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Singapore appointed 2 idiots to lead the task force.

from tnp.sg:

Latest strategy is geared towards living with Covid-19 virus​


1623441002275.png


While Singapore has managed to bring under control the latest spike in infections, the public will have to get used to living with the Covid-19 virus for the foreseeable future as it is unlikely to be eradicated soon.

And as the country gears up for a loosening of safety measures starting next week, Finance Minister Lawrence Wong, co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling the pandemic, said that moving forward, the aim is to avoid nationwide restrictions as far as possible.

Speaking at a press conference yesterday, Mr Wong said: "We will take more aggressive, localised actions, and we will try our very best to avoid having to impose general nationwide restrictions like another circuit breaker.

"We think that is the way to live with the virus while enabling most activities to resume."

The Ministry of Health announced yesterday that Singapore will move back to phase three (heightened alert) from phase two (heightened alert) in two phases, starting on Monday.

As part of the first stage of reopening, the social gathering size limit will go up from two to five, and the operating capacity limits for attractions, cruises, museums and public libraries will increase from 25 per cent to 50 per cent, among other changes. Working from home will remain the default.

Dining in at food and beverage outlets in groups of five will be allowed from June 21 as part of the second phase.




The country entered phase two on May 16 after a surge in local community cases, and the task force yesterday cited measures such as contact tracing, aggressive testing, extensive ring-fencing, localised lockdowns and vaccinations as reasons the spike was brought under control, allowing the move back to phase three as scheduled.

Health Minister and task force co-chair Ong Ye Kung said such tactics will continue to be vital in controlling the chain of transmissions in the event of any future outbreak - instead of opting for "a very blanket approach and a very painful circuit breaker".

Experts The New Paper spoke to said the strategy to try and stave off the imposition of tough controls is the right way to go.

Dr Hannah Clapham, assistant professor at the National University of Singapore's Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, said: "This is a sensible way forward - a careful, calibrated adjustment of a good suite of measures with intensities that change as case numbers, transmissions and vaccinations in the population change."

Associate Professor Alex Cook, vice-dean of research at the NUS Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, agreed, adding that the current strategy to tackle the virus has already saved thousands of lives.

"The strategy for the next and hopefully final stage of the pandemic is to move away from restrictions that are broad-based, costly and socially damaging and rely on vaccination and targeted measures instead," he added.

Trade and Industry Minister Gan Kim Yong, co-chair of the task force, said as the country opens up, there is still a possibility the number of community cases may rise.

"We will need to accelerate our testing, our vaccination (programme) and our contract tracing to keep the numbers low," he added.

Professor Dale Fisher, an infectious disease expert from the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, emphasised the importance of the vaccination programme when he said: "There is no doubt the best thing an individual can do to protect themselves is get vaccinated.

"At a community level, vaccination will allow us to avoid circuit breakers, remove more social restrictions, and eventually open our borders."

Mr Wong said vaccination is the key to bringing infection rates down.

"We expect 50 per cent of the people in Singapore to be fully vaccinated by August. And by October, we should reach an overall vaccination rate of 75 per cent, or hopefully more... As we progress through these stages, we will ease our restrictions and gradually restore our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders."

1623441076044.png
 
from msn.com:

The virus does not recognise language, religion or race: Gan Kim Yong​


Singapore – The recent incidents highlighting racist behaviour are a reminder that Singapore’s multiracialism cannot be ignored, said Trade and Industry Minister Gan Kim Yong on Thursday (June 10).

1623506428018.png


Incidents recorded on camera portraying racist behaviour by members of the public have been circulating on social media.

In one of the videos, Ngee Ann Polytechnic lecturer Tan Boon Lee was spotted criticising Dave Parkash, who is of Indian and Filipino descent, in Orchard Road.

Mr Tan was heard commenting that it was a disgrace for a Chinese woman to be dating the ice cream store owner Mr Parkash.

Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam took to Facebook on June 6 to note that “if the video is accurate, then it’s horrible.”

“It seems like more people are finding it acceptable, to make ‘in your face’ racial statement – openly,” said Mr Shanmugam.

“I used to believe that Singapore was moving in the right direction on racial tolerance and harmony. Based on recent events, I am not so sure anymore,” he added.

