30.5 C
Bangkok
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Home Blog Page 1131

COVID Superspreader in US Traced to Federal Executions

Karen Burkhart holds a sign across the road from the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Ind., to protest the scheduled execution of Lisa Montgomery, Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2021. (Joseph C. Garza/The Tribune-Star via AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the Trump administration was nearing the end of an unprecedented string of executions, 70% of death row inmates were sick with COVID-19. Guards were ill. Traveling prisons staff on the execution team had the virus. So did media witnesses, who may have unknowingly infected others when they returned home because they were never told about the spreading cases.

Records obtained by The Associated Press show employees at the Indiana prison complex where the 13 executions were carried out over six months had contact with inmates and other people infected with the coronavirus, but were able to refuse testing and declined to participate in contact tracing efforts and were still permitted to return to their work assignments.

Other staff members, including those brought in to help with executions, also spread tips to their colleagues about how they could avoid quarantines and skirt public health guidance from the federal government and Indiana health officials.

The executions at the end of Donald Trump’s presidency, completed in a short window over a few weeks, likely acted as a superspreader event, according to the records reviewed by AP. It was something health experts warned could happen when the Justice Department insisted on resuming executions during a pandemic.

___

It’s impossible to know precisely who introduced the infections and how they started to spread, in part because prisons officials didn’t consistently do contact tracing and haven’t been fully transparent about the number of cases. But medical experts say it’s likely the executioners and support staff, many of whom traveled from prisons in other states with their own virus outbreaks, triggered or contributed both in the Terre Haute penitentiary and beyond the prison walls.

1000 3 9
This Aug. 28, 2020, file photo shows the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Ind. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

Of the 47 people on death row, 33 tested positive between Dec. 16 and Dec. 20, becoming infected soon after the executions of Alfred Bourgeois on Dec. 11 and Brandon Bernard on Dec. 10, according to Colorado-based attorney Madeline Cohen, who compiled the names of those who tested positive by reaching out to other federal death row lawyers. Other lawyers, as well as activists in contact with death row inmates, also told AP they were told a large numbers of death row inmates tested positive in mid-December.

In addition, at least a dozen other people, including execution team members, media witnesses and a spiritual adviser, tested positive within the incubation period of the virus, meeting the criteria of a superspreader event, in which one or more individuals trigger an outbreak that spreads to many others outside their circle of acquaintances. The tally could be far higher, but without contact tracing it’s impossible to be sure.

Active inmate cases at the Indiana penitentiary also spiked from just three on Nov. 19 — the day Orlando Cordia Hall was put to death — to 406 on Dec. 29, which was 18 days after Bourgeois’ execution, according to Bureau of Prisons data. The data includes the inmates at the high-security penitentiary, though the Bureau of Prisons has never said whether it included death row inmates in that count.

In all, 726 of the approximately 1,200 inmates at the United States Penitentiary at Terre Haute have tested positive for COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, according to Bureau of Prisons data. Of them, 692 have recovered.

___

Advocates and lawyers for the inmates, a Zen Buddhist priest who was a spiritual adviser for one prisoner, and even the families of some of the victims fought to delay the executions until after the pandemic. Their requests were rebuffed repeatedly and their litigation failed. And some got sick.

Witnesses, who were required to wear masks, watched from behind glass in small rooms where it often wasn’t possible to stand six feet apart. They were taken to and from the death-chamber building in vans, where proper social distancing often wasn’t possible. Passengers frequently had to wait in the vans for an hour or more, with windows rolled up and little ventilation, before being permitted to enter the execution-chamber building. And in at least one case, the witnesses were locked inside the execution chamber for more than four hours with little ventilation and no social distancing.

Prison staff told their colleagues they should first get on planes, go back to their homes and then they could take a test, according to two people familiar with the matter. If they were positive, they said, they could just quarantine and wouldn’t be stuck in Terre Haute for two weeks, said the people, who could not publicly discuss the private conversations and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

Following Hall’s execution in November, only six members of the execution team opted to get coronavirus tests before they left Terre Haute, the Justice Department said in a court filing. The agency said they all tested negative. But days later, eight members of the team tested positive for the virus. Five of the staff members who had tested positive were brought back to Terre Haute for more executions a few weeks later.

Yusuf Ahmed Nur, the spiritual adviser for Hall, stood just feet away inside the execution chamber when Hall was executed on Nov. 19. He tested positive for the virus days later.

Writing about the experience, Nur said he knew he would be putting himself at risk, but that Hall had asked him to be at his side when he was put to death. He, and Hall’s family, felt obliged to be there.

“I could not say no to a man who would soon be killed,” Nur wrote. “That I contracted COVID-19 in the process was collateral damage” of executions during a pandemic.

Later, two journalists tested positive for the virus after witnessing other executions in January, then had contact with activists and their own loved ones, who later tested positive as well. Despite being informed of the diagnoses, the Bureau of Prisons knowingly withheld the information from other media witnesses and decided not to initiate any contact tracing efforts.

___

By mid-December, prison officials said that both Corey Johnson and Dustin Higgs were sick. They were the last two prisoners to be executed, just days before President Joe Biden took office.

