There were reports of antigen rapid test (ART) kits giving false negatives for Omicron variant because of reduced sensitivity. However, Minister of Health Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham bin Haji Jaafar said it is unknown which ART kits the reports referred to.
During a press conference yesterday, the minister added, “We must understand that ART is not 100 per cent accurate but it is in the 90 per cent and above range.The test kits approved for sale in Brunei had gone through rigorous tests to ensure reliable results.”
Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham said false positives are more commonly reported but the results can easily be confirmed with a PCR test.
The minister noted, “What we fear is false negative as it gives false assurance”, while urging the public to use only approved test kits.
MADRID (AFP) – Over 4,000 migrants died or disappeared trying to reach Spain by sea in 2021, twice as many as in the previous year, a migrant rights group said yesterday.
Migrant arrivals in Spain’s Canary Islands in the Atlantic have increased since late 2019 after increased patrols along Europe’s southern coast dramatically reduced crossings to the continent via the Mediterranean.
This route is fraught with dangers due to strong currents and the greater distances involved.
A total of 4,404 migrants perished or vanished in attempts to reach Spain last year, up from 2,170 in 2020, according to Spanish non-governmental organisation Caminando Fronteras, which tracks data from boats in distress.
That is the highest yearly number since the group started keeping records in 2015.
The bodies of the vast majority of migrants, 94 per cent, were never found so they are counted as missing.
Over 90 per cent of the deaths or disappearances last year, 4,016, took place during attempts to reach Spain’s Canary Islands.
The shortest route to the archipelago is more than 100 kilometres from the Moroccan coat.
“There are painful figures,” Maria Gonzalez Rollan, one of the authors of the annual report, told a news conference.
Migration routes to Spain were becoming more “feminised”, with 628 women and 205 children among those who died or went missing last year while trying to reach the country, she added.
The figures from the non-governmental organisation are much higher than those from the United Nations International Organization for Migration which has tallied 1,279 deaths or disappearances of migrants on their way to Spain from northern Africa last year.
At least 37,385 migrants arrived in Spain by sea last year, according to Spanish interior ministry figures, slightly less than the 38,014 that arrived in 2020.
Izah Azahari, Daniel Lim, Azlan Othman & James Kon
Fully-vaccinated students yesterday headed back to school for face-to-face learning for the first time since the second wave of COVID-19 hit the Sultanate. The adoption of temperature check and weekly antigen rapid test (ART) are set to be part of the new school norm.
Some 291 Meragang Sixth Form Centre students returned to their classroom yesterday after getting their temperatures checked, and BruHealth code verified at the entrance to the school premises. COVID-19 testing will be conducted every Monday morning at the school’s hall.
According to PTEM PR officer, students tested positive for COVID-19 will be isolated and requested to take a PCR test.
“We have all the standard operating procedures (SOPs) in place, including social distancing and wearing face masks at all times.”
“Meanwhile, partially vaccinated students will receive home-learning packs.”
The sixth form centre hoped the students will take advantage of the physical lessons to receive the best education and prepare themselves for upcoming examinations.
“We want to take this opportunity to thank teachers, parents and students for their support during home-based learning,” added the officer.
The sixth form centre also thanked the Ministry of Health (MoH) and the Ministry of Education (MoE) for the support and provision of personal protective equipment.
“We are confident our teachers are ready to continue teaching and learning,” said the PR officer.
In adhering to the rules, regulations and guidelines set by the MoH and MoE, returning Years 10 and 11 students of Sayyidina Ali Secondary School in Belait District yesterday took the ART and attended an hour-long refresher course.
Principal Steven Shim Sheau Huei said the course aimed to help students acclimatise themselves to the new norm.
“Over the course of five months of hiatus from physical lessons since August 7 last year, Sayyidina Ali Secondary School outlined SOPs that are aligned with the guidelines set by the MoH and MoE,” Shim said.
Shim also said the staff and teachers have taken extra precautionary steps in ensuring the health and safety of both the students and teachers.
