Jul 22, 2021

Covid-19 (July 22): 13,034 cases, Selangor climbs above 6k again

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COVID-19 | The Health Ministry today reported 13,034 new Covid-19 infections, 181 cases shy of the record high.

This is the second time fresh infections have exceeded 13,000 cases.

The highest record was on July 15 where 13,215 new infections were registered.

  • Active cases: 142,051
  • Patients in ICUs: 938
  • Intubated: 459

The climb today was largely contributed by a surge in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur.

 

 

Selangor saw new infection rise to above 6,049, the second time the state saw more than 6,000 new cases in a day.

Kuala Lumpur reported 1,611 new cases, the third-highest on record for the federal territory.

New cases in Johor, Negeri Sembilan and Kedah also remain elevated, at more than 700.

Deaths

There were 134 fatalities today, bringing the death toll to 7,574.

Of these, 39 were recorded in Selangor, 32 in Kuala Lumpur, 18 in Negeri Sembilan, 15 in Johor, 7 in Perak, 7 in Malacca, 5 in Pahang, 4 in Kedah, 2 in Penang, 2 in Terengganu, 2 in Labuan, and 1 in Sabah.

While most of the casualties have a history of chronic illness, 30 appear to have a clean bill of health prior to their infection.

Twenty-two (16.4 percent) of the deceased today had already died when brought to a hospital.

These brought-in-dead cases were reported in Kuala Lumpur (8), Selangor (7), Johor (2), Malacca (2), Labuan (2), and Perak (1).

New cases by state

Selangor (6,049)
Kuala Lumpur (1,611)
Johor (791)
Negeri Sembilan (711)
Kedah (701)
Sarawak (644)
Sabah (497)
Terengganu (391)
Penang (371)
Malacca (353)
Perak (284)
Pahang (261)
Kelantan (240)
Putrajaya (100)
Labuan (24)
Perlis (6)

Clusters

A total of 946 out of 3,361 clusters are still active. This includes the 32 new clusters reported today.

Twenty-one of the new clusters are classified as workplace clusters, while seven are community clusters, two involve private educational facilities, and two involve high-risk groups.

Overall, clusters (including older clusters) account for 2,091 (16.0 percent) of today’s cases.

Most cases are either detected through contact tracing (7,120 cases; 54.6 percent) and other types of screening (3,798; 29.1 percent). Imported cases account for the remaining 25 cases.

Details of the new clusters are as follow:

Industri Teratai
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Klang, Petaling, Kuala Selangor and Hulu Langat
Total infected: 255 out of 900 screened

Industri Jalan Sungai
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Langat
Total infected: 164 out of 458 screened

Industri Jalan Bangi
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Langat
Total infected: 159 out of 214 screened

Jalan TTP Satu
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sepang
Total infected: 26 out of 35 screened

Tapak Bina Jalan Merah Caga
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Cheras
Total infected: 105 out of 199 screened

Tapak Bina Jalan Gading
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Lembah Pantai
Total infected: 73 out of 295 screened

Jalan Wangsa Delima
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Titiwangsa
Total infected: 20 out of 44 screened

Jalan Medan Bunus
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Lembah Pantai
Total infected: 14 out of 40 screened

Teknologi Senai 21
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Kulai
Total infected: 32 out of 145 screened

Jalan NIP Industri
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 21 out of 34 screened

Tapak Bina Raya
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Muar
Total infected: 17 out of 25 screened

Persiaran Cassia Selatan Tujuh
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang
District(s): Seberang Perai Selatan, Seberang Perai Tengah, Seberang Perai Utara, Timur Laut and Barat Daya
Total infected: 26 out of 631 screened

Jalan Permatang Pauh
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang
District(s): Seberang Perai Utara
Total infected: 12 out of 44 screened

Industri Perai Lapan
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang
District(s): Seberang Perai Tengah
Total infected: 12 out of 82 screened

Industri Tunas Baru
Category: Workplace
State(s): Malacca
District(s): Alor Gajah
Total infected: 44 out of 109 screened

