Trump announces unprecedented action against China

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“They’ve ripped off the United States like no one has ever done before,” Trump said of China, as he decried the way Beijing has “raided our factories” and “gutted” American industry, casting Beijing as a central foil he will run against in the remaining months of his re-election campaign.

Trump called out China for “espionage to steal our industrial secrets, of which there are many,” announced steps to protect American investors from Chinese financial practices, accused Beijing of “unlawfully claiming territory in the Pacific Ocean” and threatening freedom of navigation.

The President also blasted Beijing for passing a national security law that fundamentally undermines Hong Kong’s autonomy, announcing that going forward the US will no longer grant Hong Kong special status on trade or in other areas and instead will apply the same restrictions to the territory it has in place with China. Trump outlined that the US will strip Hong Kong of the special policy measures on extradition, trade, travel and customs Washington had previously granted it.
Trump announced the US will pull out of the World Health Organization even as the global coronavirus pandemic continues to claim lives, claiming that China has “total control” over the organization of 194 member states. He said China had pressured the WHO to “mislead the world” over the origins of the pandemic, which he described as the “Wuhan virus,” and said that health funding would be redirected to “other worldwide and deserving, urgent global public health needs.”

The President said the US would also take action on a number of other fronts, including barring “certain foreign nationals from China” from entering the US and sanctioning officials in China and Hong Kong for their direct or indirect role in “smothering” Hong Kong’s freedoms.

“US-China relations are in full crisis,” said Richard Fontaine, the CEO of the Center for a New American Security. “We’ve hit the floor and keep falling through it. Beijing will retaliate in response to the Hong Kong steps the administration takes, and then the ball will be back in the President’s court. Things will get worse — potentially much worse — before they get any better.”

Escalating confrontation

Trump’s announcement was a multi-part salvo in what has been a steadily escalating confrontation playing out over trade, telecommunications, the media, student visas, the South China Sea, the coronavirus and most recently, the question of Hong Kong’s autonomy.

The Cantonese-speaking enclave was handed over from the UK to China in 1997 under an agreement that was meant to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy in domestic matters, including the judiciary, and ensure its citizens could vote for their leaders.

“This week China unilaterally imposed control over Hong Kong security,” Trump said Friday, calling it “a plain violation of Beijing’s treaty obligations with the United Kingdom.”

As a result, Trump said Hong Kong “is no longer sufficiently autonomous to warrant the special treatment that we have afforded the territory” and his administration would “begin the process of eliminating policy exemptions that give Hong Kong different and special treatment.”

The direction will impact the “full range” of agreements the US has with Hong Kong, including their extradition treaty, export controls on dual use technologies and more, Trump said. The US will also revoke Hong Kong’s preferential customs and travel status, the President said.

Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said revoking Hong Kong’s special status and extending Trump’s tariffs to the enclave “would have very little immediate impact,” given that in 2019, the US imported less than $5 billion of goods from Hong Kong that Trump could hit with new tariffs.

China likely to strike back

In comparison, the US imported $452 billion worth of goods from China in 2019. Bown pointed out, however, that Beijing could strike back in ways that would hurt American businesses.

“Ironically, it would be more impactful for trade if China were to respond with an escalation and forceable takeover of Hong Kong’s trade policy,” Bown said. “If Beijing were somehow able to extend its retaliatory tariffs that would have a bigger impact, as the United States exports over $30 billion a year to Hong Kong.”

Trump also said the State Department’s travel advisory for Hong Kong will be revised “to reflect the increased danger of surveillance and punishment by the Chinese state security apparatus.”

Some former officials said Trump’s response could end up hurting Hong Kong’s residents.

“The Hong Kong-related provisions in Trump’s announcement were fairly vague and it remains to be seen how quickly and extensively they are implemented,” said Danny Russel, a former senior director for Asian affairs on the National Security Council who is now a vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute. “But it is not at all clear that the removal of Hong Kong’s special status will make things better for the people we would like to help and, in fact, might inadvertently accelerate their loss of autonomy.”

‘Bold’ and appropriate

Others offered praise.

“The President’s response on Hong Kong is bold and, I think, appropriate,” said Fontaine, a former State Department and NSC official. “Beijing moving to end Hong Kong’s separate political system should trigger an American response, including by terminating Hong Kong’s special economic status. The administration has zigged and zagged on questions of democracy and human rights abroad and I’m glad it is standing up.”

Trump was widely expected to announce a restriction on Chinese students, about 350,000 of whom come to the US to study each year, and senior Cabinet officials signaled that limits on their entry would be just one of several moves the President would make.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a Thursday interview with Fox News that Trump would make “a series of announcements” on China “in the coming days” and suggested that visa restrictions on Chinese graduate students and researchers could be among them.