“We advised our teachers to be fully vaccinated and to conduct ART every two weeks,” Shim said. “And for those who are not yet fully vaccinated, they have to take the test every two days.”
“This,” he added, “is in addition to the regular temperature check as well as the use of BruHealth application.”
The principal said the school not only focusses on ensuring that the students are on track with their education; but also safeguarding the health, both physically and mental of the students and teachers.
To mark the start of new academic year, SMSA will conduct Year 7 orientation virtually, starting today.
Meanwhile, students from Arabic schools across the country and Institut Tahfiz Al-Quran Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah joined others in resuming face-to-face classes yesterday as part of the first stage of the Endemic Phase after months of remote learning due to the second wave of the COVID-19 outbreak.
Sanah 10, 11 and Pre-U students began physical classes yesterday, while others continue their lessons online using home learning pack.
Some 707 Pre-U1 and Pre-U2 Hassanal Bolkiah Boys Arabic Secondary School students, 634 Sanah 10 and 11 Hassanal Bolkiah Boys Arabic Secondary School students, 712 Raja Isteri Pengiran Anak Hajah Saleha Girls Arabic Secondary School students and 99 Ma’had Islam Brunei students began their physical lessons yesterday.
Meanwhile, 68 Aliyah Qiraat Diploma students and 136 Years 10 and 11 Institut Tahfiz Al-Quran Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah students also stepped onto the school grounds for the first time since August 2020.
Others continue learning via home learning packs.
Returning students were tested for the virus, had their body temperature checked and attendance taken as part of SOPs for schools during the Early Endemic Phase.
Among the activities arranged included Hajat prayer, reading 30 chapters of Al-Quran, Doa Khatam Al-Quran, Thanksgiving prayer, Doa against COVID-19 and Doa Peliharakan Sultan and Negara Brunei Darussalam.
Over 300 Years 10 and 11 students of Pengiran Anak Puteri Hajah Masna Secondary School also returned to face-to-face learning yesterday.
Acting Principal Pengiran Mohd Ariffin bin Pengiran Haji Aliuddin was present to oversee the school re-opening following a four-month hiatus due to the second wave of COVID-19 outbreak in the Sultanate.
Students got their temperatures checked and underwent testing for COVID-19 at the schools’ multipurpose hall prior to the first class.
Teachers and staff were on hand to assist the students carrying out the test to ensure safety and efficiency.
Teachers and staff were asked to conduct their own ART the day before the school re-opening.
According to Pengiran Mohd Ariffin, “All teachers and staff have already received two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine and half have also received their boosters.
“Alhamdulillah, we can continue face-to-face lessons today. Students who are allowed to come to school, do not have to worry about anything other than the class. The important part is to always follow the SOPs. We hope that the resumption of classroom learning will motivate the students to give their best in school.”
A Year 10 student, Ummi Nur Sabrina, relished the opportunity to be back on school grounds with her friends.
“After four months off missing classroom learning, I am thankful to be back in school again. Online classes were challenging and very stressful. I feel very excited and happy to be back in school to see and meet my friends as well as teachers while at the same time maintaining a social distance with others. We also need to wear face masks all the times and use hand sanitiser regularly.
She added, “I have done ART before, so I am comfortable with it. It’s easy to use. However, I do feel nervous when I am waiting for the result. When the result shows I’m negative, I feel immediate relief.”
Meanwhile, Amirah Syaqinah binti Abu Bakar, also in Year 10, said, “I am very happy to be able to come back to school again. I am very thankful to be able to continue my studies in the classroom.
“Online classes were quite stressful; I struggled to fully grasp some of the subjects. Now, I can see my friends and teachers in person after four months of learning remotely.
“The ART can give us a peace of mind, knowing that we are not infected. It was my first time taking ART and I felt ticklish in the nose and wanted to sneeze.
“At first, I felt nervous. But once the result was out, I was relieved to learn I am negative for the coronavirus.”