Angkasa Nuri
Category: Workplace
State(s): Malacca
District(s): Alor Gajah and Melaka Tengah
Total infected: 27 out of 75 screened

Industri 3/5 Temerloh
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Temerloh
Total infected: 23 out of 64 screened

Kuala Tahan
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Jerantut
Total infected: 18 out of 50 screened

Dah Perusahaan Lima Industri Kulim
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kedah
District(s): Baling, Kulim, Bandar Baharu and Kuala Muda
Total infected: 118 out of 194 screened

Jalan Demak Laut
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Kuching, Bau, Asajaya, Samarahan and Serian
Total infected: 30 out of 186 screened

Kuril
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kinabatangan
Total infected: 12 out of 97 screened

Jalan Cenderai Sembilan
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 14 out of 30 screened

Putri Fasa Enam
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Kulai and Johor Bahru
Total infected: 14 out of 35 screened

Jalan Permas Lapan
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 11 out of 52 screened

Kampung Kuala Gel
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Bachok and Kota Bharu
Total infected: 14 out of 38 screened

Kebun Lama
Category: Community
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Papar and Kota Kinabalu
Total infected: 27 out of 61 screened

Abu Bengang
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Saratok
Total infected: 131 out of 193 screened

Padang Pulut
Category: Community
State(s): Terengganu
District(s): Dungun
Total infected: 48 out of 158 screened

Jalan GC Satu
Category: Private educational institution registered under the Education Ministry
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sepang
Total infected: 20 out of 77 screened

Jalan Dwitasik Satu
Category: Private educational institution registered under the Education Ministry
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Cheras
Total infected: 9 out of 32 screened

Dah Kempas
Category: High-risk group
State(s): Kedah
District(s): Kuala Muda
Total infected: 57 out of 66 screened

Taman Kok Doh
Category: High-risk group
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 9 out of 18 screened

Source:Malaysiakini

Australia warns COVID-19 cases likely to rise despite weeks-long lockdown

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SYDNEY: COVID-19 cases in Australia spiked again on Thursday (Jul 22), despite a weeks-long lockdown, with authorities warning that infections would rise more and take a toll on the economy as the country battles to contain the highly contagious Delta variant.

New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state, reported 124 new COVID-19 cases, versus 110 a day earlier, a record for this year and the highest in 16 months. Most of the infections were reported in state capital Sydney, which is in its fourth week of a lockdown.

Victoria state, entering a second week of stay-at-home orders, logged 26 new cases, up from 22.

“We anticipate case numbers will continue to go up before they start coming down and we need to brace ourselves for that,” said Gladys Berejiklian, premier of New South Wales.

READ: Australia, under lockdown, sees jump in COVID-19 cases

Of most concern is the number of people moving around in the community before being diagnosed, which was 48 on Wednesday in New South Wales, the state’s health authorities say.

 

Sydney, home to a fifth of Australia’s 25 million people, was due to exit lockdown on Jul 30 but Berejiklian has said the number of infections in the community must be near zero first.

She urged people to get vaccinated.

“Until we have enough of our population fully vaccinated, we will be living with some level of restriction and that will depend on how quickly we can overcome the severity of the current outbreak,” she said.

“The vaccine is key to our freedom.”

READ: Man in Australia ties bedsheets together to escape 4th floor hotel quarantine

Neighbouring Queensland state closed its border to New South Wales, citing the outbreak, shutting off one of the most travelled routes in the country.

In Victoria, to the south of New South Wales, all the 26 new cases were linked to known chains of transmission and 24 were in quarantine throughout their infectious period, the state authorities said.

South Australia state reported two new cases as officials track two “superspread events” – gatherings at a winery and a Greek restaurant in the state capital Adelaide.

MORRISON ‘SORRY’ FOR SLOW VACCINE ROLLOUT

Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Thursday apologised for Australia’s glacial vaccine rollout.

After months of boasting about his “gold standard” pandemic response and insisting vaccine rollout was “not a race”, Morrison bowed to critics.

