Singapore sends medical supplies, equipment to Indonesia as daily COVID-19 cases hit record
SINGAPORE: Singapore sent medical supplies and equipment to Indonesia on Friday (Jul 9) amid a surge in COVID-19 cases, the Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) said.
Indonesia on Thursday reported a new daily record of 38,391 COVID-19 infections and 852 more fatalities from the disease, its second-highest daily death toll, official data showed.
More than 2.4 million COVID-19 cases have been recorded in the country since the start of the pandemic, with 63,760 deaths.
READ: Indonesia’s surge in COVID-19 cases spreads to coal mining areas
“Singapore stands in solidarity with Indonesia against the surge of COVID-19,” said MFA in a press statement.
“In response to Indonesia’s request, the Singapore Government has provided an initial tranche of medical supplies and equipment including oxygen cylinders, oxygen concentrators, ventilators and personal protective equipment such as surgical and N95 masks, gloves, and gowns to support Indonesia’s efforts to combat the COVID-19 pandemic,” said the ministry.
Two Republic of Singapore Air Force C-130 aircraft left Paya Lebar Air Base for Jakarta on Friday morning.
Multiple government agencies in both Singapore and Indonesia worked in close cooperation to arrange the dispatch of the medical supplies at short notice, MFA added.
Minister for Foreign Affairs Vivian Balakrishnan handed over the medical supplies and equipment to the Indonesian Ambassador to Singapore Suryo Pratomo at Paya Lebar Air Base.
“For the last one and a half years, we have all been coping with the unprecedented challenge that COVID-19 has caused us,” said Dr Balakrishnan in his remarks at the ceremony for the handover.
With the spread of the Delta variant across the world in the last few months, the challenge has “intensified”, the minister said.
“The situation in Indonesia right now is also due to the spread of the Delta variant, and as close neighbours and partners, we stand in solidarity with all the people of Indonesia,” he added.
Last year, Singapore sent COVID-19 test kits along with other equipment to Indonesia.
“In return – I think many people may not be aware – when we had to establish community care facilities very quickly, the Republic of Indonesia was very helpful to us in supplying essential equipment and furniture which we needed to outfit this,” said Dr Balakrishnan.
READ: Singapore sends additional medical supplies to support Indonesia’s fight against COVID-19
“So now, at their point in need, we stand in solidarity with them in support. It is this kind of mutual support that represents the strength of our relationship – not just at the government-to-government level, but at the people-to-people level.”
“This is a physical manifestation of the strength of our relationship and our solidarity with the people of Indonesia,” added the minister.
The Singapore Armed Forces and Indonesian National Defence Forces (TNI) are working closely together, said Dr Balakrishnan, adding that the operation would not be possible without the direct participation of both forces.
An “additional tranche of assistance” will be delivered through the Singapore Navy.
Source: CNA/ad
COVID-19: Southeast Asia sees spike in new cases, deaths as region struggles to contain Delta variant
Having escaped the worst when the COVID-19 pandemic erupted last year, Southeast Asia is now suffering record rises in deaths and cases, while vaccination shortfalls and highly contagious variants have derailed containment efforts.
As countries like Britain, Germany and France prepare to remove most remaining restrictions after devastating outbreaks, governments in Southeast Asia have been tightening measures, hoping targeted lockdowns will act as circuit breakers in arresting dramatic spikes after cases started rising in May.
READ: Malls shut, dining-in banned as Indonesia unveils broad emergency COVID-19 curbs in Java and Bali
Indonesia, the region’s hardest hit and most populous country, recorded 38,391 cases on Thursday (Jul 8), six times the number a month earlier, in a week when its daily death toll as much as doubled from the start of July.
Hospitals on the most populous island Java are being pushed to the limit, oxygen supplies are low, and four of five designated COVID-19 burial grounds in the capital Jakarta are close to full.
READ: Desperate Malaysians fly white flags as a call for help to survive COVID-19 lockdown
Record deaths were reported on Thursday in Malaysia, and in Thailand, where authorities proposed internal travel curbs as the Delta variant wreaking havoc in Indonesia spread quickly in and around Bangkok.
A new terminal at the Thai capital’s airport is being turned into a 5,000-bed field hospital.
READ: Phuket reports first overseas visitor with COVID-19 after reopening without quarantine requirements
Neighbouring Myanmar saw more than 4,000 new cases for the first time on Thursday and one of its deadliest days, while Cambodia has seen its highest number of cases and deaths in the past nine days.
Health experts say a low level of testing in the region’s most populous countries Indonesia and the Philippines is also likely disguising the full extent of outbreaks, while Myanmar has seen a collapse in testing since February’s military coup.
PANIC-BUYING
Vietnam’s reputation as a COVID-19 success story is under threat, with more cases in the past three days than during the first 13 months of the pandemic, although the record 1,314 cases on Thursday were a fraction of those in Indonesia.
READ: SEA Games in Vietnam postponed amid rising COVID-19 cases
Fears of a lockdown prompted supermarket panic-buying this week in the epicentre Ho Chi Minh City, and a 4 per cent plunge in its main stock index on Tuesday.
The city of 9 million had previously been subjected to travel restrictions for a month but infection rates were steadily rising – with more than 9,400 cases registered.
