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Serious KiaSee KiaSu Hokkiens Emptied Supermarkets, Balls shrinked from Possible Covid Lockdowns!

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Nope. Orang asli was there before hokkiens.
And just a handful of nationalist from mainland managed to take co trol after they lost civil war to the communist.
Nope thats called living in nature reserve not called founded according to usa angmohs. And Hokkiens are so kind not to kill or chase them out of nature reserve like what USA angmohs did. And nope Taiwanese locals were not just not fighting the nationalist but welcoming them with open arms until they realised they get sidelined and bullied in their own country. Hope they learn their lesson and don’t anyhow welcome hongkie Cantonese or PRCs this time.
 
Nope thats called living in nature reserve not called founded according to usa angmohs. And Hokkiens are so kind not to kill or chase them out of nature reserve like what USA angmohs did. And nope Taiwanese locals were not just not fighting the nationalist but welcoming them with open arms until they realised they get sidelined and bullied in their own country. Hope they learn their lesson and don’t anyhow welcome hongkie Cantonese or PRCs this time.
And Hokkiens in history are also so kind compared to Malays in history that made orang asli natives in Malaysia as slaves.
 
Supermarket shelves emptied of epidemic survival products as residents fear possible lockdown
Costco supermarket empty shelves and crowds of shoppers

May 13, 2021 Phillip Charlier 0 Comment COVID-19, New Taipei City
People rushed to supermarkets this evening, Wednesday, May 12, to stock up on supplies of products such as instant noodles, toilet paper, and disinfectant alcohol after the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) raised the epidemic alert warning to Level 2, and the mayor of New Taipei City hinted that a city-wide lockdown could happen.
CECC Director Chen Shih-chung (陳時中) told the media this morning that Taiwan could soon be under an epidemic warning Level 3, after 16 cases tested positive for COVID-19 today, and some could not be traced to previous cases, indicating that the virus was already circulating in the wider community.
“Taiwan currently has more than two chains of transmission for which we have yet to identify their sources. We are in critical condition now, and this is not a joke,” Health and Welfare Minister Chen Shih-chung (陳時中) told legislators at a session of Taiwan’s parliamentary body, the Legislative Yuan today.
New Taipei City Mayor Hou You-yi announced that all activity and sports centers, libraries, Internet cafes, and nightlife venues should remain closed until June 8 in line with the Level 2 warning.
Mayor Hou said that he is keeping a close eye on developments, and if there are signs that the community infection is out of control, does not rule out a city-wide lockdown.
A supermarket in New Taipei City cleared of instant noodles, May 12, 2021. Picture: Facebook group “On the Road Observation Academy.”
The Mayor’s comments, in particular, sparked an after-work rush to supermarkets across New Taipei City, leading to empty shelves seen in many supermarkets around the city.
Fresh produce, instant noodles, alcohol-based disinfectant, surgical masks, and of course, toilet paper, were among products cleaned off shelves.
Pictures of emptied shelves proliferated on social media where people left comments such as, “the end of the world again?” “Is there a war?” “I thought a typhoon was coming.”

Aren't Sinkies behaving the same ?
 
And Hokkiens in history are also so kind compared to Malays in history that made orang asli natives in Malaysia as slaves.
Malays needed orang asli as nobody wanted to work.besides, they were not forced to use malay names.
 
Many Chiobus in Taiwan are of mixed orang asli and KMT northerners







then there are the pure blooded orang asli types



 
Taiwan orang asli are not the same as malaya orang asli.
It is quite varied.
Malaya orang asli are of the tamil, australia aborigine, papua type. Curly hair. Pug nose.
Taiwan orang asli is similar is dressing( not all) to kadazan dusun in sabah and some others dresses like the dayaks in sarawak.
And yet some of the tribes have similar word( just a small group) to malay.
 
Taiwan orang asli are not the same as malaya orang asli.
It is quite varied.
Malaya orang asli are of the tamil, australia aborigine, papua type. Curly hair. Pug nose.
Taiwan orang asli is similar is dressing( not all) to kadazan dusun in sabah and some others dresses like the dayaks in sarawak.
And yet some of the tribes have similar word( just a small group) to malay.
Taiwan orang asli are Polynesian ancestors. You’re talking about the negritos, whom are thought to have been from an even earlier human migration.
 

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Taiwan reports 333 new domestic COVID-19 cases as it scrambles to get vaccines​

A healthcare worker prepares people to get their rapid test following a surge of COVID-19 infections in Taipei, Taiwan, May 17, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Ann Wang)
17 May 2021 02:48PM

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TAIPEI: A surge of coronavirus infections in Taiwan, one of the world's COVID-19 mitigation success stories, has left it scrambling to get vaccines as its stock of 300,000 doses starts running out with only about 1 per cent of its 23 million people vaccinated.
The island reported another 333 new domestic COVID-19 cases on Monday (May 17), amid a rise in community transmissions.

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Taiwan has been a model of how to control the pandemic since it began and life had carried on almost as normal with none of the lockdowns and overwhelmed hospitals seen elsewhere, thanks largely to effective case tracking and closed borders.
But over the past week it has reported more than 700 domestic cases, out of a total of 2,017 infections recorded since the pandemic began. In all, 12 have died of COVID-19 on the island.