AP – Is anyone going to CES this year? A long-simmering question in the tech world will finally get its answer as the gadget show returns to the Las Vegas Strip after a hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We know it will be a smaller show this year, for obvious reasons,” said Consumer Technology Association (CTA) Senior Vice President Jean Foster. CTA is the event organiser.
Several huge tech companies have abandoned plans to attend in person. The latest sign of its dwindling size was Friday’s announcement that CES will run one day shorter than originally planned.
The sprawling exhibition floors open tomorrow as the spread of COVID-19’s omicron variant has heightened concerns about the safety of indoor events and international travel.
The CTA by late December was anticipating between 50,000 and 75,000 attendees for this week’s conference, down from more than 170,000 who came for the last in-person gathering two years ago.
Some die-hard CES devotees were mulling over the choice to go or stay home right up until last week.
“An online CES is not a real CES,” said Prince Constantijn of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, in a December interview. “You’ve got to see the products and meet the people.” But a week later, the royal who regularly serves as a special envoy for Dutch technology start-ups had opted to stay home after all.
His country is sending a barebones crew to CES 2022. So are many big tech companies – if they send anyone at all.
The last physical CES in January 2020 pumped an estimated USD300 million into the Las Vegas economy.
Few attendees would have known then about the coronavirus outbreak emerging in central China and still months away from being declared a pandemic.
The CTA took the conference online in 2021 as COVID-19 hospitalisations were spiking around the world and vaccines weren’t yet widely available.
The trade group announced eight months ago it was ready to come back to Nevada in 2022 but would offer options for remote participants to see some of it virtually.
Those who do travel to CES are required to show they are fully vaccinated and will be given a COVID-19 test kit. Masks are required inside.
“CES is maybe the most significant event economically of the year in terms of conventions,” said Alan Feldman, a former executive who is a fellow at the International Gaming Institute at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Even a significantly reduced event will be “something to look forward to” for local hotels, restaurants, retailers and entertainment crews, Feldman said.
With a smaller audience and the same sprawling footprint occupied by some 2,000 exhibitors, and a desire to keep people distanced, the CTA’s Foster said the “main change for people” will be more empty space and wider aisles.
Much about the Omicron coronavirus variant remains unknown, including whether it causes more or less severe illness.
Scientists said Omicron spreads even more easily than other coronavirus strains, including Delta.
Even without a pandemic to dampen the party, tech industry analyst Carolina Milanesi said “big industry events like this are becoming less important than they used to be” as digital technology has supplied other ways to network and keep up with trends.
CES used to stand for Consumer Electronics Show, but Milanesi said the decades-old gathering has become less a place to find the next line of consumer gadgetry and more focussed on longer-term technology cycles, like self-driving cars or the artificial intelligence applications being fused into smart homes and cities.
“You no longer go to CES to see what’s going to be in the Best Buy near you by summer,” Milanesi said. New expo categories centred around the digital assets called non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, as well as space technology and food, reflect the latest tech buzzwords on the minds of investors and marketers.
Some companies also plan to hype their vision for the next generation of the Internet – a collection of virtual worlds known as the metaverse – though explored from the confines of a physical convention floor.
Milanesi has regularly attended CES for a decade to keep an eye on tech companies and trends but public health concerns led her to mull over whether she’d go this time.
She made a final decision in mid-December to attend, but plans to do things differently – visiting the exhibition halls but skipping big speaking events she can watch from her hotel room.
WASHINGTON (AP) – Verizon and AT&T have rejected a request by the United States (US) government to delay the rollout of next-generation wireless technology.
A joint letter on Sunday from the telecommunications giants to US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Steve Dickson, the head of the Federal Aviation Administration, sought to dismiss concerns brought by US airlines that a new 5G wireless service could harm aviation.
But CEO of Verizon Communications Hans Vestberg and CEO of AT&T John Stankey also wrote that they were willing to accept some temporary measures over the next six months to limit the service around certain airport runways.
Airlines had asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to delay the scheduled 5G rollout, saying the service, set to launch tomorrow, could interfere with electronics that pilots rely on.
Airlines for America, a trade group for large US passenger and cargo carriers, said in an emergency filing that the FCC has failed to adequately consider the harm that 5G service could do to the industry.