Shortly after Trump’s remarks, the White House issued a presidential proclamation suspending US entry for graduate and postgraduate students and researchers from China that takes effect at noon on Monday and remains in effect until it is terminated by the President.

US intelligence warns China is using student spies to steal secrets

Authorities in the People’s Republic of China “use some Chinese students, mostly post graduate students and post-doctorate researchers, to operate as non-traditional collectors of intellectual property,” the proclamation said. These students “are at high risk of being exploited or co-opted by the PRC authorities and provide particular cause for concern.”

Letting those students enter the US “to study or conduct research in the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States,” the proclamation announced.

Trump’s Friday announcement is just the latest limit his administration has imposed on Chinese students and other Chinese entities.

In 2018, the State Department issued new time restrictions on visas for Chinese graduate students in fields such as aviation, robotics and advanced manufacturing, which are considered sensitive to national security, scaling back the period students could stay from as long as five years to just one.

In October 2019, the State Department began requiring Chinese diplomats posted in the US to report all their meetings with state and local officials, as well as visits to educational and research institutions.
And in March, the State Department imposed caps on the number of Chinese nationals who may be employed at five Chinese media entities after designating them as foreign diplomatic missions as opposed to journalistic outlets.

CNN’s Jason Hoffman, Jennifer Hansler and Kylie Atwood contributed to this report.

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Partying on Minecraft, in a Replica of a Brooklyn Club

On a recent Friday, thousands of partygoers gathered on the rooftop of a popular Brooklyn club to hear a performance by Alice Glass, the former front woman of the Canadian electronic band Crystal Castles.

The diverse group wore dark green camouflage, electric blue jumpsuits and pink hair, while they moshed with abandon before the multitiered stage.

This dance party did not violate New York’s social distancing rules. It was a virtual concert that took place on Minecraft, the sandbox video game in which players create Lego-like worlds — in this case a reimagining of Elsewhere, an indie-music club in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn.

The Minecraft club, which is called Elsewither, was a collaboration among Elsewhere; Open Pit, an engineering group that specialize in virtual events; and Heav3n, a roving L.G.B.T.Q. party based in Los Angeles.

“Gaming is about 10 years ahead of live music in terms of an interactive online experience,” said Jake Rosenthal, 32, a founder of Elsewhere. “Buying a ticket and a virtual ticket might be part of the new paradigm of being a music venue.”

“When Elsewhere reopens, it’s going to be at some kind of limited capacity,” he said. “It’s a way to bring experimentation back to what we do.”

About 2,400 Minecraft users visited Elsewither between 6 p.m. and midnight on May 8 to hear performances by Pussy Riot, the punk political band from Russia; Rina Sawayama, a Japanese R&B pop singer; Pabllo Vittar, a Brazilian drag queen; and 18 others. The audio was also streamed to more than 30,000 listeners over the gaming platform Twitch.

At a time when Zoom party fatigue is real and the initial excitement of being able to see your favorite D.J.s spin from the comfort of your living room has worn off, video games have emerged as another means of hosting a party during the coronavirus shutdown.

In late April, 100 Gecs, the electronic pop absurdist duo, hosted a virtual concert called #Square Garden on Minecraft featuring Charli XCX, Cashmere Cat, Benny Blanco and Kero Kero Bonito. And Travis Scott held a live concert on the video game Fortnite on April 23 and 25, reaching more than 12.3 million players. (The next Elsewither is scheduled for June 6.)

Admission to Elsewither was free, but a $5 donation on Groundswell offered access to a V.I.P. room and to the artists’ conversations on Discord. After every set, the M.C. would command the audience to type slogans like “Down with Capitalism” and “Queer Rights,” and the chat stream would explode with a repeating chorus of all-capitalized phrases.

While thousands logged on, only 20 to 30 avatars seemed to be in the hall at a given time. This was, in part, by design. An earlier attempt at a Minecraft music festival called Block by Blockwest crashed when too many tried to join. (It was successfully rescheduled for May 16 and attracted 5,000 users.)

At Elsewither, no more than 100 people were allowed into any one server at a time, a setup much like having a bouncer at the door. “Technically, it was the smoothest event so far,” said Umru Rothenberg, a graphic designer with Open Pit. “We’ve ironed a lot of issues out.”

For the musical artists, video game concerts lets them reach a wider audience, free of physical constraints. Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a member of Pussy Riot, who does not normally play Minecraft, said she appreciated the party’s emphasis on an anticapitalist, pro-L.G.B.T.Q. agenda.

“For queer kids in Russia, seeing a Russian band performing in this amazing online queer community is encouraging because they feel like they are represented somehow,” she said. “I think if I was able to log onto Minecraft and see a concert with this lineup, it would probably have changed my life in a lot of ways.”



