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Health News Roundup: Africa CDC head: COVID still a threat given low vaccination rates; Taiwan eyeing an earlier end to COVID quarantine for arrivals and more | Health

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Health News Roundup: Africa CDC head: COVID still a threat given low vaccination rates; Taiwan eyeing an earlier end to COVID quarantine for arrivals and more | Health

Following is a abstract of present well being information briefs.

Africa CDC head: COVID nonetheless a menace given low vaccination charges

The COVID-19 pandemic remains to be a menace on the African continent given low vaccination charges, the performing director of the Africa Centres for Illness Management and Prevention (Africa CDC) stated on Thursday. “The virus remains to be circulating, and with the low charges of vaccination the pandemic remains to be very a lot with us right here on the continent,” Ahmed Ogwell Ouma advised a information convention.

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Taiwan eyeing an earlier finish to COVID quarantine for arrivals

Taiwan is eyeing an earlier finish to its necessary quarantine for all arrivals and has been making related preparations, Premier Su Tseng-chang stated on Friday, as the federal government continues to ease controls put in place to comprise the unfold of COVID-19. Taiwan has stored its entry and quarantine guidelines in place as giant elements of the remainder of Asia have relaxed or lifted them utterly, although in June it lower the variety of days spent in isolation for arrivals to a few from seven beforehand.

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U.S. seeing declina e in monkeypox new case progress, CDC says

U.S. Facilities of Illness Management and Prevention (CDC) Director Rochelle Walensky stated on Thursday she was cautiously optimistic over a decline within the progress of latest monkeypox circumstances, however that some areas of the nation are nonetheless experiencing an increase in infections. She additionally stated throughout a White Home briefing that the company was taking steps to deal with racial and ethnic disparities within the distribution of monkeypox vaccines.

Shopper group says drugmakers abuse U.S. patent system to maintain costs excessive

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Makers of the top-selling medicine in america are costing sufferers billions of {dollars} and worsening a drug pricing disaster by abusing the U.S. patent system to stifle competitors and inflate costs, a client group stated on Thursday, The New York-based Initiative for Medicines, Entry & Data (I-MAK) stated in a report that three of the highest 10 promoting medicine within the U.S. face no competitors within the nation and can price Individuals an estimated additional $167 billion earlier than they’re anticipated to so.

Finish of COVID pandemic is ‘in sight’ -WHO chief

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The world has by no means been in a greater place to finish the COVID-19 pandemic, the pinnacle of the World Well being Group stated on Wednesday, his most optimistic outlook but on the years-long well being disaster which has killed over six million individuals. “We aren’t there but. However the finish is in sight,” WHO Director-Common Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus advised reporters at a digital press convention.

WHO ‘strongly advises in opposition to’ use of two COVID remedies

Two COVID-19 antibody therapies are now not really useful by the World Well being Group (WHO), on the premise that Omicron and the variant’s newest offshoots have probably rendered them out of date. The 2 therapies – that are designed to work by binding to the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 to neutralize the virus’ means to contaminate cells – have been a number of the first medicines developed early within the pandemic.

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Swiss competitors watchdog probes Novartis over patent use

The Swiss competitors fee (COMCO) has opened an investigation of Novartis over doable illegal use of a patent to scale back aggressive stress, the Swiss drugmaker confirmed on Thursday. COMCO carried out an early morning raid on the corporate on Sept. 13, it stated in a press release that didn’t title Novartis, which subsequently stated in its personal assertion that it was the group below investigation.

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The lawsuit claims Pfizer fellowship program is biased in opposition to whites, Asian-Individuals

A gaggle of medical professionals that advocates in opposition to “radical, divisive, and discriminatory ideology” in healthcare sued Pfizer Inc on Thursday, saying the drugmaker runs a fellowship that illegally excludes white and Asian-American candidates. In a criticism filed in Manhattan federal courtroom, the plaintiff Do No Hurt referred to as Pfizer’s Breakthrough Fellowship Program “discriminatory on its face” as a result of solely Blacks, Latinos and Native Individuals can apply.

German COVID booster take-up low, new model could assist – medical doctors group

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Demand for booster vaccinations in opposition to COVID-19 is low in Germany, the affiliation of basic practitioners stated on Thursday, with some sufferers ready for a booster designed to fight the presently circulating Omicron BA.4/5 subvariants. Common practitioners have been equipped firstly of the week with the booster vaccine directed on the BA.1 model of Omicron and the unique virus first detected in China, stated Jens Lassen, chairman of their Schleswig-Holstein affiliation.

Hungarian girls dismayed at ‘tormenting’ abortion reform

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Hungarian girls voiced dismay as an modification to abortion guidelines took impact on Thursday in what some see as a primary step in direction of a tightening of entry to the process below a deeply conservative authorities. Inside Minister Sandor Pinter submitted an modification to abortion guidelines this week requiring pregnant girls to submit proof from their healthcare supplier of a definitive signal of life, extensively interpreted because the heartbeat of a foetus, earlier than requesting the process.