The capital Hanoi halted public transport from places with infection clusters to insulate itself from the outbreak in the southern commercial hub, where some of the country’s tightest restrictions were in force from Friday.
Ho Chi Minh City residents are now barred from gathering in groups larger than pairs in public, and people are only allowed to leave home to buy food, medicine and in case of emergencies.
Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist at Griffith University, said the region was struggling to cope with the Delta variant and were paying for inconsistencies in strategy and messaging, and enforcement of protocols.
READ: Delta COVID-19 variant threatens new pandemic challenge
He also cited the need to broaden the range of vaccines to better protect populations, noting the dominance of the Sinovac vaccine, owing to China’s vaccine diplomacy when Western brands were unavailable.
“There’s definitely benefits to the vaccine, but there’s also the weak sides of it. Why? In handling the pandemic at a bigger scale … vaccines can’t stand alone,” he said. “Vaccines need to be diversified. Resources need to be diversified.”
Vaccination rates remain low, with 5.4 per cent of Indonesia’s 270 million population fully inoculated, about 2.7 per cent of people in the Philippines and 4.7 per cent of the population in Thailand.
Malaysia has vaccinated 9.3 per cent of its 32 million people and has introduced an enhanced lockdown in its capital and industrial belt.
READ: ‘No evidence’ inactivated virus vaccines more efficacious against COVID-19 variants than mRNA ones – Singapore expert committee
Indonesia and Thailand are considering booster shots with mRNA vaccines, like those of Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech/Cominarty, for medical workers who have mostly received the Chinese-made inactivated virus vaccines of Sinovac, amid concerns about their resistance to variants.
Singapore is among the few bright spots, with authorities expected to further ease restrictions and complete the immunisation of half of the population later this month.
It also plans to allow fully vaccinated residents to attend larger gatherings such as conferences, congregational worship and wedding solemnisations.
Source: Agencies/dv
Covid-19 (July 8): Record 135 deaths; 8,868 cases with 4,152 in Selangor
COVID-19 | The Covid-19 pandemic situation in the country continues to deteriorate with a record 135 deaths reported amid political upheaval with Umno threatening the collapse of the Perikatan Nasional government.
The Health Ministry today reported 8,868 new Covid-19 cases, the second-highest since the start of the pandemic.
This is only 152 cases shy of 9,020, the highest ever number of cases registered in a day, set on May 29.
Meanwhile, the number of patients in ICU has also hit a new record.
- Active cases: 77,275
- Patients in ICU: 952
- Intubated: 445
Selangor reported 4,152 new infections, the first time the state broke the 4,000 bar.
The state’s previous record was 3,285 on Jan 30.
The Klang Valley accounted for 60.19 percent (5,332 cases) of new local infections while East Malaysia made up 7.04 percent (624 cases).
The new locally transmitted infections in the country comprised 77.52 percent Malaysians and 22.48 percent non-citizens.
Deaths
The 135 fatalities today put the death toll at 5,903.
The new deaths were recorded in Selangor (63), Kuala Lumpur (24), Johor (9), Malacca (8), Negeri Sembilan (8), Sarawak (4), Kelantan (4), Perak (3), Sabah (3), Pahang (3), Putrajaya (2), Penang (2), Labuan (1) and Terengganu (1).
The youngest victim was a 29-year-old non-citizen man. The remaining deaths were aged between 35 and 90.
For a detailed breakdown of the reported deaths today, please refer to our Covid-19 tracker site.

New cases by state:
Selangor (4152)
Kuala Lumpur (1133)
Negeri Sembilan (897)
Perak (543)
Kedah (360)
Johor (336)
Sarawak (281)
Sabah (279)
Penang (237)
Malacca (183)
Pahang (152)
Kelantan (135)
Terengganu (68)
Labuan (64)
Putrajaya (47)
Perlis (1)
Vaccination Update
As of July 7, 29.9 percent out of an estimated adult population of 23,409,600 in the country have received at least the first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine.
Around 12.97 percent have received their second dose. This does not include the under 18-year-old population.
Three states that are seeing the slowest vaccination (at least first dose) are Sabah (14.23 percent), Kedah (18.13 percent) and Johor (18.3 percent).
The fastest are Kuala Lumpur (93.89 percent), Putrajaya (72.12 percent) and Sarawak (62.85 percent).
The national registration rate for the Covid-19 vaccine stands at 74.55 percent.
The data is from the special committee on Covid-19 vaccine supply (JKJAV).
Clusters
A total of 855 out of 2,999 clusters are still active. This includes the 29 new clusters reported today.
Out of the 29 new clusters today, 19 were related to workplaces.