On June 9, a woman was filmed banging a gong because her neighbour had to ring a bell for his prayers.

Another video circulated online on May 1 of a woman shouting at a foreign couple, telling them to “get out of my country” and “get out of Singapore.” She was also heard calling them “white tr*sh”.

“Each time we see something like that happening, I think we should take a stand — make it very clear that this does not represent us, and we do not condone any such acts of racism or xenophobia,” said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong in a multi-ministry virtual press conference on Thursday (June 10).

He highlighted how the Covid-19 pandemic had brought out the best of the Singapore spirit, with many going out of their way to help those in need, regardless of race or religion.

When asked if the pandemic might have contributed to the recent incidents, Mr Gan said that pandemic-related stresses might cause frictions to flare up at times.

Singaporeans need to be reminded that they live in a multiracial society and have to keep working together to strengthen cohesion, he noted.

“It’s like vaccination – to vaccinate us against anti-racial sentiments,” added Mr Gan. “We need to continue to work with one another.”

“We must remember this fundamental DNA that Singaporeans share with each other, of trust, of confidence in each other, that we have come so far from far worse crisis to where we are today,” said Health Minister Ong Ye Kung, who weighed in on the topic.

“So, continue to keep that unity and resilience. Keep that trust – that’s the main antibody to fight against the pandemic.”
 
from msn.com:

The virus does not recognise language, religion or race: Gan Kim Yong​


Singapore – The recent incidents highlighting racist behaviour are a reminder that Singapore’s multiracialism cannot be ignored, said Trade and Industry Minister Gan Kim Yong on Thursday (June 10).

View attachment 113474

Incidents recorded on camera portraying racist behaviour by members of the public have been circulating on social media.

In one of the videos, Ngee Ann Polytechnic lecturer Tan Boon Lee was spotted criticising Dave Parkash, who is of Indian and Filipino descent, in Orchard Road.

Mr Tan was heard commenting that it was a disgrace for a Chinese woman to be dating the ice cream store owner Mr Parkash.

Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam took to Facebook on June 6 to note that “if the video is accurate, then it’s horrible.”

“It seems like more people are finding it acceptable, to make ‘in your face’ racial statement – openly,” said Mr Shanmugam.

“I used to believe that Singapore was moving in the right direction on racial tolerance and harmony. Based on recent events, I am not so sure anymore,” he added.

On June 9, a woman was filmed banging a gong because her neighbour had to ring a bell for his prayers.

Another video circulated online on May 1 of a woman shouting at a foreign couple, telling them to “get out of my country” and “get out of Singapore.” She was also heard calling them “white tr*sh”.

“Each time we see something like that happening, I think we should take a stand — make it very clear that this does not represent us, and we do not condone any such acts of racism or xenophobia,” said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong in a multi-ministry virtual press conference on Thursday (June 10).

He highlighted how the Covid-19 pandemic had brought out the best of the Singapore spirit, with many going out of their way to help those in need, regardless of race or religion.

When asked if the pandemic might have contributed to the recent incidents, Mr Gan said that pandemic-related stresses might cause frictions to flare up at times.

Singaporeans need to be reminded that they live in a multiracial society and have to keep working together to strengthen cohesion, he noted.

“It’s like vaccination – to vaccinate us against anti-racial sentiments,” added Mr Gan. “We need to continue to work with one another.”

“We must remember this fundamental DNA that Singaporeans share with each other, of trust, of confidence in each other, that we have come so far from far worse crisis to where we are today,” said Health Minister Ong Ye Kung, who weighed in on the topic.

“So, continue to keep that unity and resilience. Keep that trust – that’s the main antibody to fight against the pandemic.”

Stating the obvious and making motherhood statements. :rolleyes::eek::biggrin:
 
from straitstimes.com:

Target for 3 in 4 residents to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 by October: Lawrence Wong​


SINGAPORE - Singapore is aiming for half its residents to be fully vaccinated by August, and at least 75 per cent by October.

As at Monday (June 7), more than 1.8 million people, or about 30 per cent of the population, have been fully vaccinated.