(With inputs from companies.)

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The CW’s Top Exec on Walker’s Uncertain Fate, Potential All American ‘Reboot’ and Superman & Lois’ ‘F–king Awesome’ Sendoff

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The CW’s Top Exec on Walker’s Uncertain Fate, Potential All American ‘Reboot’ and Superman & Lois’ ‘F–king Awesome’ Sendoff


CW Exec Talks Cancelled and Renewed Shows: ‘Walker,’ ‘All American’



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Justice Dept. makes arrests in North Korean identity theft scheme involving thousands of IT workers

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Justice Dept. makes arrests in North Korean identity theft scheme involving thousands of IT workers

The Justice Department announced Thursday multiple arrests in a series of complex stolen identity theft cases that officials say are part of a wide-ranging scheme that generates enormous proceeds for the North Korean government, including for its weapons program.

The conspiracy involves thousands of North Korean information technology workers who prosecutors say are dispatched by the government to live abroad and who rely on the stolen identities of Americans to obtain remote employment at U.S.-based Fortune 500 companies, jobs that give them access to sensitive corporate data and lucrative paychecks. The companies did not realize the workers were overseas.

NORTH KOREA’S MENACING NUCLEAR THREAT IS TOO DANGEROUS TO IGNORE. US MUST LEAD BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT

The fraud scheme is a way for heavily sanctioned North Korea, which is cut off from the U.S. financial system, to take advantage of a “toxic brew” of converging factors, including a high-tech labor shortage in the U.S. and the proliferation of remote telework, Marshall Miller, the Justice Department’s principal associate deputy attorney general, said in an interview.

The seal for the Justice Department is photographed in Washington, Nov. 18, 2022. The Justice Department has announced three arrests in a complex stolen identity scheme that officials say generates enormous proceeds for the North Korean government, including for its weapons program.  (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

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The Justice Department says the cases are part of a broader strategy to not only prosecute individuals who enable the fraud but also to build partnerships with other countries and to warn private-sector companies of the need to be vigilant — and not duped — about the actual identities of the people they’re hiring.

FBI and Justice Department officials launched an initiative in March centered on the fraud scheme and last year announced the seizure of more than a dozen website domains used by North Korean IT workers.

“More and more often, compliance programs at American companies and organizations are on the front lines of protecting our national security,” Miller said. “Corporate compliance and national security are now intertwined like never before.”

The Justice Department said in court documents in one case that more than 300 companies — including a high-end retail chain and a “premier Silicon Valley technology company” — have been affected and that more than $6.8 million in revenue has been generated for the workers, who are based outside of the U.S., including in China and Russia.

Those arrested include an Arizona woman, Christina Marie Chapman, who prosecutors say facilitated the scheme by helping the workers obtain and validate stolen identities, receiving and hosting laptops from U.S. companies who thought they were sending the devices to legitimate employees and helping the workers connect remotely to companies.

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According to the indictment, Chapman ran more than one “laptop farm” where U.S. companies sent computers and paychecks to IT workers they did not realize were overseas.

At Chapman’s laptop farms, she allegedly connected overseas IT workers who logged in remotely to company networks so it appeared the logins were coming from the United States. She also is alleged to have received paychecks for the overseas IT workers at her home, forging the beneficiaries’ signatures for transfer abroad and enriching herself by charging monthly fees.

Other defendants include a Ukrainian man, Oleksandr Didenko, who prosecutors say created fake accounts at job search platforms that he then sold to overseas workers who went on to apply for jobs at U.S. companies. He was was arrested in Poland last week, and the Justice Department said it had seized his company’s online domain.

A Vietnamese national, Minh Phuong Vong, was arrested in Maryland on charges of fraudulently obtaining a job at a U.S. company that was actually performed by remote workers who posed as him and were based overseas.

It was not immediately clear if any of the three had lawyers.

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Separately, the State Department said it was offering a reward for information about certain North Korean IT workers who officials say were assisted by Chapman.

And the FBI, which conducted the investigations, issued a public service announcement that warned companies about the scheme, encouraging them to implement identity verification standards through the hiring process and to educate human resources staff and hiring managers about the threat.

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Taiwan grapples with divisive history as new president prepares for power

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Taiwan grapples with divisive history as new president prepares for power

Taipei, Taiwan – Even as Taiwan prepares for the inauguration of its eighth president next week, it continues to struggle over the legacy of the island’s first president, Chiang Kai-shek.

To some, Chiang was the “generalissimo” who liberated the Taiwanese from the Japanese colonisers. To many others, he was the oppressor-in-chief who declared martial law and ushered in the period of White Terror that would last until 1992.

For decades, these duelling narratives have divided Taiwan’s society and a recent push for transitional justice only seems to have deepened the fault lines. Now, the division is raising concern about whether it might affect Taiwan’s ability to mount a unified defence against China, which has become increasingly assertive in its claim over the self-ruled island.