“I’m sorry that we haven’t been able to achieve the marks that we had hoped for at the beginning of this year. Of course I am,” he said.

“I take responsibility for the vaccination programme. I also take responsibility for the challenges we’ve had. Obviously, some things are within our control, some things that are not.”

Morrison is under fierce public pressure to improve Australia’s vaccination rate currently languishing around 11 per cent, among the lowest rate of any rich nation.

ECONOMIC HIT

With large swathes of businesses shut down in the country’s two largest cities, Australia’s A$2 trillion (US$1.5 trillion) economy could take a big hit from the latest lockdowns that have forced more than half its population indoors.

The economy had boomed to pre-pandemic levels in the early months of this year thanks to low COVID-19 cases.

But the latest lockdowns could cost the national economy around A$300 million (US$220 million) a day, Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg estimated.

“It’s going to have a hit on the economy. We’ll see that in the future, jobs data as well as in the GDP growth numbers,” Frydenberg told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

READ: Singapore-Australia travel bubble more likely in end-2021, says Australian minister

The country’s main airline, Qantas Airways, said in a memo to staff that domestic capacity had fallen below 40 per cent of pre-coronavirus levels and that staff may be stood down without pay if lockdowns continued for “extended periods”.

Australia has fared better than many other developed economies in keeping infections relatively low, with about 32,200 cases and 915 deaths.

But with a sputtering immunisation campaign and just 11 per cent of the population fully vaccinated, it has relied on lockdowns and border closures to contain the outbreak.

Source: Agencies/dv/ad

Florida condo collapse victims, families to receive initial US$150 million: Judge

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FLORIDA: As the remaining rubble from the collapse of a 12-storey oceanfront condominium was cleared away on Wednesday (Jul 21), a Florida judge said victims and families who suffered losses will get a minimum of US$150 million in compensation initially.

That sum includes about US$50 million in insurance on the Champlain Towers South building and at least US$100 million in proceeds from the sale of the Surfside property where the structure once stood, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman said at a hearing.

“The court’s concern has always been the victims here,” the judge said, adding that the group includes visitors and renters, not just condo owners.

“Their rights will be protected.”

READ:  ‘No chance of life’: Search of collapsed Florida condominium shifts from rescue to recovery 

The US$150 million does not count any proceeds from the numerous lawsuits already filed since the Jun 24 collapse, which killed at least 97 people. Those lawsuits are being consolidated into a single class action that would cover all victims and family members if they choose, the judge said.

“I have no doubt, no stone will be left unturned,” Hanzman said of the lawsuits.

So far 97 victims have been identified, many of them using DNA analysis. Miami-Dade officials said on Wednesday evening they believed they have two more victims to identify, but another person’s name was released later in the day — meaning there may be just one more.

Officials have not yet announced an end to the recovery effort.

The site of the tragedy has mostly been cleared away with the debris relocated to an evidentiary collection site near the airport where a thorough search will continue “with enormous care and diligence”, said Mayor Daniella Levine Cava.

She spoke about the difficulties of the search in a statement on Wednesday.

“The enormous pressure of the weight of the collapse and the passage of time also make it more challenging,” she said, stressing that workers were still carefully combing through the rubble for the remaining victims as well as personal property.

On Wednesday, police said 24-year-old Anastasia Gromova and Linda March, 58, were identified.

READ: Florida condominium collapse lawsuits seek to get answers, assign blame

Gromova, a Canadian from Montreal, had just been accepted to a programme teaching English in Japan. She was visiting Florida with her friend Michelle Pazos, and were staying with Pazos’ father at the condo.

Gromova’s body was recovered three days ago and was one of the last to be identified. Pazos’ body, along with her father’s, was recovered earlier this month.

Gromova’s grieving family rushed from Canada after the collapse and had spent weeks in agony waiting in Miami.

“It just makes it real and hard but on a different level. At least we can move on now.” her sister Anna Gromova told the Associated Press, describing her sister as a bright star that fell fast. “We will remember her forever.”