Death row was put on lockdown after their results, inmates told Ashley Kincaid Eve, a lawyer and anti-death penalty activist. But even though they had also tested positive, she said Higgs and Johnson were still moved around the prison — potentially infecting guards accompanying them — so they could use phones and email to speak with their lawyers and families as their execution dates approached. Eve said prisons officials may have worried a court would delay the executions on constitutional ground if that access was denied.

In response to questions from the AP, the Bureau of Prisons said staff members who don’t experience symptoms “are clear to work” and that they have their temperatures taken and are asked about symptoms before reporting for duty. (The AP has previously reported that staff members at other prisons were cleared with normal temperatures even when thermometers showed hypothermic readings.)

The agency said it also conducts contact training in accordance with federal guidance and that “if staff are circumventing this guidance, we are not aware.”

Officials said staff members were required to participate in contact tracing “if they met the criteria for it” and agency officials couldn’t compel employees to be tested.

1000 8 5
In this Aug. 28, 2020, file photo, a no trespassing sign is displayed outside the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Ind. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

“We cannot force staff members to take tests, nor does the CDC recommend testing of asymptomatic individuals,” an agency spokesperson said, referring to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The union for Terre Haute employees declined to comment, saying it did not want to “get into the public fray of this whole issue.”

Elsewhere, union officials have long complained about the spread of the coronavirus through the federal prison system, as well as a lack of personal protective equipment and room to isolate infected inmates. Some of those issues have been alleviated, but containing the virus continues to be a concern at many facilities.

___

No more executions have yet been scheduled under Biden. The Bureau of Prisons has repeatedly refused to say how many other people have tested positive for the coronavirus after the last several executions. And the agency would not answer questions about the specific reasoning for withholding the information from the public, instead directing the AP to file a public records request.

The Bureau of Prisons said it also “took extensive efforts to mitigate the transmission” of the virus, including limiting the number of media witnesses and adding an extra van for the witnesses to space them out.

It has argued witnesses were informed social distancing may not be possible in the execution chamber and that witnesses and others were required to wear masks and were offered additional protective equipment, like gowns and face shields. The agency also refused to answer questions about whether Director Michael Carvajal or any other senior leaders raised concerns about executing 13 people during a worldwide pandemic that has killed more than 450,000 in the U.S.

1000 3 10
Protesters stand across Prairieton Road from the Federal Death Chamber Friday, Dec. 11, 2020 in Terre Haute, Ind. (Austen Leake/The Tribune-Star via AP)

Still, it appears their own protocols weren’t followed. After a federal judge ordered the Bureau of Prisons to ensure masks were worn during executions in January, the executioner and U.S. marshal in the death chamber removed their masks during one of the executions, appearing to violate the judge’s order. The agency argued they needed to do so to communicate clearly and that they only removed their masks for a short time and disputes that it violated the order.

___

In a Nov. 24 court filing on the spread of COVID at Terre Haute, Joe Goldenson, a public health expert on the spread of disease behind bars, said hundreds of staff participated in one way or another at each execution, including around 40 people on execution teams and those on 50-person specialized security teams who traveled from other prisons nationwide. He said he had warned earlier that executions were likely to become a superspreader.

Medical and public health experts repeatedly called on the Justice Department to delay executions, arguing the setup at prisons made them especially vulnerable to outbreaks, including because social distancing was impossible and health care substandard.

“These are the type of high-risk superspreader events that the (American Medical Association) and (the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) have been warning against throughout the pandemic,” James L. Madara, the executive vice president of the AMA, wrote to the Department of Justice on Jan. 11, just before the last three federal executions were carried out.

___

Tarm reported from Chicago and Sisak reported from New York.

Advertisement

Decision on Holding Tokyo Games Must Be ‘Based on Science’: Biden

A group of students from Uruguay pose for a souvenir picture on the Olympic Rings set outside the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo, Saturday, March 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

TOKYO (Kyodo) — U.S. President Joe Biden said Sunday the decision on whether the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics should go ahead this summer must be “based on science.”

The comments mark what is regarded to be the first time Biden has expressed his opinion on the issue of holding the events as the coronavirus pandemic continues across the world.

Continue reading the story here

Advertisement

10 Ways To Increase Your Online Revenues

Sales and revenues are the basis of profitability for any online business, as well as the SEO results and rankings on the internet. One company’s long-term sustainability depends greatly on the numbers of its sales. All different kinds of functionalities like resource hiring, product development, logistic planning, etc. depend on one single entity. And that is what creates the sales. Without sales, there are no revenues and no growth for any online business. Many companies decide to follow and practice different strategies to increase their online revenues.

For those who want to grow their online business, the sales and the revenues are related, and knowing how to best coordinate them is crucial from the aspect of optimizing your online revenues. There are many different factors on which the sales depend, and eventually the revenue too. The current economy, market trends, competitor strategy, substitute products or services, and other important factors can affect the sales. Whichever the reason is for your desire to boost the sales and revenues, you need to focus on a different set of strategies and keep them flexible so that they can be changed according to the change of market needs and demands. Although many of the strategies can be implemented alone, better results will be achieved when various strategies will be applied together.