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11 Amazing Photos You Missed This Week

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With the news continuing to revolve around the coronavirus pandemic, it’s easy to miss great images that fly under the radar. We’ve got you covered.

We’re highlighting exceptional photos from around the world for the week of May 23 to 29. Check them out below.

Above: Maria Velez of Orlando, Florida, hugs the tombstone of her son Stephen at the Ohio Western Reserve National Cemetery on Memorial Day in Seville, Ohio, on May 25, 2020. Credit: Aaron Josefczyk/Reuters



A protester carries the carries a U.S. flag upside-down, a sign of distress, next to a burning building on May 28, 2020, in Minneapolis, after the police killing of George Floyd.



Italy’s aerobatic team Frecce Tricolori (Tricolour Arrows) flies over Milan’s Duomo Square as part of celebrations for the 74th anniversary of the proclamation of the Italian Republic on May 25, 2020.



Serdal Kizilcik, one of the members of a volunteer group of motorcycle riders, accompanied by his Chihuahua, “Asil,” on May 23, 2020, in Ankara, Turkey.



A man adjusts a face mask with his nose and mouth printed on it at a photo studio in Chennai, India, on May 23, 2020.



NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken greet their families before the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on May 27, 2020.



A woman reacts after riot police fire tear gas to disperse a pro-democracy rally against a proposed new security law in Hong Kong on May 24, 2020.



Patients exercise on the balconies of a training center that has been converted into a quarantine house in Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, on May 28, 2020.



People wear face masks while participating in the annual Memorial Day Parade on May 25, 2020, in the Staten Island borough of New York City. Dozens of cars and nearly 100 members of the patriotic motorcycle group Rolling Thunder joined the event. This year’s parade was diminished in size and in person-to-person contact due to the coronavirus outbreak.



Members of the Israeli Mermaids Community swim with mermaid tails at the beachfront in Bat Yam, near Tel Aviv, Israel, to mark the beginning of the bathing season on May 23, 2020. 



A field of poppies in full blossom as the sun rises in Frankfurt, Germany, on May 29, 2020.



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Trump’s Looting and ‘Shooting’ Remarks Escalate Crisis in Minneapolis

President Trump issued a violent ultimatum to protesters in Minneapolis on Friday and inserted himself in a harshly divisive fashion into the growing crisis there, attacking the city’s Democratic mayor and raising the specter that the military could use armed force to suppress riots that erupted after the death of George Floyd, a black man, at the hands of a white police officer.

Mr. Trump’s threat to have unruly protesters shot — “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” — stirred an outcry in Minnesota and from his national critics, with his Democratic challenger in the presidential race, Joseph R. Biden Jr., expressing indignation that Mr. Trump was “calling for violence against American citizens during a moment of pain.”

The president framed his comments in explicitly ideological terms, as a denunciation of a liberal local government that had failed to maintain order, before abruptly retreating from them some 14 hours later in a slapdash effort to claim he had been misinterpreted. At an event in the Rose Garden on Friday afternoon, he made no mention of events in Minneapolis, took no questions and offered no acknowledgment of the spiraling conflagration over his initial outbursts on Twitter.

“I can’t stand back & watch this happen to a great American City, Minneapolis,” Mr. Trump wrote shortly before 1 a.m. on Friday. “A total lack of leadership. Either the very weak Radical Left Mayor, Jacob Frey, get his act together and bring the City under control, or I will send in the National Guard & get the job done right.”

Mr. Trump’s mix of demands and attacks came despite the fact that Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota had already activated and deployed the National Guard in response to a request from local leaders.

Mr. Trump began talking about the unrest in Minneapolis overnight as cable news showed a police station engulfed in a fire set by protesters. The four city police officers involved in the death of Mr. Floyd were assigned to that station.

Mr. Floyd was killed on Monday after one of the officers, who were responding to a call about an alleged counterfeit bill used at a store, knelt on his neck while he was handcuffed and lying face down on the ground. Mr. Floyd called out, “I can’t breathe.” The officer, Derek Chauvin, and the three others were fired the next day. On Friday afternoon, Minnesota officials said that Mr. Chauvin had been arrested.

Mr. Trump, in his tweets, denigrated the protesters and issued demands in a situation that was already spiraling out of control.

“These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen,” the president wrote in another post, which was flagged by Twitter. “Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way. Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thank you!”

In saying “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” Mr. Trump echoed a phrase coined by a Miami police chief in the 1960s about crackdowns on black neighborhoods during times of unrest. Walter Headley, the Miami police chief in 1967, warned that young black men who he called “hoodlums” had “taken advantage of the civil rights campaign,” and added, “We don’t mind being accused of police brutality.”

