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CORONAVIRUS - FIVE ESTABLISHMENTS, DEMONSTRATORS BOOKED

 Cyprus Mail 14 September 2020 - by Annette Chrysostomou



Police booked five establishments and 29 individuals for violating coronavirus measures in 24 hours from Sunday until Monday morning.

In total 600 checks were carried out nationwide.

Most were booked for not wearing masks.

Violations were recorded in Nicosia, Limassol, Larnaca, the Famagusta and Morphou districts but not in Paphos.

Port authorities inspected an additional 89 people but did not book anybody while three people were fined at the airports for not filling in the Cyprus flight pass.

Another 20 people who participated in a protest at Eleftheria square on Saturday were fined €300 each for not wearing masks.

Police will prosecute two organisers and a speaker at the event.


MONDAY SEPTEMBER 14 - CORONAVIRUS GLOBAL UPDATE

 in-cyprus 14 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



More than 28.93 million people have been reported to be infected by the novel coronavirus globally and 921,437​ have died, according to a Reuters tally.

Infections have been reported in more than 210 countries and territories since the first cases were identified in China in December 2019.

Here is the latest information on the spread of the novel virus:

DEATHS AND INFECTIONS

ASIA-PACIFIC

* India said it was considering granting an emergency authorisation for a COVID-19 vaccine, particularly for the elderly and people in high-risk workplaces, as the country’s number of reported infections passed 4.75 million.

* Indonesia on Sunday reported its sixth consecutive day of over 3,000 new cases, just as its capital city prepares to re-impose social distancing restrictions.

* Singapore is battling new clusters of infections in migrant dormitories that had won the all-clear from authorities.

* New Zealand will lift restrictions across the country on Sept. 21, except in its biggest city, Auckland, which is the epicentre of a second wave of infections.

* Australia’s second-most populous state, the epicentre of the country’s coronavirus second wave, on Monday reported its lowest single-day rise in new infections in nearly three months.

EUROPE

* The Czech Republic reported its biggest one-day increase in new infections for a third straight day on Sunday, recording 1,541 cases.

* Ireland plans to replace its current system of travel quarantines with the European Union’s proposed coordinated system as soon as it is ready, Prime Minister Micheal Martin told RTE television on Saturday.

MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA

* Israel will enter a three-week nationwide lockdown starting on Friday after a second- wave surge of new cases, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

* Saudi Arabia will partially lift its suspension of international flights as of Sept. 15 to allow “exceptional categories” of citizens and residents to travel, the state news agency SPA said.

AMERICAS

* The World Health Organization reported a record one-day increase in global coronavirus cases on Sunday, with the total rising by 307,930 in 24 hours.

* President Donald Trump held a Nevada campaign rally at an indoor venue on Sunday despite public health professionals’ warnings against large indoor gatherings during the pandemic.

MEDICAL DEVELOPMENTS

* AstraZeneca has resumed British clinical trials of its COVID-19 vaccine, one of the most advanced in development, after receiving the green light from safety watchdogs, the company said on Saturday.

* Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE proposed to the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand their Phase 3 pivotal COVID-19 vaccine trial to about 44,000 participants while increasing the diversity of the trial population.

ECONOMIC IMPACT

* Japan’s manufacturers remained pessimistic for the 14th straight month in September.

* South Africa’s economy will likely contract this year by more than the 7% previously forecast by the Treasury, Finance Minister Tito Mboweni said in an opinion piece published on Sunday.

AT LEAST 100,000 BELARUS PROTESTERS FLOOD STREETS TO DEMAND END OF LUKASHENKO

 Cyprus Mail 14 September 2020 - by Reuters News Service

Opposition supporters take part in a rally against police brutality following protests to reject the presidential election results in Minsk

At least 100,000 Belarusian protesters took to the streets of Minsk on Sunday in one of the biggest demonstrations yet against President Alexander Lukashenko after he claimed a landslide victory in an election his opponents say was rigged.

As public anger continued to build against Lukashenko, who has ruled the former Soviet nation for 26 years, Moscow offered him support by saying it would send paratroopers to Belarus for “Slavic Brotherhood” joint drills.

A wave of protests has swept Belarus since the Aug. 9 presidential election, which demonstrators say was actually won by Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya. Key opposition figures have since either been jailed or fled the country, with Tsikhanouskaya now in Lithuania.

Lukashenko denies the election was rigged and has said foreign powers are behind the protests.