If you are following the trend of modern social marketing, you must know that getting noticed on the virtual sky is the secret and the only way in growing your business and increasing your online sales. Without a virtual presence, the chances of increasing your online sales are very low. That is why hiring professionals who specialize in this area is the best thing that you can do for your business and revenues. A good SEO Digital Marketing Agency is the partner you need in your business endeavor.

To help all those of you who are willing to increase your online revenues in the best possible way, including all the best strategies, we at Inspira as a digital agency offer you the best possible services so that you can achieve your desired results quickly and efficiently.

2 1

As the best SEO agency, here are our top 10 ways/suggestions on how to increase your online revenues:

1. AdSense

This is the most obvious and easy way to convert the visitors into money in a quick way. Depending on the type of your online business and visitors, your monthly revenue will significantly different and bigger. The practice is that if you receive good money for your current visitors, google might invade that particular niche you are in and make sure that they convert those customers directly and not through your website. Google tries to pull up the big user-generated websites on top of the search. That is why your website and online business should not only and solely rely on that and you should not be dependable only on Google. Setting an AdSense account is an easy and straightforward job and a safe option for your online business presence.

2. Leads

Leads are the people who have shown an active interest in the products or services that you offer through your online business. Unlike the typical website visitor, the leads give their name, contact information, and permission to send them additional information. They are the first big step in the online sales funnel. Their number can be counted by email subscribers, registered users, contact form submissions, quote requests, or all of the combinations above.

3. Direct advertising on your website

Depending on the type of website that you are running, you might be able to sell advertising space on it. There is a large variety of options here: it can be a sponsored profile page, expanded profile with more features, or sponsored result in the website’s search results. That is the best way to deal with the end-companies who like to advertise them, without using a middleman. The money you will get for advertising is another way to boost your online revenues.

4. Advertise connected but different niche businesses

This is a nice way to earn more money. Find different but business-related companies that will advertise on your website. Depending on the niche, this might be a win-win situation for both sides. For example, if you offer beauty tips, find a company that specializes in these services, which will advertise on your website. That is a nice way of connecting you and the different businesses for increased revenues.

5. Cross-Sell

If your online business offers multiples product lines or service lines, let your customers know the variety of your offer by including a full spectrum. You should always ascertain their challenges and problems by offering different solutions from your line –this is the best way of cross-selling. By offering one thing, you can easily connect some other products or services to that one. Carefully linking the services and the products you offer is a great way to sell more and earn more.

6. Have a special event

Holding a special event, like a sale or something like a promotional night with special prices is a great way to increase your revenues. At this point, you can expect growth in purchasing, maximize your cash flow and inspire them to buy more. You can introduce this special event, every year on the same date, that can start with a secret sale, or pre-sale, with a closed group of your registered users, and then open for all those who will enter your website. It is a good marketing move to both advertise your business and increase online revenues.

7. Offer complementary products or services

Offering complimentary services or products is an excellent way to show appreciation for your users/customers/visitors. It can be something small, without big value, but just a token of appreciation that will go well with the services/products you sell. It will not decrease your revenues, on the contrary, it will only get you more visitors and more revenues.

8. Communicate frequently

Communication with your customers is much appreciated. That can be done via mail, phone, email, newsletters, etc. this way, your customers and registered users will feel important and cared for, and will know that you are doing your thing, rather than just existing out there, which will constantly remind them to come back and purchase more.

9. Promote others

For the growth of your business and your revenues, it is important to endorse and promote others. This is a popular and well-used way in modern marketing. This can go a long way, especially if the ones that you endorse, return the favor. Depending on the type of business that you do, collaborate with similar companies and get a deal that will benefit both parties. That will increase your online presence, might gain you more followers and customers, and eventually grow your online revenues.

10. Learn to say No to bad customers

Bad opportunities are bad for the business, which means that you will have to learn how to detect the bad customers and those that will not bring prosperity to your business. Your attention should be devoted to the best opportunities and customers and not to the unprofitable, disagreeable ones.

With time, you will get a grip on those who are there only to ask questions, bother you and not buy anything. Wasting the time persuading them to buy your services or products is contra-productive for your tie and your business. Those types of customers will always exist, so if your first feeling is not positive, try not to engage.

These are 10 useful ways to increase your online revenues. However, working with us at Inspira, one of the leading digital marketing and SEO agency, will save you time as well as add to the efficiency of the strategies implemented. We know and understand how hard it is to optimize your company to become noticed, recognized, and visible to the potential customers, and to stand out in the huge area of so many different and similar businesses like yours.

Don’t waste your time – leave the work to the professional and enjoy the results. Inspira is your one and only go-to digital and SEO marketing agency that will promote and rank your business in the best possible way.

Advertisement

Burmese Restaurant in Bangkok Promotes Anti-Coup Activism

A donation bowl with an image of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi is displayed at Mandalay Food House in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — As expatriates from Myanmar around the world react to the military’s lightning takeover of their homeland, one restaurant in neighboring Thailand is working a diner at a time to help support members of Bangkok’s Myanmar community who want to take action against Monday’s coup.

Instead of paying for their meals, customers at Mandalay Food House are asked to donate to a fund to support Myanmar activists in Thailand who are protesting the power seizure from the elected civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

They are considering campaigning online, distributing petitions and “anything they can do lawfully from here,” said one, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of attracting the attention of Burmese or Thai security officials. Myanmar is also known as Burma.