Details of the new clusters:
Jalan Radin Dua
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Lembah Pantai
Total infected: 18 out of 39 screened
Jalan Medan Putra
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 12 out of 22 screened
Taman Perusahaan Kepong
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 7 out of 65 screened
Tapak Bina Jalan Sri Permaisuri
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Cheras
Total infected: 132 out of 201 screened
Industri Jaya Sungai Buloh
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Gombak and Petaling
Total infected: 16 out of 67 screened
Putra Dua
Category: Workplace
State(s): Putrajaya, Kuala Lumpur and Selangor
District(s): Putrajaya, Titiwangsa and Petaling
Total infected: 13 out of 43 screened
Industri Sungai Lalang
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Langat
Total infected: 52 out of 531 screened
Tapak Bina Jenderam Hilir
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sepang and Hulu Langat
Total infected: 32 out of 90 screened
Industri Bunga Tanjung
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban, Jelebu and Rembau
Total infected: 39 out of 208 screened
Industri Sendayan Metropark
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban
Total infected: 32 out of 48 screened
Industri Emas Satu
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban
Total infected: 103 out of 206 screened
Jalan Daiman
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Kota Tinggi
Total infected: 11 out of 150 screened
Jalan Harmonium 33
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 8 out of 29 screened
Industri Bakri Empat
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Muar
Total infected: 13 out of 24 screened
Jalan Tanah Putih
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Kuantan
Total infected: 25 out of 149 screened
Jalan Gebeng 1/11
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Kuantan
Total infected: 15 out of 91 screened
Industri Jalan Stapunal
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Kuala Krai and Machang
Total infected: 16 out of 269 screened
Lebuh Pantai Baru
Category: Workplace
State(s): Perak
District(s): Manjung
Total infected: 22 out of 143 screened
Dah 90 Industri Sungai Petani
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kedah
District(s): Kuala Muda
Total infected: 20 out of 232 screened
Taman Tanjung Mas
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Kota Bharu
Total infected: 15 out of 23 screened
Kampung Batu 8 1/4
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Kota Bharu
Total infected: 10 out of 15 screened
Kampung Istimewa 2
Category: Community
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Sandakan
Total infected: 27 out of 261 screened
Lumadan
Category: Community
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Beaufort
Total infected: 46 out of 110 screened
Bandar Baru Sentul 2
Category: Community
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 55 out of 311 screened
Sega
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Bau and Kuching
Total infected: 19 out of 61 screened
Taman Tasek Solok Dua
Category: Community
State(s): Perak
District(s): Kinta
Total infected: 19 out of 29 screened
Titian 2
Category: Community
State(s): Labuan
District(s): Labuan
Total infected: 37 out of 870 screened
Jalan Ria
Category: High-risk group
State(s): Johor
District(s): Muar
Total infected: 29 out of 65 screened
Jalan Jenderam Hulu
Category: Higher education
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sepang and Petaling
Total infected: 15 out of 153 screened
Source:Malaysiakini
Covid-19 (July 7): 7,097 cases with Klang Valley worst-hit, Pahang fails Phase 2 criteria
COVID-19 | The Health Ministry today reported 7,097 new Covid-19 cases with the Klang Valley still contributing the most number of new infections.
Selangor saw 3,119 new Covid-19 cases, the second consecutive day where fresh infections numbered above 3,000 for the state.
Kuala Lumpur recorded a four-digit increase with 1,005 new infections. It was also a four-digit increase yesterday.
Negeri Sembilan witnessed a surge with 788 new cases, the highest in 19 days.
Meanwhile, Pahang, which entered Phase 2 of the National Recovery Plan (NRP) on July 5, has regressed.
The state needed to maintain its new daily number of Covid-19 cases under 206 in order to qualify for Phase 2 but the seven-day average of new cases for the state has risen to 224.
The number of active cases are continuing on a 13-day uptrend, while the number of patients under intensive care have reached a new record.
- Active cases: 74,344
- Patients in ICUs: 948
- Intubated: 441
Breakdown by state:
- Selangor (3,119)
- Kuala Lumpur (1,005)
- Negeri Sembilan (788)
- Malacca (358)
- Sarawak (289)
- Pahang (258)
- Sabah (244)
- Johor (224)
- Kedah (198)
- Perak (187)
- Penang (140)
- Kelantan (123)
- Labuan (93)
- Terengganu (43)
- Putrajaya (26)
- Perlis (2)
The R-naught for the country has climbed to 1.09. The figure has been steadily rising since a recent low of 0.90 seen on June 12.
A R-naught of more than 1.00 suggests that the spread of Covid-19 was accelerating.
At the state level, Pahang, notably, had a R-naught of 1.18, which suggests the spread of Covid-19 in the state was not slowing down.
The only regions where the R-naught figure was less than 1.00 are Perak, Johor, Terengganu, Labuan, Sarawak, Kelantan and Perlis.
Deaths
There were 91 fatalities today, bringing the death toll to 5768.
Selangor (47) reported the most deaths followed by Negeri Sembilan (16), Kuala Lumpur (10), Johor (4), Malacca (4), Sarawak (3), Perak (2), Pahang (1), Kelantan (1), Labuan (1), Kedah (1) and Terengganu (1).
There were 10 victims who were pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital.
Details of the victims are documented on Malaysiakini’s Covid-19 tracker site.
Clusters
The number of active Covid-19 clusters monitored by the Health Ministry is 850. This figure has been steadily reducing since reaching a high of 887 on June 29.
The Health Ministry has classified 18 new clusters today, of which six were replaced to workplaces and nine were related to community spread.