“There is a concern when push comes to shove if the civilians work well with the military to defend Taiwan,” said historian Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang of the University of Missouri in the United States.

On February 28, 1947, Chiang’s newly-arrived Kuomintang (KMT) troops suppressed an uprising by Taiwan natives, killing as many as 28,000 people in what became known as the February 28 Incident. In the four-decade-long martial law era that followed, thousands more perished.

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This traumatic history met its official reckoning in 2018, when the Taiwan government set up its Transitional Justice Commission modelled after truth and reconciliation initiatives in Africa, Latin America and North America to redress historical human rights abuses and other atrocities.

People attend the commemoration of the February 28 Incident in Taipei [Violet Law/Al Jazeera]

When the commission concluded in May 2022, however, advocates and observers said they had seen little truth and hardly any reconciliation.

Almost from the first days of the commission, the meting-out of transitional justice became politicised across the blue-versus-green demarcation that has long defined Taiwan’s sociopolitical landscape, with blue representing KMT supporters and green the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).

A recently published anthology entitled Ethics of Historical Memory: From Transitional Justice to Overcoming the Past explains how the way Taiwanese remember the past shapes how they think about transitional justice. And as that recollection is determined by which camp they support, each champions their own version of Taiwan’s history.

“That’s why transitional justice seems so stagnant now,” explained Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu, research professor at the legal research institute Academia Sinica who contributed to and edited the book. “Whatever truth it uncovers would be mired in the blue-green narrative.”

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A non-partisan view, Hsu said, is to credit the DPP with codifying transitional justice and Lee Teng-hui, the first democratically elected KMT president, with breaking the taboo on broaching the February 28 Incident.

The past shaping the future

In February, Betty Wei attended the commemoration for the February 28 incident for the first time and listened intently to the oral history collected from the survivors. Wei, 30, said she wanted to learn more about what happened because her secondary school textbook had brushed over what many consider a watershed event in a few cryptic lines, and many of her contemporaries showed little interest.

“In recent years the voices pushing for transitional justice have grown muted,” Wei told Al Jazeera. “A lot of people in my generation think the scores are for previous generations to settle.”

Statues of former Taiwan leader Chiang Kai-shek lined up in a park. Two of the statues in front show him seated. They are painted red. Some behind are standing. They are white or bronze.
The Transitional Justice Committee recommended the relocation of Chiang Kai-shek statues from public areas, but many remain [File: Ritchie B Tongo/EPA]

In Taiwan, the past is never past, and rather it is fodder for new fights.

As the DPP gears up for an unprecedented third consecutive term, the unfinished business of removing the island’s remaining statues of Chiang has resurfaced as the latest front in what Yang, the historian, described to Al Jazeera as “this memory war”.

More than half of the initial 1,500 monuments have been taken down over the past two years, with the remaining statues mostly on military installations.

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Yang argues that is because the top brass rose through the ranks under martial law and many still regard Chiang as their leader, warts and all. For them, toppling the statues would be an attack on their history.

The statues embody “the historical legacy the military wants to keep alive,” Yang said. “That’s a source of tension between the military and the DPP government.”

On the eve of William Lai Ching-te taking his oath as the island’s next president, Taiwanese will for the first time mark the “White Terror Memorial Day” on May 19, the day when martial law was declared in 1949.

While it is clear Taiwanese have promised to never forget, whom and how to forgive has become far murkier.

As the former chairman of the Taiwan Association for Truth and Reconciliation, the first NGO advocating for the cause, Cheng-Yi Huang lauded the government’s move to take over the KMT’s private archives in recent years but lamented there had been too little truth-seeking so far.

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For example, under the February 28 Incident Disposition and Compensation Act, Huang said many have chosen to stay silent about their complicity because only victims get compensation.

However, Taiwan’s tumultuous history means the line between victim and victimiser is rarely clear-cut.

Chiang Kai-shek pictured in 1955. He is wearing a military uniform with a long cape. Others in uniforms are walking behind him. They are leaving a temple.
Chiang Kai-shek (centre) in 1955. Known as ‘Generalissimo’, he led a brutal military dictatorship that only ended in 1992 [Fred Waters/AP Photo]

By digging into military archives, Yang has shed light on how Chinese were kidnapped and pressed into service by the KMT in the last years of the Chinese Civil War. Those who tried to flee were tortured and even murdered. And the native Taiwanese who rose up to resist KMT’s suppression were persecuted as communists.

“Under martial law, the military was seen as an arm of the dictatorship, but they were also victims of the dictator’s regime,” Yang told Al Jazeera. “The transitional justice movement has missed the opportunity to reconcile Taiwanese society with the military.”

To Hsu, Beijing’s belligerence demands Taiwanese of all stripes find a common cause.

“As we’re facing the threat from the Chinese Communist Party, it’s imperative that we unite in forging a collective future,” said Hsu, to a standing-room-only book talk during the Taipei International Book Exhibition in late February.

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“And how we remember our past will shape this future of ours.”

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