1000 12 3
A female diner puts money in a donation bowl with an image of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi at Mandalay Food House in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Diners who learned of the fundraising activity filled the seats at lunchtime on Friday, digging into such specialties as mohinga — a rice noodle and fish soup. Some came wearing shirts or hats with symbols of Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party.

Many also attended several small rallies in Bangkok outside the Myanmar Embassy and in front of the United Nations’ regional office.

Sai Lao Mai, the restaurant’s 28-year-old owner, said that when he woke up to news of the coup, he immediately felt he had to do “something for our country, our leader.”

1000 3 8
Diners wearing shirts with an image of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi look at the menu of Mandalay Food House in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Many of his customers feel the same way. Rain Adhikaul said he too felt the need to push back against the army.

Khine Su, another patron, donated 1,000 baht ($33), double the meal’s cost.

Sai Lao Mai said he had raised close to $2,000 in five days, a significant sum for the 3-year old restaurant that operates under time and social distancing restrictions during the COVID-19 crisis.

1000 14 6
A large image of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi is illustrated at the façade of Mandalay Food House in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Outside the establishment, the restaurateur brainstormed with some of his compatriots on what they can do next.

Before they went on their way, the group sang “Kabar Makyay Bu” (We Won’t Be Satisfied Until the End of the World) — an anthem of the country’s new nonviolent resistance movement. The song was written to inspire Myanmar’s ultimately failed 1988 uprising against military rule, and is set to the tune of “Dust in the Wind,” a 1977 song by the U.S. rock group Kansas.

Advertisement

Myanmar Junta Blocks Internet Access, Anti-Coup Protests Expand

In this image from video, protesters flash the three-fingered salute as they march in Yangon, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Myanmar’s new military authorities appeared to have cut most access to the Internet on Saturday as they faced a rising tide of protest over their coup that toppled Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected civilian government.

Numerous internet users noted a slow disappearance of services, especially from mobile service providers, that accelerated sharply late Saturday morning. Broadband connection also later failed, while there were mixed reports on whether landline telephone service was still working.

Netblocks, a London-based service that tracks internet disruptions and shutdowns, said Saturday afternoon that “a near-total internet shutdown is now in effect” in Myanmar, with connectivity falling to just 16% of normal levels.

1000 4 8
In this image from video, protesters flash the three-fingered salute as they march in Yangon, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

The broad outage followed Friday’s government order to block Twitter and Instagram that said some people were trying to use the platforms to spread what it deemed fake news. Facebook had already been blocked earlier in the week — though not completely effectively.

The communication blockages are a stark reminder of the progress Myanmar is in danger of losing after Monday’s coup plunged the nation back under direct military rule after a nearly decade-long move toward greater openness and democracy. During Myanmar’s previous five decades of military rule, the country was internationally isolated and communication with the outside world strictly controlled.

Suu Kyi’s five years as leader since 2015 had been Myanmar’s most democratic period despite the military retaining broad powers over the government, the continued use of repressive colonial-era laws and the persecution of minority Rohingya Muslims.

1000 14 5
In this image from video, protesters wearing hard hats flash the three-fingered salute while they march in Yangon, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

The blockages are also adding greater urgency to efforts to resist the coup, with Saturday seeing some of the largest street protests against the takeover. In what appeared to be the main one, about 1,000 protesters — factory workers and students prominent among them — marched Saturday morning down a main street in Yangon, the country’s biggest city, and were met by more than 100 police in riot gear.

Members of the crowd shouted “Military dictatorship should fall” and “Down with dictatorship.” They marched with their hands in the air, formed into three-fingered salutes, a symbol of defiance adopted from protesters in neighboring Thailand, who borrowed the gesture from the “Hunger Games” movie franchise.

The demonstration ended peacefully with no clashes reported. It dispersed around the time communications were cut, and it was unclear if the marchers later regrouped.

1000 8 3
In this image from video, a crowd of protesters march in Yangon, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

Telenor Myanmar, a major mobile operator, confirmed it had received Friday’s order to block Twitter and Instagram. In a statement, Twitter said it was “deeply concerned” about the order and vowed to “advocate to end destructive government-led shutdowns.”

“It undermines the public conversation and the rights of people to make their voices heard,” its spokesperson said.

Since the coup, social media platforms have been major sources of independent news as well as organizing tools for protests.

For the fourth night Friday, those opposed to the coup and the arrests of activists and politicians that have accompanied gathered at windows and on balconies around Yangon to make a cacophony of noise in protest.

1000 8 1
In this image from video, protesters flash the three-fingered salute as they march in Yangon, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

Earlier Friday, nearly 300 elected lawmakers from Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party declared themselves as the sole legitimate representatives of the people and asked for international recognition as the country’s government.

They were supposed to take their seats Monday in a new session of Parliament following November elections when the military announced it was taking power for a year.

The military accused Suu Kyi and her party of failing to act on its complaints that last November’s election was marred by fraud, though the election commission said it had no found no evidence to support the claims.

In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pledged Friday that the United Nations will do everything it can to unite the international community and create conditions for the military coup in Myanmar to be reversed.