Lorong Tiga Kampung Siol Kandis
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Kuching and Samarahan
Total infected: 69 out of 213 screened
Sungai Bedil Besar
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Kuching
Total infected: 31 out of 94 screened
Pintasan Kota Belud
Category: Community
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kota Belud
Total infected: 18 out of 34 screened
Siasai Dundau
Category: Community
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kota Belud
Total infected: 35 out of 149 screened
Jalan Bukit 17
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 16 out of 32 screened
Jalan Pulasan 18
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 14 out of 28 screened
Taman Dovenby
Category: Community
State(s): Perak and Selangor
District(s): Kuala Kangsar, Kinta, Larut, Matang, Selama and Gombak
Total infected: 34 out of 61 screened
Jalan Panchang
Category: Community
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sabak Bernam
Total infected: 14 out of 33 screened
Jalan Nik Yusuf
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Pasir Mas
Total infected: 14 out of 26 screened
Tasik Utama 2
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban and Port Dickson
Total infected: 27 out of 448 screened
Industri Lengkok Emas Nilai
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban and Port Dickson
Total infected: 68 out of 1,300 screened
Industri Jalan TMP Lapan
Category: Workplace
State(s): Malacca
District(s): Melaka Tengah
Total infected: 22 out of 69 screened
Jalan Tun Razak Peringgit
Category: Workplace
State(s): Malacca
District(s): Melaka Tengah
Total infected: 29 out of 114 screened
Jalan Metro Perdana
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur and Selangor
District(s): Kepong, Titiwangsa, Gombak, Petaling and Kuala Selangor
Total infected: 19 out of 116 screened
Pasar Orkid Sentosa
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Selangor
Total infected: 20 out of 63 screened
Sejantung
Category: Pendidikan Tinggi
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Selangor
Total infected: 96 out of 152 screened
Jalan Limau Kampung Pasir
Category: High-risk group
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 8 out of 20 screened
Jalan Parit Mahang
Category: High-risk group
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Kuala Selangor
Total infected: 45 out of 71 screened
Source:Malaysiakini
Life after lockdown: How places around the world are reopening as COVID-19 vaccination speeds up
SINGAPORE: As vaccinations gather pace, a number of places around the world have lifted COVID-19 restrictions and some countries have begun reopening borders to immunised travellers.
Singapore authorities have signalled that living with the coronavirus is the way forward, and are drawing up reopening plans for when vaccination rates reach a higher level here.
In a ministerial statement on Monday (Jul 5), Finance Minister Lawrence Wong said that vaccinations will enable the country to progressively reopen and reconnect with the world. He added that Singapore would be able to reach a “very high level of vaccination coverage” in the next one to two months.
READ: Reopening borders vital to recovery, but COVID-19 vaccinations must first be sped up: Lawrence Wong
More than 5 million doses of vaccine jabs have been given in Singapore and over 2 million people are fully vaccinated, according to the Ministry of Health (MOH).
But even as pandemic safety measures are eased, the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned about the spread of the highly transmissible Delta variant and urged vaccinated people to continue wearing masks.
What lies ahead? We take a look at how parts of the world are opening up after more than a year of hunkering down during the pandemic.
RESTRICTIONS LIFTED AFTER VACCINATION
Israel and Iceland are two countries that lifted domestic COVID-19 restrictions after vaccinating a large proportion of their population. But Israel reintroduced masks shortly after as cases rose.
Iceland lifted all COVID-19 restrictions on Jun 26 and has vaccinated about 60 per cent of people eligible for the jabs.
Relatively unscathed from the pandemic, the country, which has a population of about 364,000, has reported more than 6,600 infections and 30 coronavirus-related deaths.
Israel had one of the fastest vaccination programmes in the world and Reuters reports that nearly 60 per cent of its population of 9 million is vaccinated.
READ: Israel requires masks indoors again as Delta variant drives up COVID-19 cases
It lifted most of its restrictions on Jun 15 but 10 days after that, reimposed a requirement to wear masks indoors amid a rise in coronavirus cases. The country has also postponed the reopening of borders to vaccinated tourists by one month.
It also warned on Monday that rising cases there suggest the Pfizer/BioNTech jab it is using might not guard so well against mild illness (64 per cent), even if it is highly effective in reducing severe disease and hospitalisations (93 per cent).
Singapore, meanwhile, is aiming to vaccinate two-thirds of its population by National Day in August. Currently, more than 37 per cent of Singapore residents are fully vaccinated.
READ: Singapore to accelerate COVID-19 vaccination programme, increasing daily doses by 70%
Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said that some relaxation of COVID-19 restrictions can be expected later in July when 50 per cent are inoculated, and there will be more easing again in August. Mask-wearing will be among the last of measures that will be reviewed, he said in an interview with The Straits Times published on Jul 1.
ENGLAND, GERMANY TO REOPEN
Despite a rising number of coronavirus cases, England is set to lift most COVID-19 restrictions from Jul 19 after which people will no longer have to wear masks or maintain social distance indoors.
The UK’s other nations – Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – set their own health policies and are expected to open up more slowly.
The announcement came a day before the country reported the highest daily number of new COVID cases since Jan 29 on Tuesday, at 28,773 new cases. There were 37 deaths, the greatest number since Apr 23.
More than 86 per cent of adults in the UK have received at least one jab, with 64 per cent fully vaccinated, said AFP, quoting National Health Service data.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is betting that vaccinations, which have weakened the link between infections and hospital admissions, can prevent the health service being overwhelmed by a new wave of COVID-19 cases.
READ: England to end COVID-19 lockdown: No face masks, no distancing, no WFH order
READ: UK PM Johnson outlines plans to end England’s COVID-19 restrictions
But Mr Johnson warned cases were predicted to rise to 50,000 a day later this month and that “we must reconcile ourselves, sadly, to more deaths from COVID”, BBC reported.