READ: Taiwan upbeat on economic prospects despite COVID-19 spike

Tough new restrictions have been imposed in the capital, Taipei, for the first time as authorities fear an increasing number of cases.

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While Taiwan has begun vaccinations, it has only received about 300,000 shots, all AstraZeneca ones, having been caught up in the global shortage despite having 20 million on order, including from Moderna.
Health authorities last week stopped giving shots to people who are not on priority lists that include the elderly and medical staff.

READ: Don't vaccinate kids against COVID-19, but give doses to COVAX: WHO chief

Taipei's de facto ambassador in the United States, Hsiao Bi-khim, in comments published on Saturday by Taiwan's official Central News Agency, said she had been pressing Moderna to ensure the vaccines arrive on schedule before the end of June.

"Our people's expectations for vaccines (are) rather urgent," she said.
Moderna and AstraZeneca did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said last week more vaccines would be arriving from next month, though she gave no details. Domestically developed vaccines are also due by July.

READ: COVID-19 vaccines that are made in Taiwan could be ready in July, says minister

Health Minister Chen Shih-chung told reporters on Monday that there was "no new progress" to report on the arrival of more vaccines.
One government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the issue of vaccines was both "sensitive and confidential", which was why few details had been made public.
HOPES
Taiwan's main opposition Kuomintang party has called for more transparency on when vaccines are due to arrive, but also for the world to ensure that the island, a major semiconductor maker, gets priority help.
"Taiwan's pandemic is related to the stability of the global electronic product supply chain," party chairman Johnny Chiang said on Sunday.

COMMENTARY: Taiwan's national security depends on a highly sought-after product

A further concern for the government has been China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory and has a deep antipathy towards Tsai, whom it believes to be a separatist, which she denies.
China has been shipping supplies of its domestically developed vaccines around the world and has offered them to Taiwan via the COVAX global sharing scheme.
Taiwan law does not permit the use of Chinese vaccines.

READ: US condemns political use of COVID-19 vaccines after China-Taiwan tussle

A security official looking into Chinese activity on the island told Reuters the security services had been told to focus on what the government believes is "cognitive warfare" by China to "create chaos" and undermine public trust in the government's handling of the pandemic.
"Messages criticising the government are being circulated on social media," the person said.
"They are trying to highlight the efficacy of the Chinese vaccines and how the government is blindly pinning its hopes on vaccines from the United States and homemade vaccines, leaving the lives of citizens in the lurch."
China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not respond to requests for comment.
 
Taiwan mobilises diplomats to seek out COVID-19 shots
Virus Outbreak Taiwan
People wear face masks to protect against the spread of the coronavirus after the COVID-19 alert raise to level 3 in Taipei, Taiwan on May 15, 2021. (Photo: AP/Chiang Ying-ying)
18 May 2021 09:24AM
(Updated: 18 May 2021 10:23AM)
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TAIPEI: Taiwan is mobilising its diplomatic corps to hunt for speedier delivery of COVID-19 vaccines - a quest that has become more urgent since a sudden rise in domestic cases on an island that has vaccinated less than 1 per cent of its population.

Taiwan has reported more than 700 new domestic infections during the past week, leading to new curbs in the capital, Taipei, and shocking a population that had become accustomed to life carrying on almost normally with the pandemic well under control.

Taiwan, a major semiconductor manufacturing hub, has only received about 300,000 shots so far for its more than 23 million people, all AstraZeneca vaccines, and those are rapidly running out.

READ: Taiwan reports 333 new domestic COVID-19 cases as it scrambles to get vaccines
In comments published on Tuesday by Taiwan's official Central News Agency, Taipei's top official in Washington said she was in talks with the United States for a share of the COVID-19 vaccine doses President Joe Biden plans to send abroad.

"We are in negotiations and striving for it," said Hsiao Bi-khim, the de facto Taiwanese ambassador to the United States.

She said that although vaccine purchases were the remit of Taiwan's health ministry, her office's role was to talk to the United States about speeding up those requests.

Biden said the United States would send at least 20 million more vaccine doses abroad by the end of June.

A source briefed on the situation told Reuters the US government had already been helping Taiwan coordinate with manufacturers to speed up deliveries.

The United States, like most countries, has no formal diplomatic relations with Chinese-claimed Taiwan, but is its most important international backer.

Taiwan has ordered 20 million doses, mostly from AstraZeneca but also from Moderna, though global shortages have curtailed supplies.

Taiwan has said it also expected to get more than 1 million AstraZeneca shots via the COVAX vaccine-sharing programme for lower-income countries.

A second source familiar with the matter said Taiwan's diplomats in Germany had been involved in talks with BioNTech

Taiwan complained in February the firm had pulled out of a deal to sell it 5 million doses at the last minute, possibly because of Chinese pressure. BioNTech later said it did plan to provide COVID-19 vaccines to Taiwan.

BioNTech declined to comment on the status of the talks.

Taiwan Foreign Ministry Spokeswomen Joanne Ou also declined to comment on details of getting vaccines.

"We are making great efforts and trying through all means to get the qualified vaccines for our people and residents," she said.
 
the sudden covid19 outbreak caught the Taiwan govt and people by surprise ? they need the vaccines fast.
 
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