1000 8 2
In this image made from video, Myanmar police block the road to prevent protesters from marching forward Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021 in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo)

He told a news conference it is “absolutely essential” to carry out the Security Council’s calls for a return to democracy, respect for the results of the November elections, and release of all people detained by the military, “which means the reversal of the coup that took place.”

Guterres said Christine Schraner Burgener, the U.N. special envoy for Myanmar, had a first contact with the military since the coup and expressed the U.N.’s strong opposition to the takeover.

According to U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric, she reiterated to Deputy Commander-in-Chief Vice Gen. Soe Win “the secretary-general’s strong condemnation of the military’s action that disrupted the democratic reforms that were taking place in the country.”

1000 2 8
Lawyers who graduated from the Yadanabon University flash the three-fingered salute of protest in Mandalay, Myanmar Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. (AP Photo)

In addition to 134 officials and lawmakers who were detained in the coup, some 18 independent activists were also held, said the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners in Myanmar, which added that some have been released.

On Friday, Suu Kyi’s senior aide, Win Htein, was picked up in Mayangone township. He told BBC in a phone call earlier that he was being arrested for sedition, which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

Suu Kyi and President Win Myint are also under house arrest and have been charged with minor offenses, seen by many as merely providing a legal veneer for their detention. Suu Kyi was described by her party as being in good health.

Advertisement

Israel, a Global Leader in COVID Vaccinations, Finds Limits

Israelis receive a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine from medical professionals at a coronavirus vaccination center set up on a shopping mall parking lot in Givataim, Israel, during a nationwide lockdown to curb the spread of the virus, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — When it comes to fighting the coronavirus, Israel is discovering the limits of vaccines.

The country famous for its high-tech prowess and spirit of innovation is home to the world’s speediest vaccination drive, fueled from the top by national pride and a deep longing to start “getting back to life,” as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put it.

But experts say reopening the country will still take months, complicated by coronavirus mutations that have spread from Britain and South Africa, a refusal among some sectors to adhere to safety rules and wobbles in the pace of vaccinations of people under 60.

While the government is expected to begin easing a third nationwide lockdown in the coming days, there are likely to be further, partial closings as the threat ebbs and flows.

“This is going to be a balancing act,” said Eyal Leshem, director of the Center for Travel Medicine and Tropical Diseases at Sheba Medical Center.

1000 3 6
Israelis line up to receive a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at a coronavirus vaccination center set up at a gymnasium in Petah Tikva, Israel, during a nationwide lockdown to curb the spread of the virus, Monday, Feb. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

In an impressive feat, more than a third of Israel’s 9.3 million people have received at least one shot in mere weeks, and over 1.9 million have gotten both doses, perhaps putting the country on track to inoculate nearly its entire adult population by the end of March.

Alongside the praise for its speed, Israel has come under global criticism for excluding Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the blockaded Gaza Strip. The situation has drawn attention to the global disparity in access to vaccines between rich and poor countries.

Rights groups say Israel has the obligation as an occupying power to vaccinate Palestinians. Israel denies having such a responsibility, and says its priority is its own citizens. Nevertheless, Israel this week for the first time transferred 5,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine to the Palestinian Authority to inoculate medical workers.

In Israel, for the first time, researchers are starting to see the effects of the vaccinations, giving other nations a very early glimpse of what might lie ahead for them.

Netanyahu on Thursday said that among people over 60, the first group vaccinated, serious cases of hospitalizations have dropped 26% and confirmed infections have fallen 45% over the past 16 days.

“This is a direct result of the vaccinations,” he said. “The vaccines work.”

1000 2 6
Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews participate in funeral for prominent rabbi Meshulam Soloveitchik in Jerusalem, Sunday, Jan. 31, 2021, flouting the country’s ban on large public gatherings amid the pandemic. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

But other key indicators, including deaths and new infections, remain high, in part because of the fast-spreading mutations and the month-long lag time before the vaccine shows its full benefits.

Israel has been reporting some 7,000 new infections a day, one of the highest rates in the developed world. Nearly 5,000 people have died, more than a quarter of them in January alone.

Israel has certain advantages that suggest its success at vaccinations may not be easily duplicated elsewhere. It is small, with 9.3 million people. It has a centralized and digitized system of health care, delivered through just four HMOs. And its leader, Netanyahu, has made the vaccination drive a centerpiece of his bid for reelection in March, personally negotiating deals with the CEOs of Pfizer and Moderna.

Still, experts around the world are watching eagerly.

“Israel’s aggressive inoculation program demonstrates that it is indeed possible for a country to get vaccines into people’s arms quickly and efficiently,” said Jonathan Crane, a bioethicist at Emory University in Atlanta. In an email, he praised the centralized effort, compared with the “piecemeal” way vaccines in countries like the U.S. are being delivered by various jurisdictions.

Even with these early signs of success, it’s increasingly clear that there will be no pandemic day-after, a celebratory moment when people are cleared to flood back to work, hold large family gatherings or resume the social lives they once knew.

Reopening will depend on many factors, including efforts to halt the spread of the highly contagious variants and whether the public takes the proper precautions. Many Israelis were horrified this week by scenes of big ultra-Orthodox funerals for two revered rabbis, with most mourners mask-free.

