs are on top, with over two thirds (68 per cent) receiving at least one dose. Auckland is in the middle with 63.8 per cent of the 12+ population having had a jab so not far off the national rate.
Things are a bit different when it comes to second doses, which provide fuller protection.
Once again Taranaki is in last place, with 23 per cent of its 12+ population double-dosed. And again Nelson Marlborough are on top with 42 per cent of its 12+ population double-dosed.
Canterbury is again the worst of the main centres, with just 27 per cent fully protected, but Wellingtons DHBs are not far ahead of them with just 28 per cent of its 12+ population fully protected. Aucklands DHBs are a bit ahead of the national curve, with 33 per cent of its 12+ population double-dosed.
Funnily enough, Taranaki has generally been meeting its own self-set plans. But as of this week there are no more plans: The Ministry of Health says the unprecedented demand because of the outbreak means the plans are of no more use, and will not return until October.
New Zealands speed has dropped slightly from the past few weeks, when we were going faster than most of the world ever managed.
It is still going very fast, however, with over half a million doses doled out over the week to Tuesday. At 74,000 doses a day about 1.5 per cent of the country have been getting a jab every single day.
Thats faster than Australia who are sitting at about 1.1 per cent and rivals Korea and Japan at their peaks, while easily outstripping the peak rate of other Western nations. But it is a (slight) drop-off from heights of 1.6 per cent reached the week prior.
We know that this rate won't be maintained forever, because eventually New Zealand will run out of people who are motivated to get the vaccine and run into those who aren't so keen. But as a point of illustration, if that pace was maintained, the entire roll-out would be finished on November 9. Before that, 80 per cent of the 12+ population would have had a first jab by September 23, 90 per cent by October 1, and 100 per cent by October 10.
New Zealand is no longer at the bottom of the developed world. But its not far from it.
With the countrys huge first dose campaign, the Government has now partially protected more of its population than several other nations, including Australia and Poland. The lead is slight, however: 52 per cent of our entire population has at least one jab, compared with 51% of Australia. If the vaccine roll-out keeps going at its current speed, we will likely pass several other nations on this statistic in the next week or so, including the United States.
Yet on second doses, we remain behind every country in the OECD other than Costa Rica.
You can blend these two figures to get a slightly better idea of how our overall vaccine roll-out is going compared with other nations, by looking at the overall number of doses doled out per 100 people.
New Zealand remains behind Australia on this measure, with about 79 doses per 100 people compared with 82 in Australia. And while we may be ahead of countries like Mexico, were far behind the countries we traditionally compare ourselves with such as Canada, the UK, the USA, and the EU, who have all doled out more than 100 doses per 100 people.
New Zealands vaccination campaign was staged by priority groups, with healthy young people intended to get the vaccine last.
The Government set up four different priority groups to manage this, with the first (border workers) being the most important and the last (the general population) the least.
But while the Government has basically vaccinated everyone connected to the border, it hasnt finished vaccinating its two other priority groups, yet is marching ahead with the general population.
Lets go through each of these in turn.
Group 1 border workers does appear to be mostly complete. The Government estimated there were 50,000 of these people earlier this year, but there was clearly more: 64,000 have now had a first jab, while 60,000 of them have had their second.
Group 2 is frontline health professionals and people in rest homes. The Government estimated there was 480,000 of these people, but again this must have been an undercount: 552,000 have had at least a first dose, while 456,000 have had a second. If we assume that the actual ceiling for this group is 550,000, that still leaves 100,000 frontline workers or rest home residents with only partial protection.
But the real gap is in group 3, an amorphous group that takes in everyone aged 65 or over and everyone with a health condition that could make a Covid-19 infection a particularly bad time, from pregnancy to asthma.
The actual size of this group is very tricky to work out: We know there is 750,000 people aged 65 or over, and then the Ministry of Health estimate there is anywhere between 700,000 and 1.2 million people with a health condition that makes them eligible.
But it is clear that not all in this vulnerable group are protected, and that they are falling behind the general population who are vaccinating at pace.
Just 689,000 people in group 3 have had at least one dose, while 524,000 have had both. Given we know the group has to be at least 750,000 just to cover the over-65s this suggests many vulnerable people are unprotected.
And group 4 - the general population under-65 are racing ahead of them. A total of 1.36m in group 4 have had a first jab, and 331,000 have had a second.
Stuff has asked the Ministry of Health for an explanation of group 3s laggardly pace. Covid-19 Minister Chris Hipkins has noted in earlier weeks that many people technically eligible for group 3 may just be saying they are in group 4 when turning up for a jab.
Its also worth noting that when group 3 were first allowed to book vaccines, there were far fewer slots than there are now meaning many people booked a first jab for late-September or October. Since then a huge slew of clinics has opened up, meaning those in group 4 have often been able to just get a walk-in vaccine, or book an appointment for the next day.
Another lens we can look at for vulnerability is ethnicity, particularly as we know Mori are far more likely to be hospitalised and die if they are infected with Covid-19.
Mori continue to lag the general population while close to a third of the 12+ population (32 per cent) is now fully protected, just 21 per cent of Mori are. Around four in ten Mori have had a first dose, compared to six in ten of the full population.
Some of this is explainable by age structure, as Mori people are typically younger and thus werent eligible for the vaccine as early as older populations. But not all of it: Mori aged 20-34 are about half as likely as the rest of the population to have had a first or second jab.
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