Germany has also announced that it should be lifting all remaining COVID-19 social and economic curbs by next month, as soon as everyone has been offered a vaccine.
Around 56.5 per cent of people in Germany have received at least one dose and almost 39 per cent are fully vaccinated.
FEWER RESTRICTIONS FOR VACCINATED PEOPLE
In a number of cities that have opened up, vaccinated people are subject to fewer restrictions than those who have not been immunised. This could be the scenario in Singapore as well when it reopens.
United Arab Emirates capital Abu Dhabi will allow only vaccinated people in many public places from Aug 20. However, this does not apply to children under 15 and those exempt from vaccination such as pregnant women and those with medical conditions.
The city’s health app, which details testing and vaccination history, will indicate people with “green” status – who will be allowed more freedom of movement. The UAE has vaccinated more than 78 per cent of its population, according to Reuters data.
READ: Seoul delays relaxation of social distancing as COVID-19 cases surge
New York and California lifted restrictions on businesses and social distancing on Jun 15 after about 70 per cent of adults received at least one dose of the vaccine.
Unvaccinated individuals still need to wear masks indoors and maintain social distancing, according to the guidance from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. It remains unclear how a person’s vaccination status will be checked in order for the measure to be enforced.
DELTA VARIANT POSES THREAT
Even as many places reopen or plan to do so, coronavirus variants are putting a spanner in the works.
WHO has warned that the Delta variant, which was first detected in India, is the most transmissible variant of concern identified so far.
Britain is battling a surge in infections caused by the Delta variant prompting European countries such as Portugal, Spain and Malta to tighten entry requirements for visitors from the UK.
READ: COVID-19 cases in Europe up again after 10 weeks of decline: WHO Europe
READ: Delta COVID-19 variant threatens new pandemic challenge
The variant is now spreading rapidly across Europe and WHO said that hundreds of cases have been detected among spectators attending Euro 2020 football matches.
Calling Delta a “game-changer”, the premier of Australia’s New South Wales state on Wednesday extended a lockdown in Sydney for another week, hoping to curb an outbreak of the highly contagious variant.
Experts had initially believed “herd immunity” could be reached with 70 per cent of a population fully vaccinated, but now judge it to be 80 per cent or more, given Delta’s infectiousness and because vaccines are less effective against it.
WHO has called for vigilance around all major summer gatherings and continued mask-wearing.
COME IF YOU’RE VACCINATED
Singapore is also holding out hope for borders to reopen and for leisure travel to resume by the end of the year.
The examples of territories like Phuket, which opened with much fanfare to tourists on Jul 1, will be closely watched. More than 80 per cent of the island’s population have been vaccinated with at least one dose, and about 65 per cent were fully vaccinated as of June 30, CNN reports.
The Phuket “sandbox” allows vaccinated travellers to tour the island without quarantine. Tourists must remain in Phuket for a fortnight if they wish to travel to the rest of Thailand, and take three coronavirus tests during this period.
READ: Thailand’s popular resort island Phuket reopens to international tourism
But Southeast Asia continues to grapple with the virus. Another regional tourist hotspot, Bali, has put off reopening as virus cases surged to record levels in Indonesia.
On Tuesday, Jakarta said about 10,000 concentrators – devices that generate oxygen – were to be shipped from nearby Singapore as it battles a surge in cases.
Many European countries have eased travel restrictions, particularly for vaccinated individuals and those from countries with low infection rates.
France includes Singapore among a list of “green” countries, while Italy needs visitors from Singapore to be fully vaccinated, recovered from COVID-19 or to present a negative COVID-19 test.
Spain welcomes anyone who has been fully vaccinated, although it has reimposed a test requirement for visitors from Britain after cases there spiked.
If you’re from Singapore, and a few other regions, you no longer even need proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test. Visitors who can enter Spain freely include those from Australia, South Korea, the United States, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, Thailand, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong and Macao.
The thing is, you will have to be quarantined in Singapore when you return.
Source: CNA/hm(ac)
Sydney extends COVID-19 lockdown as Delta cluster grows
SYDNEY: More than 5 million Sydney residents will spend at least another week in coronavirus lockdown, Australian authorities said on Wednesday (Jul 7), after detecting another 27 new cases.
Stay-at-home orders have already been in place in the country’s biggest city for two weeks, as authorities try to curb an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.
State officials said progress had been made, but light-touch measures – allowing residents to leave home for work, exercise and shopping – needed to continue.
“This Delta strain is a game-changer, it’s extremely transmissible,” said New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklian, saying it must be eradicated from the community.
“We don’t want to be in a position where we are constantly having to move between lockdown, no lockdown, lockdown, no lockdown.”
Berejiklian said an extension – which includes school closures – was the “best chance of making sure this is the only lockdown we have until the vast majority of our citizens are vaccinated”.
READ: Australia’s New South Wales says next 2 days ‘critical’ as COVID-19 outbreak grows
The lockdown is now expected to end on Jul 16.
Australia’s “COVID zero” approach has seen a series of snap lockdowns in cities across the country and its international borders closed for the last 15 months.
The strategy has allowed Australians to live relatively normally throughout the pandemic, while avoiding the high death tolls seen around the world.