Some parts of the population, including the Arab and ultra-Orthodox sectors and younger adults, have shown an apparent reluctance to get vaccinated, which could also hinder the effort to achieve “herd immunity” and stop the virus.

“All of Europe is waiting for the vaccines, and here people don’t want to get vaccinated?” Sara Baruch said after receiving her second dose on Wednesday in Tel Aviv. “It’s strange.”

1000 5 4
Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews participate in funeral for prominent rabbi Meshulam Soloveitchik in Jerusalem, Sunday, Jan. 31, 2021, flouting the country’s ban on large public gatherings amid the pandemic. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

She said it is a “big mistake” if the trend continues: “We won’t be able to go on a holiday and to go back to normal life we had before.”

The vaccination campaign has become a feature of pop culture and a point of national pride. Israelis proudly post photos on social media showing themselves getting vaccinated, and one HMO serves cappuccinos afterward so people can be monitored for side effects before they leave.

Experts have recommended a gradual reopening of the country, though political leaders will make the final decision. Closings and reopenings, experts say, will be a cost-benefit analysis that will change according to the course of the outbreak and the state of the economy.

Dr. Nadav Davidovitch, a member of a government advisory panel, said young children along with vaccinated high school students over 16 should be allowed to return to school in the first stage, and only teachers who have been inoculated should be in class. Street shops and restaurants might open for takeout only, followed in later stages by malls and cultural events opened only to people who have been vaccinated.

He said steps should be staggered every two weeks, with a constant eye on infection rates, testing and more vaccinations. Indoor and outdoor public gatherings should continue to be limited for a while, he said. Social distancing and masks will be required for the foreseeable future.

“It will be very gradual in the coming months,” said Davidovitch, director of the school of public health at Israel’s Ben-Gurion University. “Vaccinations are very important, but they are not going to solve all the problems.”

___

Associated Press writers Josef Federman, Isaac Scharf and Ilan Ben Zion contributed.

Advertisement

Opinion: What Many Thais See in Myanmar Coup

Teachers from the Yangon Education University flash the three-finger protest gesture while holding signs that read: "Civil Disobedience Myanmar Teachers" Friday, Feb. 5, 2021 in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo)

The military coup in Myanmar on Monday sent a political ripple to Thailand, its next door neighbour, not because of any immediate influx of political asylum seekers (yet) but for the similar fate they share.

For some Thais it’s like reliving a nightmarish coup and reflecting on how they fail to oppose the Thai junta.

Thailand’s latest coup, which was unlikely to be the last, took place in 2014 and junta leader Gen Prayut Chan-ocha, nearly seven years on, is still in power today, albeit as prime minister of an elected government after the elections in March 2019.

Thais, particularly those supporting democracy could not help but feel sorry, compare and consider what’s happening next door and what they can do about it.

By comparing, they realized that Burmese were quick to denounce Monday’s coup in drove, despite the more ruthless reputation of the Burmese military generals in the past compared to Thai generals like Prayut. Politicians, academics, doctors, nurses, stars, models and flight attendants protested while back in Thailand, after the May 2014 coup, too few people were willing to come out publicly to take a stance to denounce the coup led by Gen Prayut.

One acerbic and popular motto in Thai language spreading on social media since the latest coup in Myanmar went like: “If Thais don’t fight we will remain like slaves. If Burmese don’t fight they will remain like Thais”.

Be that as it may, some Thai activists have already initiated two protests against the Myanmar coup in front of the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok as of press time.

It’s as if they are reliving the experience of the Thai coup that they failed to repel back home back in Bangkok in 2014 and now wanting to make amends by doing what they can so their brothers and sisters in Myanmar do not have to suffer the same fate. It’s almost like a surrogate battle. The gesture was welcomed by Burmese in Thailand who came out to join the protests.

Some Burmese, both in Thailand and Myanmar, also adopted the three-finger salute that Thai protesters use as a symbol of anti-junta resistance after the 2014 coup in Bangkok.

The past few days since the coup saw no shortage of statements issued by Thai organizations and groups to denounce the coup in Naypyitaw. Even grassroot groups like the Assembly of the Poor came up with one on Friday.

“Myanmar, like Thailand, has long been under the influence of the military. The military has interfered in national administration, directly and indirectly, for many years. It has dominated the direction of public policies, resulting in chronic problems of the country..,” part of the statement in English read.

It reads like a reflection on Thailand. This is why Thais who care for liberty and democracy feel empathetic and engrossed by what people in Myanmar are going through.

1000 1 10
Teachers from the Yangon Education University flash the three-finger protest gesture while holding signs that read: “Civil Disobedience Myanmar Teachers” Friday, Feb. 5, 2021 in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo)

They realized that more dictatorships around Thailand cannot bode well for the struggle for genuine democracy in Thailand.

On Thursday night, I received a call from an exiled and elderly Thai activist Jaran Ditapichai, who formerly fought for democracy in Burma and Thailand.

The call was from one of the arrondissements, or districts, in Paris where Jaran lived as a political exile since the May 2014 coup when he fled the kingdom.