Shortly before his event in the Rose Garden — a statement announcing punitive measures against China — Mr. Trump tweeted in a puzzling construction that his remarks overnight had been “a fact, not a statement,” and said he had not been urging further violence but rather describing it as a natural consequence of looting.

Twitter officials appended Mr. Trump’s “shooting starts” tweet with a note saying the remark was “glorifying violence.” That provoked another tweet from the president accusing Twitter of having targeted “Republicans, Conservatives & the President of the United States” and prompting his aides to repost his original tweets on the official White House Twitter account. It was also flagged by Twitter.

On Friday afternoon, Mr. Biden condemned the president’s remarks, without naming Mr. Trump.

“This is no time for incendiary tweets,” Mr. Biden said over a livestream from his basement. “It’s no time to encourage violence.”

“The original sin of this country still stains our nation today and sometimes we manage to overlook it,” Mr. Biden said. “We just push forward with a thousand other tasks in our daily life, but it’s always there, and weeks like this, we see it plainly that we’re a country with an open wound. None of us can turn away.”

In a statement posted on Twitter, former President Barack Obama described hearing anguished reactions from African-Americans to the images of Mr. Floyd lying facedown with a knee on his neck. Mr. Obama said he shared their feelings.

“For millions of Americans, being treated differently on account of race is tragically, painfully, maddeningly ‘normal,’” in even the most ordinary situations, he said.

“This shouldn’t be ‘normal’ in 2020 America,” Mr. Obama said, calling for officials to investigate Mr. Floyd’s death and for all Americans to help end “the legacy of bigotry and unequal treatment.”

When the video of Mr. Floyd lying on the ground under the police officer’s knee first circulated, Mr. Trump called it “shocking,” and at the White House on Thursday, the press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, said the president was “very upset” seeing it.

But the protests in Minneapolis have recalled some of the worst scenes of unrest in response to police brutality in the treatment of black men over the last 30 years.

When conflicts involving race has arisen during his presidency, Mr. Trump has often avoided taking a clear position. When neo-Nazis marched in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 and a counterprotester was killed, Mr. Trump condemned the death but told reporters there were “very fine people” on “both sides” of the matter, prompting outrage. Mr. Biden referred to Mr. Trump’s comments about Charlottesville when he declared his campaign in 2019.

Mr. Trump’s hostility to black activists and his admiration of suppressive government force have been consistent features of his worldview for decades, stretching back even to a 1990 interview in which he spoke admiringly about the Chinese government’s crackdown on protesters in Tiananmen Square. (“That shows you the power of strength,” he told Playboy magazine.

The crisis in Minneapolis recalled scenes of police violence and civil unrest that scarred the 2016 presidential campaign, and that Mr. Trump seemed to use to his advantage in his contest with Hillary Clinton, his Democratic opponent. During the campaign, Mr. Trump criticized Black Lives Matter protesters seeking to call attention to police brutality, describing the activists as a “threat” in the summer of 2016.

A series of killings that summer — two incidents involving black men killed by police officers in Louisiana and Minnesota, and a mass shooting of police officers in Texas by a black gunman — set a bloody backdrop for Mr. Trump’s nominating convention and may have helped reinforce his law-and-order pledge to “make America safe again.”

Yet it was far from clear on Friday that Mr. Trump’s instinct for the mailed fist would offer him comparable political rewards in his re-election campaign.

Americans typically expect their president to be not just an enforcer but also a unifier and a healer, roles that Mr. Trump has repeatedly shown no interest in performing. His threat early Friday morning to have unruly protesters shot exemplified his preference for escalating conflict, often in violent terms, rather than easing it.

Should scenes of violence, rioting and arson continue to dominate television screens in the coming weeks, it could ultimately make Mr. Trump’s brute-force message more appealing to some of the white swing voters who embraced him reluctantly in the 2016 election.

But that, too, might carry a political price: Mr. Trump’s campaign has been making selective efforts to reach out to black voters, particularly young men, and it is difficult to see how that pursuit could have the desired effect if the president demonizes police protesters in harsh terms.

And as in other arenas of the 2020 campaign, Mr. Trump is confronting an elusive rival in Mr. Biden, who is one of only a few major figures left in the Democratic Party who can claim both a deep bond with black voters and a relatively conservative record on matters of law enforcement.

At a virtual fund-raiser on Thursday, Mr. Biden opened his remarks with a somber reflection on Mr. Floyd’s death, calling it a “brutal, brutal death.” He described the nation as struggling with “an open wound” and nodded to “an ingrained systemic cycle of racism and oppression” in America.

“It’s ripped open anew this — this ugly underbelly of our society,” he said.