Her parents said she was bright, always on the go, constantly smiling and unafraid to take on difficult challenges.

“It’s hard because you knew the loss was preventable and still nothing was prevented,” her sister said.

March’s body was recovered on Jul 5, police said. She was an attorney described by family as an outgoing woman looking for a new start in the Miami area. She had lost both her mother and father in the past decade and was divorced.

The rubble that will be key evidence is being stored in a Miami-area warehouse, with the rest in nearby vacant lots, said the receiver, attorney Michael Goldberg. All of that will be preserved as possible evidence for the lawsuits and for other experts to review, he said.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology is leading a federal probe into the collapse, according to a receiver handling the finances on behalf of the condominium board.

“It may take years for their report to become public,” Goldberg said of the NIST probe.

The building was just undergoing its 40-year recertification process when it collapsed. That came three years after an engineer warned of serious structural issues needing immediate attention. Most of the concrete repair and other work had yet to be started.

There remain differences of opinion among condo owners about what to do with the site. Some want the entire condo rebuilt so they can move back in. Others say it should be left as a memorial site to honour those who died. A third suggestion is to combine both.

Owner Raysa Rodriguez, whose unit was on the ninth floor, said she couldn’t imagine going back into a building in a place where so many friends died.

“I personally would never set foot in a building. That’s a gravesite,” Rodriguez told the judge. “I wake up in the middle of the night thinking of everyone who perished.”

Oren Cytrynbaum, an attorney who is informally representing some fellow condo owners, said it was important to think creatively about the building sale, including whether requirements might be added such as a memorial of some kind for future developers.

“It shouldn’t be a traditional land sale,” Cytrynbaum said. “We’re not on one path.”

Hanzman, however, said time is of the essence because victims and families need money to begin rebuilding their lives.

“This is not a case where we have time to let grass grow underneath it,” he said.

Source: AP/ad

More residents flee as fires ravage western Canada, US

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MONTREAL: Thousands of residents fled blazes in western Canada on Wednesday (Jul 21) with several hundred soldiers scheduled to deploy to fight this year’s virulent and early fires, which are wreaking havoc across portions of western North America.

“I have a holiday trailer that is my new home,” said Margo Wagner, head of a district in the western province of British Columbia, who has found herself among the evacuees.

The fire marks the second time in four years that her home in the province’s central Canim Lake rural area has been threatened by a blaze.

South of the border, a number of communities in the United States are being threatened by wildfires, creating conditions so extreme that the blazes have generated their own weather, according to experts.

Nearly 80 huge fires are currently ravaging hundreds of thousands of hectares in California, Oregon, Montana and Nevada.

READ: Massive wildfires in US West bring haze to East Coast

Smoke from the Dixie Fire (top) and the Tamarack Fire in Northern California on July 21, 2021
Smoke from the Dixie Fire (top) and the Tamarack Fire in Northern California on Jul 21, 2021. (Photo: AFP/handout)

 

The largest among these is still the Bootleg Fire in Oregon, which has burned through a section of land the same size as the city of Los Angeles, in just two weeks.

“The fire got so big and it creates so much energy that it started to create its own weather,” Marcus Kauffman, a specialist with the Oregon Department of Forestry, told AFP, adding that the blaze “feeds on itself” and has even been making its own lightning.

Firefighters’ work over the past two weeks “has undoubtedly protected hundreds of homes and we remain vigilant to the task at hand”, said Ian Yocum of the Oregon State Fire Marshal.

In neighbouring California, several towns were evacuated as they faced rising flames from the Dixie Fire, a conflagration that may have been caused by a tree falling on Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) lines.

READ: Major US wildfire grows, forcing new evacuations

Last year the company pleaded guilty to manslaughter and causing a fire that devastated the nearby town of Paradise, California in 2018, due to faulty lines.

On Wednesday, it announced its intention to bury thousands of kilometres of power lines, starting with those located in areas prone to fires.