Jaran wasn’t an armchair activist by any chance. He spent six days in Burmese prison back in August 1998 for distributing leaflets attacking Burmese military dictators and calling for democracy there in front of Kaba Aye Pagoda in Yangon.

1000 5 5
Staffers of the University Hospital flash the three-finger protest gesture while holding signs that read: “Protect democracy” and “Reject the military coup, Free our president, Respect our votes” Friday, Feb. 5, 2021 in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo)

Jaran, who was among the group of 18 international activists arrested back then, expressed concerns not just for what’s happening in Myanmar but fears that the Thai military may stage yet another military coup in the not too distant future.

This would be done to consolidate its power in the face of threats from anti-government and monarchy-reform movements, particularly if they think they can get away with it.

Whether they think they can get away with it, Jaran told me, depends on how the Burmese junta in Naypyitaw can get away with it despite international outcries. The latest coup in Myanmar may presage what may occur in Thailand. A case of juntas of feather flock together.

Jaran was part of the old generation of Thais who actively supported the struggle for democracy in Burma in the past, particularly after the Aug 8, 1988 uprising in Burma which eventually led to a brutal crackdown by Burmese military against pro-democracy student protesters in Yangon and beyond. Many fled to Thailand in the months and years after the crackdown.

14485
A demonstrator flashes the anti-military three-finger salute in front of riot police close to the Myanmar Embassy on Feb. 1, 2021.

Fast forward to Feb 2021. Three decades on, it’s now up to young Thais to decide what kind of neighbours they would like to be, what kind of people-to-people relations they want to have with those in Myanmar facing military suppression. Will it be one of apathy, selfish ASEAN non-interference, or that of empathy and solidarity?

Will Thais simply sit and watch the suppression of political rights in Myanmar unfold and say it’s just like domestic violence next door so let them sort it out or will they do what they can to help stop the rape and abuses?

The past few days have been encouraging, but this is just the beginning as more are being arrested in Myanmar for taking a stance against illegitimate military rule.

Advertisement

Gov’t, BRN Hold Online Peace Dialogues in Pandemic

Soldiers on July 2, 2016, walk away from a house in Narathiwat province where two separatist gunmen were reportedly shot dead after a gunfight with security officers.

BANGKOK — The government and a militant group behind separatist campaigns in the southern border provinces on Friday said peace dialogues between them have moved online due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Both the government’s negotiation team and the National Revolutionary Front, or BRN, confirmed in separate statements that the online meetings took place on Wednesday. Topics of the discussions were said to include a deescalation of armed operations, and peaceful resolution to the bloody conflict in the region, known as the Deep South.

“The resumption of the peace dialogue process is the mutual efforts and commitment between the two sides to seek peaceful solutions and ensure continuity of the process,” part of the English-language statement released by the government said.

“The atmosphere of the meeting was constructive where both sides agreed to hold virtual meeting on a regular basis in the future which will foster cooperation and contribute to sustainable solutions for the south border provinces.”

S 3145799 1
Security officers search motorists for their ID cards during a counter-insurgency patrol in Yala province on Feb. 3, 2021.

A statement issued by the BRN gave a somewhat more detailed account of the conversation. The group said the two sides discussed “reduction in military operations” and “political and peaceful solutions to the conflict in Patani in order to realise people’s aspiration and global human rights principles.”

Patani is the name of an independent state that existed for centuries in what are today the provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat. The sultanate was annexed by the Thai authorities in the early 20th century.

“Both sides agreed to have online technical meetings periodically under the pandemic of Covid-19, following the norms that had been previously agreed,” the group said, according to a translation provided by a prominent Deep South scholar.

“BRN hopes that this round of the negotiation shall be supported by all layers of the society and it would proceed smoothly.”

The coronavirus outbreaks in Thailand and Malaysia have led to border shutdowns and severe disruption of travels between the two countries.

450601 1
Security officers inspect the site of a blast that injured 5 policemen in Narathiwat province on Jan. 31, 2021.

The pandemic also had a paradoxical impact on the secessionist violence in the Deep South. It prompted the BRN to declare a “cessation of all operations” in the region on humanitarian grounds, while the death tolls and injuries linked to the separatist campaign throughout 2020 were remarkably lower than the previous years.

The conflict, fueled by ethnic and religious enmity, has killed at least 7,000 people since it broke out in 2004, according to human rights watchdogs. Most of the victims were civilians, though security officers were also routinely targeted.

Just last week, on Saturday, five policemen were injured when a bomb went off on their patrol route in Narathiwat province. Investigators blame local separatist militants for the attack.

Advertisement

Dream On? Activists Want Gov’t to Sanction Myanmar Coup Leaders

Burmese living in Thailand and supporters hold pictures of Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi during a protest in front of the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok on Feb. 4, 2021.

BANGKOK — A group of pro-democracy activists on Thursday urged the opposition parties to push for sanctions of the military junta in Myanmar.

The campaign was led by Ekachai Hongkangwan, who submitted a petition to representatives of opposition parties on Thursday. Speaking on the phone, Ekachai said he wants the government to ban the Burmese coup leaders from entering Thailand and freeze any of the assets that they may have in the kingdom.