Black activists and political groups responded to Mr. Trump’s statements with shock, accusing the president of using race as a political wedge at the expense of vulnerable communities. They pointed to Mr. Trump’s previous statements regarding protesters in Charlottesville as a counterexample, saying that his willingness to defend protesters who included racist and anti-Semitic individuals in 2017 did not extend to black protesters in Minneapolis.

Progressive groups said that the protests and actions in the Minneapolis community should not be seen in isolation, but a culmination of sustained police aggression and systemic inequality — present long before Mr. Floyd’s death.

“This is a clear representation of a president who has always seen those who stand up to injustice as enemy combatants, and has been uninterested — at every turn — in the role of uniting people,” said Rashad Robinson, president of Color of Change, a racial justice organization.

Katie Glueck and Astead W. Herndon contributed reporting.



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Covid-19 crisis: Over to states as next phase of lockdown set to kick in

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Two days before 4.0 comes to a close, the Centre and states engaged in hectic parleys to chalk out the road ahead. After taking chief ministers’ views on the contours of the next lockdown, Union Home Minister met Prime Minister on Friday before finalising the guidelines. Sources indicated that the focus this time would be on further easing the curbs on economic activities, including opening shops in malls, while maintaining stringent norms in the containment zones. Also, states are likely to have a bigger role than the Centre in deciding how 5.0 will play out from June 1.

After a first of its kind meeting between Shah and chief ministers, officials said from now on, measures would be reviewed every fortnight and restrictions would largely be decided by states. While many states opted to wait for the Centre’s guidelines, expected on Saturday, chief minister led the way in announcing significant relaxations from June 1.


ALSO READ: India GDP growth slows to 3.1% in Q4 as Covid-19 lockdown hits economy

Even as there’s no consensus among states on the shape of the next lockdown, many favoured extension of curbs to contain the spread of Covid-19 cases. Kerala, and are among those concerned that economic reasons outweighing health considerations could sharply increase the number of cases.

Therefore, they want the lockdown extended. ‘’Considering the cases are going up, the recommendations are not in favour of lifting of the lockdown,’’ a government official told Business Standard.

However, others such as West Bengal, Karnataka, Punjab, and Goa supported further relaxations to spur economic activity. After his meeting with Shah, Goa CM said he felt the lockdown may be extended for 15 more days. “However, we want some more relaxations like opening of restaurants with social distancing at 50 per cent capacity,” he said.

government on Friday allowed offices — private and government — to operate at full capacity from June 8; jute and tea industries would also be allowed to deploy full workforce. To facilitate this, public transport, particularly buses, would be allowed to ply, though crowding and standing will not be allowed.

ALSO READ: Govt unlikely to press for hike in GST rates for non-essentials next month

Banerjee also approved opening religious places from June 1 with restrictions. “Considering the sorry state of affairs in the country, let us come forward and pray together,” Banerjee said on Friday.

Karnataka, too, has decided to open the doors to religious places from June 1. Pujas can be offered through an app which would soon start taking bookings. The state is also in favour of opening restaurants and theatres from Monday, but the Centre will take a final call on the issue.

Punjab CM Amarinder Singh told a group of industrialists that his government wants to ensure 100 per cent operationalization over the next few days. He said 78 per cent of the industry had resumed operations, and 68 per cent of the migrant labour has opted to stay back in Punjab.

States’ stand

  • allows offices to operate at full capacity from June 8; religious places to open from June 1
  • Karnataka, too, will open religious places from June 1; pujas can be offered through app
  • Punjab wants to ensure industry functions at 100% capacity
  • Maharashtra has asked for resumption of suburban trains in Mumbai for emergency service
  • Jharkhand, Odisha, favour lockdown extension

While educational institutions will remain shut, the view was divided on whether the Centre should allow resumption of metro services, opening of restaurants, hotels and theatres from June 1.

International air travel is likely to remain suspended for some time.

The Centre-state talks on Friday also revolved around resumption of economic activities in the worst Covid-19 hit cities including the biggest urban centres of the country such as Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Pune, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Indore, and Jaipur. The Centre is concerned at the increase in cases in 30 municipal areas across states accounting for 80 per cent of the positive turnout in the country. Most states agree that the Centre should continue to restrict inter-state bus, train and flight operations.

ALSO READ: GDP to contract 10.8% without more fiscal stimulus, says Pronab Sen

Sources indicated that parts of Tamil Nadu — that had not reported new Covid cases or seen a decline in the number of cases — would see relaxations. But it may not be the same in Chennai as the numbers in the metro were increasing.

Telangana and Andhra Pradesh were treading cautiously as the number of cases was on the rise. No additional relaxations have been sought by the two state governments. Not much is expected to change in Maharashtra, which accounts for the highest share of confirmed Covid cases and fatalities. CM is understood to have asked for resumption of suburban trains in Mumbai for emergency service.