Since the pandemic began, Australia has detected just over 30,000 virus cases and reported 910 deaths.
READ: Australia tightens border further to curb COVID-19 outbreak
But there are growing questions about how long the country can continue to fend off the virus and remain cut off from the rest of the world.
The Sydney outbreak has so far seen just 357 cases, underscoring the strictness of the strategy.
In contrast, Britain is considering lifting virus restrictions with 27,000 new infections each day.
READ: After early COVID-19 response, Australia stuck in vaccine slow lane
Australia’s opening up has been hampered by a glacial vaccine roll-out, which has seen under 8 per cent of the population vaccinated so far.
A top health official this week likened Australians’ efforts to get the jab to the Hunger Games – a fictional battle-to-the-death contest.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has outlined a four-step plan to allow the country to gradually open up when so-far-undefined vaccine targets are met.
Source: AFP/ec/dv
US military withdrawal from Afghanistan more than 90% complete
WASHINGTON: Afghan authorities on Tuesday (Jul 6) vowed to retake all the districts lost to the Taliban as the pullout of US forces from the country neared completion.
Hundreds of commandos were deployed to counter the insurgents’ blistering offensive in the north, a day after more than 1,000 government troops fled into neighbouring Tajikistan.
The US Central Command announced that the American withdrawal from the country, ordered in April by President Joe Biden, was now more than 90 per cent completed, underscoring that Afghan forces were increasingly on their own in the battle with the hardline Taliban.
Fighting has raged across several provinces, but the insurgents have primarily focused on a devastating campaign across the northern countryside, seizing dozens of districts in the past two months.
“There is war, there is pressure. Sometimes things are working our way. Sometimes they don’t, but we will continue to defend the Afghan people,” National Security Adviser Hamdullah Mohib told reporters.
“We have plans to retake the districts,” he added.
US PULLOUT ON TRACK
The Pentagon said on Tuesday they were well on track to completing their pullout of thousands of American forces and civilian contractors by the end of August, just days after turning over the last and largest of seven US bases, Bagram air base north of Kabul, to the Afghan government.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby underscored that the US and NATO coalition partners would continue to support Afghan security forces in the fight with the Taliban, even if there were no coalition troops on the ground.
“We still have the authority to assist the Afghans in the field if they need it,” Kirby said, specifying the possibility of air strikes.
He also said negotiations were underway to ensure that US civilian technicians, who have been essential to keeping Afghan air force aircraft flying, would be able to stay.
But he underscored that US forces were leaving by August.
“We have spent a lot of time, a lot of effort, a lot of resources in improving the competency and the capability of the Afghan national security forces, and now it’s their turn, it’s their time, to defend their people.”
TALIBAN GAIN IN NORTH
Troops and pro-government militiamen were deployed in the northern provinces of Takhar and Badakhshan where the Taliban has captured large swathes of territory at lightning speed, often with little resistance.
Afghan defence officials have said they intend to focus on securing major cities, roads and border towns in the face of the Taliban onslaught.
But the fighting in the north has also forced Moscow to close its consulate in the large city of Mazar-i-Sharif, near the border with Uzbekistan.
And the US exit from Bagram, which provided essential air support, has heightened the crisis facing Afghan government forces.
AFGHAN FORCES FLEE
The speed and ease of the Taliban’s effective takeover of areas in the north represent a massive psychological blow to the Afghan government.
The area once served as the stronghold for the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance during the gruesome civil war in the 1990s and was never routed by the militants.
President Ashraf Ghani blamed the Taliban for all the “bloodshed and destruction”, adding that his government will not “surrender” to the militants, a palace statement said.
But on Monday, more than 1,000 Afghan troops fled into neighbouring Tajikistan.
“We had to abandon our base because there was no coordination or interest among our commanders to counter the attack,” said one of the soldiers, Mohammad Musa.
But Mohib said the soldiers who fled were returning and rejoining the security forces.
“They may have abandoned their posts because they ran out of ammunition or they ran out of supplies, but by no means has anyone defected to the Taliban,” he said.
STEALTHY EXIT
Meanwhile a psychological war has also been taking shape online.
The Taliban has used social media to post live updates on their takeover of districts and videos of Afghan soldiers surrendering.
The Afghan government in turn has released its own footage of air strikes on Taliban positions, boasting of inflicting heavy casualties on the militant group.
But the government appears to have been embarrassed by the stealthy US exit from Bagram early on Friday morning, leaving many Afghans surprised and the base unoccupied for hours.
Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said that Afghan officials were told of the impending departure two days ahead of time, but not given the specific time.
“The exact hour of departure was not divulged for operational security purposes,” Kirby said.
“In general we felt it was better to keep that information as closely held as possible,” he said.
Source: AFP/ec
Searchers at Florida condominium collapse site ‘not seeing anything positive’
SURFSIDE, Florida: Officials overseeing the search at the site of the Florida condominium collapse sounded increasingly sombre on Tuesday (Jul 6) about the prospects for finding anyone alive, saying they have detected no new signs of life in the rubble as the death toll climbed to 36.
Crews in yellow helmets and blue jumpsuits searched the debris for a 13th day while wind and rain from the outer bands of Tropical Storm Elsa complicated their efforts. Video released by the Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue Department showed workers lugging pickaxes and power saws through piles of concrete rubble barbed with snapped steel rebar. Other searchers could be seen digging with gloved hands through pulverised concrete and dumping shovels of debris into large buckets.