The chance of that happening is virtually nil – the Thai government has signaled it would treat the coup as Myanmar’s internal affairs. Even opposition politicians admitted as much, Ekachai said.

“They told me Thailand is a member of ASEAN, we cannot interfere with a fellow member state,” the activist said. “But I told them there has to be a sanction … I laid down the options for them and told them, ‘you can do it. Don’t give me an excuse about non-interference. If you don’t do it, you’re hypocrites.’”

Move Forward Party MP Amarat Chokepamitkul accepted the letter on behalf of the opposition camp. She said there is no plan to raise the matter in Parliament as of now.

“We have to consult with fellow opposition parties,” Amarat said on the phone. “There is an issue about non-interference principle that we must consider.”

Scores of Myanmar nationals and Thai activists also gathered in front of the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok on Thursday night to denounce the coup. The military’s takeover began on Monday with the preemptive detention of senior government officials and politicians, including the country’s leader, State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi.

Paiboon Nititawan, deputy leader of the ruling Phalang Pracharath Party, said on the phone Thursday that the party’s policy on the matter is identical to the government: no intervention in Myanmar’s domestic issues.

“We cannot interfere with domestic policies of any ASEAN member state,” Paiboon said. “The government also said it will stick to the principle of ASEAN, which is to refrain from interfering with other countries.”

S 3145799
Demonstrators burn portrait of Burmese junta leader Min Aung Hlaing close to the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok on Feb. 4, 2021, to protest the coup in Myanmar and call for restoration of democratic regime.

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha said on Tuesday that Thailand will adhere to the principle of non-interference. He also warned the media to be careful in their news coverage of the situation in Burma.

“Don’t cause conflicts. The media has to help,” Prayut said.

Army chief Gen. Narongphan Jitkaewthae on Thursday declined to comment on the putsch in Myanmar.

When reporters asked Gen. Narongphan whether he found it difficult to comment on the military takeover because Thailand has also experienced many coups in the past, the army chief was clearly irritated.

“I don’t have any feeling about it,” Narongphan said. “I already told you that this word [coup] has not existed in my head. It hasn’t existed for a long time. It disappeared long ago. Yet the media still dig up this word.”

Advertisement

Cambodian Officials ‘Dragging Feet’ on Wanchalearm Abduction

Sitanan Satsaksit holds a photo of Wanchalerm Satsaksit on July 30, 2020.

BANGKOK — The sister of a Thai activist who disappeared in an apparent abduction in Cambodia said local law enforcement agencies were paying no importance to the case.

Speaking at a news conference on Thursday night after her return from Cambodia, Sitanan Satsaksit said that Cambodian police and a judge did not properly investigate the case of Wanchalearm Satsaksit.

“The Cambodian police did not conduct a proper investigation,” Sitanan said at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand.

Sitanan visited Cambodia from Nov. 10 until Dec. 15 in search of her brother. During her investigation, she said, Sitanan met with the Cambodian police commander on Dec. 7 and presented evidence to Phnom Penh Civil Court on the following day. She completed and left her quarantine in Thailand on Dec. 30.

“I got the impression that officials in Cambodia did not care about the evidence we presented. They said if we could not provide stronger evidence, they would not investigate the case at all.”

Wanchalearm is an anti-military activist who fled Thailand to Cambodia after the armed forces staged a coup in May 2014.

He spent the following years in Cambodia criticizing the government and the monarchy online. He was reportedly kidnapped by a group of men in front of his residence in early June in Phnom Penh.

Both Thai and Cambodian governments have not given any explanation to his disappearance. Their collective silence prompted Sitanan to travel to Cambodia, at her own expense, and sought the answers.

“Cambodia has denied every single piece of information or evidence that the family has submitted,” Badar Farrukh, human rights officer from the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, said. “The anguish and sorrow of the family may reach the threshold of torture.”

A security guard who allegedly witnessed the kidnapping said he was too afraid to provide testimony, Sitanan said.

EnqtoV6VcAEOc0L 6
Demonstrators march in Bangkok on Dec. 3, 2020, to demand answers from the government over the disappearance of Wanchalearm Satsaksit.

Sitanan also said Thai authorities have not given her any information or conducted any formal inquiry of their own. All of the investigation over the past eight months was done by Sitanan.

Sunai Phasuk of Human Rights Watch said that hope for investigation into Wanchalearm’s case depends on a revival in media attention.

“As months go on, and public interest declines, this gives a chance for Cambodian authorities to drag their feet,” Sunai said. “They will say, ‘we will look into it, but please give us more evidence.’”

“We need to rebuild media attention,” Sunai continued. “If Wanchalearm can be disappeared, we too can be just like him.”

But there is a glimmer of hope. The Human Rights Watch researcher said of 80 or so enforced disappearance cases in Thailand, Wanchalearm’s is the first where the Thai government had a response within 24 hours.

The foreign ministry had also asked Cambodia what had happened within a day of Wanchalearm’s disappearance.

Correction: An earlier version of this article’s headline misspelled Wanchalearm’s name. 

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
30.5 ° C
30.5 °
30.5 °
79 %
4.1kmh
100 %
Wed
31 °
Thu
36 °
Fri
38 °
Sat
37 °
Sun
36 °