 

A firefighting tanker drops a retardant over the Grandview fire near Sisters, Oregon on July 11,
A firefighting tanker drops a retardant over the Grandview fire near Sisters, Oregon on Jul 11, 2021. (Photo: AFP/handout)

 

“ABSOLUTELY” SCARY

Back in Canada, British Columbia declared a state of emergency on Monday, with more than 5,700 people under an evacuation order.

“We did it in 2017 and we will do it again in 2021. Is it stressful? Is it scary? Absolutely it is,” Wagner said.

Other neighbouring areas are preparing for the worst since weather conditions, particularly wind and heat, are not expected to give the more than 3,000 firefighters already battling the blazes a break anytime soon.

“I have been living here in Ashcroft for almost 25 years now and I have never seen anything like this before,” said Mayor Barbara Roden, whose municipality in the centre of the province has been on high alert since Jul 14.

“The most frightening thing in a lot of ways is that we’re all looking at the calendar and this is only halfway through July,” she said.

Climate change amplifies droughts which dry out regions, creating ideal conditions for wildfires.

The Canadian armed forces are preparing to deploy 350 additional troops to British Columbia and 120 to Manitoba, a central province also struggling with large fire outbreaks, according to the Canadian Joint Operations Command. In Ontario, about 75 soldiers are helping firefighters.

Source: AFP/mi

Germans question handling of floods as hopes of finding survivors fade

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BERLIN: A relief official dampened hopes on Wednesday (Jul 21) of finding more survivors in the rubble of villages devastated by floods in western Germany, as a poll showed many Germans felt policymakers had not done enough to protect them.

More than 170 people died in last week’s flooding, Germany’s worst natural disaster in more than half a century, and thousands went missing.

“We are still looking for missing persons as we clear roads and pump water out of basements,” Sabine Lackner, deputy chief of the Federal Agency for Technical Relief (THW), told Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland.

Any victims found now are likely to be dead, she said.

One woman in Insul, in the rural Eifel region, said people had emerged from their houses like ghosts last week to see whether their neighbours were alive. In the Ahrweiler district, of which Insul is part, 123 people died.

READ: Knee-deep in sewage: German rescuers race to avert health emergency in flood areas

READ: ‘It’s terrifying’: Merkel shaken as flood deaths rise to 188 in Europe

For immediate relief, the federal government will initially provide up to €200 million (US$235.5 million) in emergency aid, and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said more funds can be made available if needed.

That will come on top of at least €250 million provided by the affected states to repair buildings and damaged local infrastructure and to help people in crisis situations.

Scholz said the government would contribute to the cost of rebuilding infrastructure such as roads and bridges. The full extent of the damage is not clear, but Scholz said that rebuilding after previous floods cost about €6 billion.

PUBLIC CRITICISM

The floods have dominated the political agenda before a national election in September and raised uncomfortable questions about why Europe’s richest economy was caught flat-footed.

READ: Germany picks through rubble after deadly European floods

READ: Germans describe helplessness in face of flood devastation

Two-thirds of Germans believe that federal and regional policymakers should have done more to protect communities from flooding, a survey by the INSA institute for German mass-circulation paper Bild showed on Wednesday.

Interior minister Horst Seehofer, who faced calls from opposition politicians to resign over the high death toll, said there would be no shortage of money for reconstruction.

“That is why people pay taxes, so that they can receive help in situations like this. Not everything can be insured,” he told a news conference.

Insured losses from the floods may total €4 billion to €5 billion (US$4.7-5.9 billion), said the GDV insurance industry association. Damage in the states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate is likely to exceed the €4.65 billion recorded after a deluge in August 2002, it said.

The estimate does not include losses from the southern German state of Bavaria and in Saxony in the east last weekend.

Only around 45 per cent of homeowners in Germany have insurance that covers flood damage, according to the GDV, triggering a discussion about the need for compulsory insurance.

“As the time interval between heavy natural disasters gets shorter and shorter, one needs a debate about a protection scheme and how it could be designed,” Seehofer said.

Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told Deutschlandfunk radio aid would include funds to help businesses such as restaurants or hair salons make up for lost revenue.

Source: Reuters/ga/ec