Search-and-rescue workers continued to look for open spaces where people might be found alive nearly two weeks after the disaster struck at the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside.
“We’re actively searching as aggressively as we can,” Miami-Dade County Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said at a news conference. But he added: “Unfortunately, we are not seeing anything positive. The key things – void spaces, living spaces – we’re not seeing anything like that.”
While officials still call the efforts a search-and-rescue operation, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said families of those still missing are preparing for news of “tragic loss”.
“I think everybody will be ready when it’s time to move to the next phase,” said Levine Cava, who stressed that crews would use the same care as they go through the rubble even after their focus shifts from searching for survivors to recovering the dead.
“Really, you will not see a difference,” she said. “We will carefully search for bodies and belongings, and to catalog and respectfully deal with any remains that we find.”
No one has been rescued alive since the first hours after the collapse, which struck early on Jun 24, when many of the building’s residents were asleep.
Officials announced on Tuesday that teams had recovered eight additional bodies – the highest one-day total since the collapse. More than 100 people remain unaccounted for.
Severe weather from Elsa threatened to hinder search efforts. Lightning forced rescuers to pause their work for two hours early on Tuesday, Miami-Dade Assistant Fire Chief Raide Jadallah said. And stiff winds of 32kmh, with stronger gusts, hampered efforts to move heavy debris with cranes, officials said.
READ: Florida condominium collapse lawsuits seek to get answers, assign blame
However, the storm’s heaviest winds and rain were expected to bypass Surfside and neighbouring Miami as Elsa strengthened before making landfall somewhere between Tampa Bay and Florida’s Big Bend on a path across northern Florida.
“Active search and rescue continued throughout the night, and these teams continue through extremely adverse and challenging conditions,” Levine Cava said. “Through the rain and through the wind, they have continued searching.”
Crews have removed 112 metric tonnes of debris from the site, Cominsky said.
Workers have been freed to search a broader area since the unstable remaining portion of the condo building was demolished Sunday amid fears that the structure could fall. Officials said the demolition gave rescuers access to spaces that were previously closed off, including bedrooms where people were believed to be sleeping at the time of the disaster.
Source: AP/ec
Covid-19 (July 6): 7,654 new cases, situation worsens in Klang Valley
The Health Ministry today reported 7,654 new Covid-19 cases were detected.
Active Covid-19 cases have shot up to the highest since June 13 and is on a steady 12 day uptrend.
Worrying, a new record has been set for the number of confirmed Covid-19 patients who require intensive care.
- Active cases: 72,201
- Patients in ICUs: 943
- Intubated: 450
States
- Selangor (3,260)
- Kuala Lumpur (1,550)
- Negeri Sembilan (698)
- Kedah (337)
- Johor (313)
- Sarawak (286)
- Malacca (230)
- Sabah (225)
- Penang (185)
- Pahang (180)
- Kelantan (118)
- Perak (94)
- Labuan (82)
- Terengganu (61)
- Putrajaya (33)
- Perlis (2)
The Klang Valley region (Selangor, Kuala Lumpur and Putrjaya) accounted for 63.3 percent of new cases.
Kuala Lumpur (1,550) reported a record number of new cases.
As of yesterday, the R-naught for the country has reached 1.07. A R-naught of more than 1.00 suggests that the spread of Covid-19 is accelerating.
The only regions where the R-naught was less than 1.00 are Johor, Kelantan, Labuan, Negeri Sembilan, Perak, Terengganu and Sarawak.
Deaths
Another 103 deaths attributed to Covid-19 were reported today, bringing the national death toll to 5,677.
Selangor (43) reported the most deaths followed by Kuala Lumpur (18), Negeri Sembilan (12), Johor (9), Kelantan (6), Pahang (4), Malacca (3), Sarawak (2), Kedah (2), Perak (1), Sabah (1), Penang (1) and Labuan (1).
There were twelve victims who were pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital.
Details of the victims are documented on Malaysiakini’s Covid-19 tracker site.
Clusters
The Health Ministry is monitoring 852 active Covid-19 clusters. This figure has been gradually reducing since hitting a high of 887 on June 29.
Covid-19 clusters are deemed to have expired should there be no new cases attributed to the cluster in 28 days.
However, there were another 21 new clusters that were classified today, of which 11 were work related while 10 were related to community spread.