Finance Minister Lawrence Wong gave the projection at a news conference on Thursday (June 10), as he noted that the United States saw infection rates steadily come down - from a peak in January this year - when about half the population developed immunity to the coronavirus which causes Covid-19.

He added that more than 40 per cent of people in the US are fully vaccinated, and about 10 per cent have been infected with the virus.

Singapore has not reached that level of immunity yet, but "we will get there soon", said Mr Wong.

In his national address on May 31, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said the country's target is for everyone who is eligible for a vaccination and wants everyone to get at least their first jab by National Day on Aug 9.

With a higher vaccination rate, compliance with social distancing and safe management measures, regular testing, and faster and more comprehensive contact tracing, Singapore will ease restrictions and gradually restore "our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders", said Mr Wong, who is co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19.

For now, phase two (heightened alert) measures will be rolled back from Monday in a cautious and controlled manner, while maintaining strict controls at borders.

The maximum group size for social gatherings will increase from two people to five, among other relaxation of rules.

The second stage of the reopening will happen from June 21, when dining in at eateries may be allowed, with a maximum group size of five.

Such restrictions are needed in phase three (heightened alert) until Singapore's vaccination rate is higher, said Mr Wong.

"It is not quite the full phase three, we call this phase three (heightened alert) because there are still these restrictions in place."

The announcement on the relaxation of rules comes amid a decline in community cases in the past three weeks.

Mr Wong said: "As we progress through these stages (of reopening), we will ease our restrictions and gradually restore our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders. Then we will move to phase three, and even beyond phase three, to a new normal phase of living with endemic Covid."

This is a very reasonable target. :thumbsup:
 
from tnp.sg:

Latest strategy is geared towards living with Covid-19 virus​


View attachment 113421

While Singapore has managed to bring under control the latest spike in infections, the public will have to get used to living with the Covid-19 virus for the foreseeable future as it is unlikely to be eradicated soon.

And as the country gears up for a loosening of safety measures starting next week, Finance Minister Lawrence Wong, co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling the pandemic, said that moving forward, the aim is to avoid nationwide restrictions as far as possible.

Speaking at a press conference yesterday, Mr Wong said: "We will take more aggressive, localised actions, and we will try our very best to avoid having to impose general nationwide restrictions like another circuit breaker.

"We think that is the way to live with the virus while enabling most activities to resume."

The Ministry of Health announced yesterday that Singapore will move back to phase three (heightened alert) from phase two (heightened alert) in two phases, starting on Monday.

As part of the first stage of reopening, the social gathering size limit will go up from two to five, and the operating capacity limits for attractions, cruises, museums and public libraries will increase from 25 per cent to 50 per cent, among other changes. Working from home will remain the default.

Dining in at food and beverage outlets in groups of five will be allowed from June 21 as part of the second phase.




The country entered phase two on May 16 after a surge in local community cases, and the task force yesterday cited measures such as contact tracing, aggressive testing, extensive ring-fencing, localised lockdowns and vaccinations as reasons the spike was brought under control, allowing the move back to phase three as scheduled.

Health Minister and task force co-chair Ong Ye Kung said such tactics will continue to be vital in controlling the chain of transmissions in the event of any future outbreak - instead of opting for "a very blanket approach and a very painful circuit breaker".

Experts The New Paper spoke to said the strategy to try and stave off the imposition of tough controls is the right way to go.

Dr Hannah Clapham, assistant professor at the National University of Singapore's Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, said: "This is a sensible way forward - a careful, calibrated adjustment of a good suite of measures with intensities that change as case numbers, transmissions and vaccinations in the population change."

Associate Professor Alex Cook, vice-dean of research at the NUS Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, agreed, adding that the current strategy to tackle the virus has already saved thousands of lives.

"The strategy for the next and hopefully final stage of the pandemic is to move away from restrictions that are broad-based, costly and socially damaging and rely on vaccination and targeted measures instead," he added.

Trade and Industry Minister Gan Kim Yong, co-chair of the task force, said as the country opens up, there is still a possibility the number of community cases may rise.

"We will need to accelerate our testing, our vaccination (programme) and our contract tracing to keep the numbers low," he added.