CM said his government was in no hurry to open the lockdown, and could go for an extension depending on the pattern of the spread.

Delhi health minister Satyendra Jain said large congregations should not be allowed. Schools, colleges, cinemas should remain shut, he said on a day when two floors of Parliament Annexe building were sealed after an officer tested positive.

In UP, the was slated to take stock of the situation with top district officials on Friday night. At present, there are about 1,200 hotspots in the state with a population of more than 5 million people belonging to 960,000 households, UP additional chief secretary Awanish Kumar Awasthi told the media.

ALSO READ: Coronavirus LIVE: Trump says US ‘terminating’ relationship with WHO

The fresh guidelines by the MHA are set to ask states to implement social distancing more strictly and increase fines on those violating this. Punjab on Friday increased fine on those found spitting in public places to Rs 500. CM has said he has received representations from many religious leaders to open religious places. Among others, Rajasthan plans to restrict the lockdown to “curfew and non-curfew zones”. Odisha, after an increase in the spread, favours extending the lockdown. home minister has said lockdown should continue beyond May 31 and justified strictness at the state’s borders with Delhi since free movement was likely to result in a surge in Covid cases in the state.


(With inputs from Avishek Rakshit, Samreen Ahmad, Virendra Singh Rawat, T E Narasimhan, Dasarath B Reddy, Aneesh Phadnis & Archis Mohan)



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Tune into Die Heuwels Fantasties’ lockdown live stream launch of ‘2021’

With touring in the foreseeable future being off the cards, the South African alternative electronic band have decided to venture online for the launch of their new album, 2021.

And joining them on Saturday 30 May for this state-of-the-art live stream experience will be well-known musos Francois van Coke, Arno Carstens, Jack Parow and Tarryn Lamb.

“The whole band is amped for our first full-on online live show,” said DHF frontman Pierre Greeff.

“It’s an exciting experience to be able to ‘send’ our album into the homes of fans across the world through the cyber realm. It’s going to be an audio visual treat!”

Double whammy: Free digital album

And to top off this what promises to be a memorable first for the band, tickets to the live stream includes a free 2021 digital album.

Their latest album boasts 16 brand new tracks and also features the likes of legendary musical powerhouse Arno Carstens, Tarryn Lamb, rapper Jack Parow, Francois van Coke, Johnny de Ridder, Ampie, TJ Terblanché and Pierre Pressure. 

A taste of ‘2021’:

Soulful decade for DHF

Die Heuwels Fantasties is considered one of the most successful Afrikaans electronic acts. They released their self-titled debut album in March 2009, features contributions from popular names on the South African music scene, such as Francois van Coke (Fokofpolisiekar and Van Coke Kartel), Laudo Liebenberg (aKING), Adriaan Brand (Springbok Nude Girls), Neil Basson (Foto na Dans) and Jack Parow. 

Die Heuwels Fantasties is composed of Hunter Kennedy (also a member of Fokofpolisiekar and formerly of aKING), Pierre Greeff (also member of Lukraaketaar), Fred den Hartog (also member of Thieve) and Sheldon Yoko (also a member of Die Gevaar).

‘2021’ tracks:

  1. Mis Oor Die See (feat. Arno Carstens)
  2. Ons Moet Leef (feat. Ampie)
  3. Plekkie In Die Son (feat. Early B)
  4. Naweek (feat. Jack Parow)
  5. Lieg Net Vir My
  6. Kan Iemand My Hoor? (feat. TJ Terblanché)
  7. Ek Mis Jou (feat. Tarryn Lamb)
  8. Vat My Saam 
  9. Mejuffrou Sonneblom
  10. Kom Na My Toe (feat. Johnny De Ridder)
  11. Jy Stel My Teleur
  12. Min Worries (feat. Francois Van Coke)
  13. Bly By Die Huis 
  14. Nog Een (feat. Loki Rothman) [Bonus Track]
  15. Doin’ It Right (feat. Pierre Pressure) [Bonus snit]
  16. Leja (Live at Francois van Coke en Vriende 2019, Pretoria) [Bonus Track]

Get your tickets here:

Tickets for the live stream show which will take place from 20:00 to 21:30 on Saturday is available for R150 on www.howler.co.za.  

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Arakan Army Kills Myanmar Policemen in Attack on Border Guard Outpost

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The Arakan Army attacked a paramilitary border guard outpost in western Myanmar’s war-ravaged Rakhine state on Friday, capturing six policemen and three of their family members, and killing several others, the Myanmar military and local residents said.

The ethnic armed force raided the Thazin Myaing police outpost in rural Rathedaung township from the northwest, according to a statement on the website of the Office of the Commander-in-Chief of Defense Services.