A vast column protesters marched through the capital Minsk towards a government district on Sunday, chanting “long live Belarus” and “you’re a rat,” a taunt that has frequently been used against Lukashenko during demonstrations.

They came to a halt and chanted “fascists” as hundreds of riot police with shields blocked off the road. Meanwhile in the city of Brest, police used water cannons on protesters, according to the Nexta Live channel.

Police said they had detained about 250 people in Minsk.

The atmosphere was tense, with a large police presence in parts of the capital, and some central areas sealed off with barbed wire, including Oktyabrskaya Square and Independence Square – common focus points of anti-government rallies .

The Interfax Russian news agency reported that shots had been fired into the air to warn off protesters in an area of Minsk where the Belarusian leadership lives.

An interior ministry official denied that any shots were fired in the air.

RUSSIAN PARATROOPERS

The unrest comes as Lukashenko, in power since 1994, prepares to travel to Russia on Monday for talks with President Vladimir Putin.

Moscow, a neighbour and traditional ally, has stepped up support, offering to potentially restructure Belarusian debt, and providing banking liquidity. It has also said Russian riot police could be made available if needed.

On Sunday, Russia’s defence ministry said it would send paratroopers from its elite Pskov division to Belarus for the joint drills starting on Monday and running till Sept. 25, the TASS state news agency reported.

On the streets of Minsk, some critics of Lukashenko expressed hope that the sheer size of Sunday’s protests would undermine the Belarusian leader and make it difficult for Putin to back him openly.

“We have to show with this march that he (Lukashenko) doesn’t control the country, that he is not in a position to speak on behalf of Belarusians,” said Gennady, 35, a logistics worker who declined to give his surname.


THOUSANDS OF PRIMARY, SECONDARY STUDENTS BACK TO SCHOOL

 in-cyprus 14 September 2020 - by Annie Charalambous



Thousands of primary and secondary level students went back to school early on Monday after a summer recess prolonged this year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Their return to classrooms was postponed for a week due to the high temperatures, humidity, radiation and  dust levels in the atmosphere. Students aged 12 and above have to wear a mask throughout the day, afterall.

In the meantime, children have been informed on health protocols and safety rules, while secondary school students and parents were handed a relevant information package.

Ministry of Education data shows that 331 primary level schools with a total of 51,540 students are in operation as of Monday.

Along with 273 nurseries with a total of 11,705 students and nine special education schools with 484 students.

As for secondary level education, 64 Gymnasiums with 23,323 students, seven six-grade schools and five evening gymnasiums-lyceums.

Technical education has 4,640 registered morning school students while 350 will attend evening classes.

EUROPE, BRITAIN'S CARMAKERS SAY HARD BREXIT WILL COST €110bn

 Cyprus Mail 14 September 2020 - by Reuters News Service



Europe and Britain’s car industries called on Monday on the two sides to urgently clinch a free trade agreement, warning that a disorderly Brexit would cost the sector 110 billion euros ($130 billion) in lost trade over the next five years.

Less than four months before a post-Brexit transition period ends in December, Britain and the European Union’s talks on a trade deal for 2021 onwards have been plunged into crisis, after Britain tabled a plan to break the divorce treaty both sides signed in January.

Failure to secure a deal would lead to tariffs. That would make vehicles more expensive and cause a drop in demand that could eliminate production of 3 million vehicles over the next five years, 23 auto industry associations said in a joint statement on Monday.

That could cost EU plants 57.7 billion euros and UK factories 52.8 billion euros, they said.

“These figures paint a bleak picture of the devastation that would follow a ‘no deal’ Brexit,” Mike Hawes, chief executive of Britain’s Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), said.

Associations that signed the statement included SMMT, the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, the European Association of Automotive Suppliers and Germany’s Association of the Automotive Industry.

A hard Brexit would see World Trade Organisation tariffs applied to trade across the English Channel, adding to pressure on Europe’s car industry which is already reeling from the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

The tariffs, of 10 per cent for cars and up to 22 per cent for trucks and vans, would “almost certainly” need to be passed onto consumers, the associations said.

These losses would come on top of an estimated 100 billion euros in lost UK and EU production value so far this year, as car sales plunged during the pandemic.

New passenger car registrations in the EU dropped by 38 per cent in the first half of 2020, compared with the same period last year, while sales in Britain saw a 49 per cent drop.

 

Hyun Woo Kim - 'Papa Builder'

 Hyun Woo Kim

Backstage Competition Summer 2020