Professor Dale Fisher, an infectious disease expert from the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, emphasised the importance of the vaccination programme when he said: "There is no doubt the best thing an individual can do to protect themselves is get vaccinated.

"At a community level, vaccination will allow us to avoid circuit breakers, remove more social restrictions, and eventually open our borders."

Mr Wong said vaccination is the key to bringing infection rates down.

"We expect 50 per cent of the people in Singapore to be fully vaccinated by August. And by October, we should reach an overall vaccination rate of 75 per cent, or hopefully more... As we progress through these stages, we will ease our restrictions and gradually restore our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders."

View attachment 113422

Will slowly change from pandemic to endemic. :coffee:
 

Lawrence Wong

1 hr ·
IRAS is our tax administrator; but they do much more than that. They also play an important role in disbursing grants to enterprises, be it through the Job Support Scheme or the latest Rental Relief Scheme.
The work that IRAS officers do is often not visible to the public eye. But a lot of heavy lifting happens behind the scenes each time Ministry of Finance (Singapore) announces a new scheme. The officers have to work out the operations, ensure effective implementation, and promptly address any public queries or appeals. So the IRAS officers have been working extra hard throughout this pandemic. Although the hours are long, our officers share a common desire to do their part to help workers and companies through these tough times.
Like many Singaporeans, IRAS officers also have to adapt to working remotely. Some like Kwee Yong have to juggle their work with their responsibilities as young parents. Others like Taikhoom and Damien have adapted to using digital tools, and are now highly productive when working from home!
Thanks for the chat everyone, and thanks for your commitment and dedication in serving Singapore and our fellow Singaporeans!

View attachment 113391

Did LW ask them to clamp down hard on tax evaders? :unsure:
 

Lawrence Wong is at Tuas Checkpoint Singapore.​

2 hrs · Singapore ·
Our frontline officers work very hard everyday to keep Singapore safe. Day in, day out they often have to put on PPE for work, and some even have marks on their faces after prolonged wearing of masks.
Today I met with a few of them from Immigration & Checkpoints Authority and the healthcare sector. They are stationed at Tuas Checkpoint to test the cargo drivers who transport our food and key supplies.
Let's continue to support our many unsung heroes on the Covid-19 frontline. Stay United and we will get through this together!

Hopefully Lawrence learned that he needs to close the borders whenever overseas cases rise. :coffee:
 
from straitstimes.com:

Target for 3 in 4 residents to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 by October: Lawrence Wong​


SINGAPORE - Singapore is aiming for half its residents to be fully vaccinated by August, and at least 75 per cent by October.

As at Monday (June 7), more than 1.8 million people, or about 30 per cent of the population, have been fully vaccinated.

Finance Minister Lawrence Wong gave the projection at a news conference on Thursday (June 10), as he noted that the United States saw infection rates steadily come down - from a peak in January this year - when about half the population developed immunity to the coronavirus which causes Covid-19.

He added that more than 40 per cent of people in the US are fully vaccinated, and about 10 per cent have been infected with the virus.

Singapore has not reached that level of immunity yet, but "we will get there soon", said Mr Wong.

In his national address on May 31, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said the country's target is for everyone who is eligible for a vaccination and wants everyone to get at least their first jab by National Day on Aug 9.

With a higher vaccination rate, compliance with social distancing and safe management measures, regular testing, and faster and more comprehensive contact tracing, Singapore will ease restrictions and gradually restore "our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders", said Mr Wong, who is co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19.

For now, phase two (heightened alert) measures will be rolled back from Monday in a cautious and controlled manner, while maintaining strict controls at borders.

The maximum group size for social gatherings will increase from two people to five, among other relaxation of rules.

The second stage of the reopening will happen from June 21, when dining in at eateries may be allowed, with a maximum group size of five.

Such restrictions are needed in phase three (heightened alert) until Singapore's vaccination rate is higher, said Mr Wong.

"It is not quite the full phase three, we call this phase three (heightened alert) because there are still these restrictions in place."

The announcement on the relaxation of rules comes amid a decline in community cases in the past three weeks.

Mr Wong said: "As we progress through these stages (of reopening), we will ease our restrictions and gradually restore our normal lives, both within Singapore and at our borders. Then we will move to phase three, and even beyond phase three, to a new normal phase of living with endemic Covid."