“Around 100 AA terrorist insurgents attacked in droves using heavy and light artillery and guns at about 2:10 a.m. today on the main station of Thazin Myaing police outpost which has been undertaking law enforcement in the region,” the statement said.

The ambush resulted in four deaths and the abduction of nine others, including some of officers’ relatives, it said.

The attacks killed four policemen, while six more policemen and three family members, including a child, are missing,” the statement said.

Similar AA raids on police outposts in late 2018 and in early 2019 triggered the conflict pitting the ethnic Rakhine rebel group against the Myanmar military that has engulfed much of northern Rakhine state — a region already devastated by the national army’s campaign to expel 740,000 Rohingya Muslims in 2017.

Some residents from a nearby village estimated that at least 30 security forces were deployed at the outpost and that as many as 10 of them may have died during the armed assault.

“There were heavy losses of servicemen from the government side during the battle last night in the village, [and] the AA abducted some policemen,” said a resident of Thazin Myaing village who requested anonymity for security reasons.

AA soldiers took away nine police officers, the resident said, adding that the exact number of deaths is unclear.

“Another 10 policemen who left the outpost are staying on the mountain, and they haven’t come down,” he said. “They asked us for help with food supplies. We promised to help them.”

The remaining 10 or so are assumed to have been killed during the assault, the villager said.

Myanmar military spokesman Brigadier Gen Zaw Min Tun told RFA that only a handful of policemen were assigned to the outpost and that authorities were still trying to determine the number killed and abducted.

Myanmar security forces are now following AA soldiers and conducting clearance operations to eliminate them from the area, he said.

Another local villager who also requested anonymity for the same reason said AA troops also torched two police outpost buildings following the cessation of artillery fire at about 3 a.m.

“They burned down two buildings,” the villager said. “One is on the hill, and the other one for support staff is at the foot [of the hill].”

Almost all the residents of Thazin Myaing, except for the elderly, have now fled the community — a purpose-built village with about 40 houses that was set up as an outpost to protect the area against attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), a Muslim militant group active in the region.

Military ‘support station’

The Myanmar military said the AA’s strategy of targeting border guard outposts and police stations as well as civilians related to officers stationed at these places are war crimes.

“The AA terrorist insurgent group committing such consistent attacks targeting police outposts and policemen is [tantamount to] committing war crimes,” the military’s statement said.

AA spokesman Khine Thukha confirmed the attack on outpost saying that “the facility nominally called a police outpost is actually a support station for the military’s operations.”

He said that security forces at the outpost cannot be classified as civilian forces because they are under the command of the military, and that AA troops had seized a rocket launcher and 14 other weapons there.

Khine Thukha said that the AA is assessing the policemen it detained at the scene and would soon release all nonmilitary personnel and well as information about the number of deaths and injuries that occurred during the attack.

A violent AA ambush on four border outposts in neighboring Buthidaung township on Jan. 4, 2019, killed 13 policemen and injured nine others, amid an escalation of hostilities with Myanmar forces that began in late 2018 and has now raged for nearly 17 months.

The AA conducted additional deadly attacks on other police outposts and barracks in Rakhine’s Ponnagyun, Mrauk-U, and Buthidaung townships in 2019.

The Myanmar government in March declared the AA an illegal association and a terrorist group.

Reported by RFA’s Myanmar Service. Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.



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Govt says testing lab not possible in each district, Bombay HC expresses ‘displeasure’

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Written by Omkar Gokhale
| Mumbai |

Published: May 30, 2020 2:33:08 am





The bench expressed its displeasure over the state’s reply and sought the presence of Advocate General Ashutosh Kumbhakoni. (File)

The Bombay High Court on Friday expressed displeasure after the Maharashtra government stated it was not possible to have full-fledged Covid-19 testing facilities in all the districts of the state and that it had fulfilled the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) guidelines prescribing testing lab within 250 km.

A division bench of Chief Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice K K Tated was hearing a plea filed by a fisherman seeking proper testing facilities in Ratnagiri, a non-red zone, in the light of thousands of stranded migrant workers returning to the district from red zones, such as Mumbai and Pune.

In his petition, filed through advocate Rakesh Bhatkar, 58-year-old Khalil Ahmad Hasanmiya Wasta claimed that if migrants, returning from red zones to Ratnagiri, were not tested due to lack of facilities, it would endanger the lives of local residents there.

On May 26, the high court had sought to know from the state government whether Covid-19 testing facilities are available in each district of Maharashtra, including Ratnagiri, and inquired if mobile clinics can be started across the state.

On Friday, assistant government pleader for the state government submitted a note in response and informed the court that a testing facility had been established at the Civil Hospital at Ratnagiri as per a government resolution and same would be functional within eight days.