Tapak Bina Damanlela 2 clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 630 out of 2,225 screened
Bukit Kiara clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Kepong
Total infected: 16 out of 38 screened
Pasar Razak Mansion clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Lembah Pantai and Cheras
Total infected: 12 out of 67 screened
Industri Lorong Senawang Empat clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban and Port Dickson
Total infected: 324 out of 1,001 screened
Industri Perai Lima clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang, Perak and Kedah
District(s): Seberang Perai Tengah, Seberang Perai Selatan, Seberang Perai Utara, Kerian, Larut, Matang, Selama, Baling, Bandar Baharu, Kota Setar, Kuala Muda, Kulim, Paandg Terap, Penandg and Yan
Total infected: 182 out of 3,860 screened
Jalan Perusahaan Prai clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang
District(s): Seberang Perai Tengah
Total infected: 6 out of 26 screened
Agora Borneo clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kota Kinabalu
Total infected: 26 out of 133 screened
Batu Tiga Bakri clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Muar
Total infected: 19 out of 57 screened
Jalan Baldwin Tiga clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Perak
District(s): Batang Padang and Kampar
Total infected: 39 out of 294 screened
Jalan KK 6/2 Kubang Kerian clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Kota Bharu
Total infected: 8 out of 27 screened
Jalan Cempaka Ampang clusters
Category: Workplace
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Hulu Langat
Total infected: 25 out of 84 screened
Panjang Sari clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Muar
Total infected: 17 out of 41 screened
Jalan Kolam Ikan Kluang clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Johor
District(s): Kluang
Total infected: 22 out of 26 screened
Jalan Sagang clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Bau
Total infected: 30 out of 55 screened
Sungai Sengkabang clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Subis
Total infected: 58 out of 210 screened
Parit Sebelas clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Sabak Bernam
Total infected: 18 out of 40 screened
Pondok Tanjung clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Perak
District(s): Larut, Matang, Selama and Kerian
Total infected: 17 out of 26 screened
Kampung Gong Kulim Tengah clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan and Terengganu
District(s): Pasir Puteh, Bachok and Besut
Total infected: 16 out of 92 screened
Kampung Kerpal clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Rompin
Total infected: 9 out of 268 screened
Kampung Perwira clusters
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Tanah Merah
Total infected: 11 out of 19 screened
Pagar Langat clusters
Category: Detention Centre
State(s): Selangor
District(s): Kuala Langat
Total infected: 13 out of 30 screened

Source:Malaysiakini
Covid-19 (July 5): 6,387 new cases, more than half in Klang Valley
COVID-19 | The Health Ministry today reported 6,387 new Covid-19 cases with the Klang Valley making up more than half of the fresh infections.
Active Covid-19 cases are on an 11-day uptrend while the number of patients needing intensive care is almost at record levels.
- Active cases: 69,447
- Patients in ICU: 923
- Intubated: 433
New cases by state
- Selangor (2,610)
- Kuala Lumpur (819)
- Negeri Sembilan (523)
- Sarawak (424)
- Johor (324)
- Pahang (312)
- Kedah (273)
- Sabah (263)
- Perak (249)
- Malacca (206)
- Penang (157)
- Kelantan (114)
- Labuan (71)
- Putrajaya (25)
- Terengganu (17)
- Perlis (0)
Selangor reported 2,610 new cases, the seventh consecutive day where daily fresh infections were above 2,000.
One in eight new Covid-19 cases in Selangor were detected among those who reported symptoms but were not linked to existing clusters nor were they close contacts to Covid-19 positive cases.
Kuala Lumpur also saw elevated levels with 819 new cases.
As of last night, the R-naught figure for the country is 1.06, down slightly. A R-naught figure of more than 1.00 suggests that the spread of Covid-19 was accelerating.
The only regions where the R-naught was less than 1.00 are Johor, Kelantan, Labuan, Negeri Sembilan, Terengganu, Perlis and Sarawak.
Deaths
There were 77 deaths attributed to Covid-19 that were reported today. The national death toll has reached 5,574.
Selangor (30) reported the most deaths followed by Kuala Lumpur (10), Negeri Sembilan (10), Malacca (8), Johor (7), Pahang (4), Kedah (4), Kelantan (3) and Labuan (1).
There were 13 victims who were already pronounced dead when they were brought to the hospital.
Details of the victims are documented in Malaysiakini’s Covid-19 tracker page.

Clusters
The Health Ministry is currently monitoring 855 Covid-19 clusters, down from a peak of 887 on June 29. This is a good sign.
Another 13 clusters were classified today, which includes 11 workplace clusters.
Industri Tech Valley Sendayan cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban and Port Dickson
Total infected: 17 out of 118 screened
Industri TTJ 2 cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Negeri Sembilan
District(s): Seremban, Kuala Pilah and Tampin
Total infected: 31 out of 632 screened
Jalan Harmoni Sembilan cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Johor Bahru
Total infected: 11 out of 56 screened
Jalan Sri Sulong cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Johor
District(s): Batu Pahat
Total infected: 13 out of 80 screened
Lorong Berjaya cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kota Kinabalu
Total infected: 8 out of 104 screened
Jalan Kayu Madang cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sabah
District(s): Kota Kinabalu and Tuaran
Total infected: 18 out of 184 screened
Industri Bentong Sebelas 2 cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Bentong
Total infected: 9 out of 445 screened
Industri Jerantut Feri cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Pahang
District(s): Jerantut
Total infected: 6 out of 58 screened
Industri 121 Kuala Baram cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Sarawak
District(s): Miri
Total infected: 132 out of 221 screened
Dah Satu Industri Kulim cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Kedah
District(s): Kulim, Baling and Bandar Baharu
Total infected: 52 out of 87 screened
Lintang Macallum Dua cluster
Category: Workplace
State(s): Penang
District(s): Timur Laut
Total infected: 64 out of 261 screened
Kampung Bakong Gunong cluster
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Bachok
Total infected: 10 out of 28 screened
Kampung Bechah Tembesu cluster
Category: Community
State(s): Kelantan
District(s): Kota Bharu
Total infected: 10 out of 22 screened
Source:Malasiakini