Actually 3 in 4 is not that many. :unsure:
 

Lawrence Wong

5 hrs ·
The revamped wet market at Limbang Shopping Centre is now open.
Visited the market this morning and chatted with several stallholders and residents. They all like the new look, and the more open and brighter environment!
The Yi Jia Food Centre at the second floor of the shopping centre will soon move to a location next to the wet market. Took the opportunity to support Our Limbang hawkers and ta-pau lunch from my favourite chicken rice stall there.

1623587294616.png
 
Lawrence Wong buying his favourite chicken rice. :wink:

1623678553959.png
 
Lawrence Wong checking out the seafood. :thumbsup:

1623693369576.png
 

Ong Ye Kung

4 hrs·

Throughout the CB last year and now the HA period, I walked a lot more in the park. There are brief encounters with many people - a ‘hi’ here, a wave there, sometimes just a nod, and occasionally a quick selfie. I think it makes everyone feel that we are going through this together. I love our parks.

1623733164748.png
 
from msn.com:

The virus does not recognise language, religion or race: Gan Kim Yong​


Fact checked : absolutely FALSE! The virus does recognise race. If you're a nigger you're 4x more likely to be well and truly fucked!


theguardian.com


Black people four times more likely to die from Covid-19, ONS finds​


Robert Booth

8-10 minutes



Black people are more than four times more likely to die from Covid-19 than white people, according to stark official figures exposing a dramatic divergence in the impact of the coronavirus pandemic in England and Wales.
The Office of National Statistics found that the difference in the virus’s impact was caused not only by pre-existing differences in communities’ wealth, health, education and living arrangements.
It discovered that after taking into account age, measures of self-reported health and disability and other socio-demographic characteristics, black people were still almost twice as likely as white people to die a Covid-19-related death.
Bangladeshi and Pakistani males were 1.8 times more likely to die from Covid-19 than white males, after other pre-existing factors had been accounted for, and females from those ethnic groups were 1.6 times more likely to die from the virus than their white counterparts.
The risk of Covid-19 death for people from Chinese and mixed ethnic groups was found to be similar to that for white people.
“These results show that the difference between ethnic groups in Covid-19 mortality is partly a result of socio-economic disadvantage and other circumstances, but a remaining part of the difference has not yet been explained,” the ONS said.
Guardian research last month confirmed suspicions that minority groups faced the greatest risk from the coronavirus and showed that areas with high ethnic minority populations in England and Wales tended to have higher mortality rates in the pandemic.
 
Fact checked : absolutely FALSE! The virus does recognise race. If you're a nigger you're 4x more likely to be well and truly fucked!


theguardian.com


Black people four times more likely to die from Covid-19, ONS finds​


Robert Booth

8-10 minutes



Black people are more than four times more likely to die from Covid-19 than white people, according to stark official figures exposing a dramatic divergence in the impact of the coronavirus pandemic in England and Wales.
The Office of National Statistics found that the difference in the virus’s impact was caused not only by pre-existing differences in communities’ wealth, health, education and living arrangements.
It discovered that after taking into account age, measures of self-reported health and disability and other socio-demographic characteristics, black people were still almost twice as likely as white people to die a Covid-19-related death.
Bangladeshi and Pakistani males were 1.8 times more likely to die from Covid-19 than white males, after other pre-existing factors had been accounted for, and females from those ethnic groups were 1.6 times more likely to die from the virus than their white counterparts.
The risk of Covid-19 death for people from Chinese and mixed ethnic groups was found to be similar to that for white people.
“These results show that the difference between ethnic groups in Covid-19 mortality is partly a result of socio-economic disadvantage and other circumstances, but a remaining part of the difference has not yet been explained,” the ONS said.
Guardian research last month confirmed suspicions that minority groups faced the greatest risk from the coronavirus and showed that areas with high ethnic minority populations in England and Wales tended to have higher mortality rates in the pandemic.

It could be due to diet, lifestyle habits and/or underlying conditions more so than race. This was discussed in quite a lot of detail during the Trump administration. :coffee:
 
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