Responding to the court’s query on whether separate laboratory for each district can be established, the state lawyer, through the note, responded: “It can be seen that there is no need to have a separate laboratory in each district due to the procedure which gives sufficient time to send the samples to the designated laboratory within a radius of 250 km as recommended by the ICMR. Also, new laboratories cannot instantly be set up due to severe constraints in the availability of the technical infrastructure in each district.”

The bench expressed its displeasure over the state’s reply and sought the presence of Advocate General Ashutosh Kumbhakoni. When Kumbhakoni appeared, through video-conference, the bench said such an approach by the state was not acceptable.

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‘Something to hide’: government accused over Covid-19 tests

The government has failed to disclose the number of people tested for Covid-19 for the seventh day running, prompting criticism from senior scientists who said this risked a perception that there is “something to hide”.

On Friday, figures showed that less than 131,500 daily tests were carried out the previous day. No 10 insisted that it was “on target” to hit 200,000 daily tests by 1 June, as promised by health secretary Matt Hancock.

However, no figure for the total number of people tested was provided – and hasn’t been for a week – which experts said makes it impossible to judge whether an adequate regime is in place to support the newly launched test-and-trace system.

Paul Hunter, professor of medicine at the University of East Anglia, said: “Whether or not the Department of Health is trying to hide these figures … not making them publicly available could be perceived as that.

“If the government is setting targets that it’s then going to judge itself by, the results should be publicly available so that people outside the small group of advisers to the government are able to judge them independently. It does feel that the openness is not there.”

Prof Allyson Pollock, director of the Newcastle University Centre for Excellence in Regulatory Science, said the lack of transparency was concerning at a critical time when testing was required to ensure restrictions can be eased safely without triggering a resurgence of infections.

“I have no idea whether we’ve got adequate testing [for track and trace] because we just don’t have enough information,” she said. “We should know how many people have been tested, why they’ve been tested, where they’ve been tested, who has done the test, the test results. We haven’t got those figures.”

The latest figures provide the number of people tested in Pillar 1 (people in hospital and health and care workers), but not for Pillar 2 (tests for the wider population carried out at drive-through centres or through home testing) or overall figures. These numbers were last made available on 22 May.

The Department of Health website states: “Reporting on the number of people tested has been temporarily paused to ensure consistent reporting across all pillars.”

The most recent available figures for Pillar 2 show that there had been around 1.6 million tests to date, but just 1.1 million people tested in this category. The gap of roughly 500,000 is understood to be accounted for by people who have had retests and because tests mailed out for home testing and to satellite labs are only counted as “people tested” once they return to the system.

Only a “small percentage” of people in Pillar 2 have retests, according to the Department of Health, suggesting that hundreds of thousands of tests mailed out to homes and satellite labs – potentially more than a third of those mailed out – had not returned to the system by last week.

“If this service is working properly we need to know that the tests are being done and not just disappearing into the postal service never to be seen again,” said Hunter.

The Department of Health declined to say how many tests have been mailed out, but have not returned to the system or are awaiting use in satellite laboratories.

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COVID-19 Pandemic ‘Greatest Threat to Cambodia’s Development’: World Bank

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Concerns over the spread of coronavirus have severely damaged Cambodia’s economy, with the country’s important tourism, export, and construction sectors especially hard hit, the World Bank said in a new report on Friday.

These three sectors together account for more than 70 percent of Cambodia’s economic growth and about 40 percent of its paid employment, the World Bank said in its latest economic update for the Southeast Asian nation, Cambodia in the Time of COVID-19.

“As a result, [Cambodia’s] economy is expected to register its slowest growth since 1994, contracting by between -1 percent and -2.9 percent,” the World Bank said, adding that poverty among affected households could increase between 3 to 11 percentage points higher than in the years before the virus spread.

At least 1.76 million jobs in Cambodia are now at risk, according to the report.

“The global shock triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted Cambodia’s economy,” Inguna Dobraja, Cambodia Country Manager for the World Bank said, urging that policies be quickly put in place in Cambodia to provide economic relief and protect public health.

“The World Bank is committed to helping Cambodia deal effectively with the COVID-19 crisis and strengthen the economy for recovery and future resilience,” Dobraja said.

Cambodian Ministry of Economy spokesman Meas Soksensan said that the easing of the COVID-19 pandemic will restore normalcy to the economy, but that the government is also taking measures of its own.

“It is up to the government measures that we are implementing now through 2021 and 2022,” he said.

“We will then find any possibility to see if we can inject more cash [into the economy], and if we don’t have enough resources we will look into debt,” Soksensan said, adding that he thinks Cambodia’s debt levels are manageable.

To date, 124 cases of coronavirus infection have been confirmed in Cambodia.

Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Written in English by Richard Finney.



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