The group wants more time for the FCC and the FAA, which regulates airlines, to resolve issues around aviation safety.
Those are related to a type of 5G service that relies on chunks of radio spectrum called C-Band, which wireless carriers spent billions of dollars to buy up last year.
Siding in part with airlines, Buttigieg and Dickson wrote late Friday to the CEOs of AT&T and Verizon to propose a delay in activating 5G C-band service near an undetermined number of “priority airports” while the FAA studies the potential for interference with aircraft operations.
AT&T and Verizon previously agreed to a one-month delay in 5G, which provides faster speeds when mobile devices connect to their networks and allows users to connect many devices to the internet without slowing it down.
But the telecommunications executives said on Sunday that further delays requested by the government would harm their customers.
NEW DELHI (AFP) – Oxfam India said restrictions on its access to international funds will have severe consequences for its humanitarian work and hinder provision of vital medical equipment to fight the COVID pandemic.
The charity group’s local arm said a decision by the country’s home ministry meant that from January 1 it was no longer able to receive foreign funding to finance relief work.
It comes just a week after India imposed the same restrictions on the Missionaries of Charity, founded by the late Mother Teresa.
Oxfam India chief Amitabh Behar said his organisation had worked closely with local partners to “provide life-saving equipment and support” during the pandemic.
The ministry’s decision “will severely hamper these collaborations which were providing relief to those who needed it the most during times of crisis”, he said in a Sunday statement.
Charities and non-profit firms in India need to register under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) to receive money from abroad.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has been accused of cutting off access to funding for rights groups and charities based in the country.
Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity, which runs shelter homes across India, had its permission revoked last week for “not meeting the eligibility conditions”, according to the home ministry, which did not give further details.
In total the ministry refused to renew FCRA registration for 179 non-government organisations, according to The Hindu newspaper.
Amnesty International announced it was halting operations in India after the government froze its bank accounts in 2020.
AP – While the “will he or won’t he?” question remains for No 1 Novak Djokovic and his participation in the Australian Open, the rest of the tennis world returns to work this week to prepare for the season’s first major beginning January 17 at Melbourne Park.
The men’s ATP Cup team event has been on since the weekend in Sydney, and there are three tune-up events being played this week in Melbourne as part of Tennis Australia’s “Summer Set” of tournaments — two WTA tournaments and one ATP.
In Adelaide, there is a joint ATP and WTA tournament this week. Next week, both Adelaide and Sydney will hold joint ATP-WTA tournaments.
Djokovic is still nowhere to be seen. Australian Open chief executive Craig Tiley said there is “quite a bit to play out” before nine-time champion Djokovic shows up to play in Australia.
The top-ranked player has continually refused to reveal if he is vaccinated against COVID-19, a requirement to play in Melbourne. But there has been speculation Djokovic could apply for a medical exemption to play as he eyes a record-breaking 21st Grand Slam singles title. He is tied with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal with 20.
Djokovic withdrew from Serbia’s ATP Cup team last week.
“We’ve still got a few charter flights coming in until the end of this week and then all the players will be here,” Tiley said. “As far as the status relates to Novak, I think we’ll have a much clearer picture in the coming days otherwise it’s getting pretty late to show up and play the Australian Open. There’s quite a bit to play out and I think it will play out in the coming days.”
Naomi Osaka and Simona Halep will headline the WTA tournament in Melbourne this week while Nadal, recovering from COVID-19, is the top seed at the ATP event at Melbourne Park.
Also in the ATP tournament is second-seeded Reilly Opelka, Nick Kyrgios and Grigor Dimitrov.
In Adelaide, top-ranked and Wimbledon champion Ash Barty is the headliner, joined by Coco Gauff, Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka. Gael Monfils is the No 1 seed at the Adelaide ATP tournament, while Karen Khachanov is seeded second.
At the Adelaide WTA event yesterday, third-seeded Maria Sakkari beat Tamara Zidansek 6-2, 0-6, 6-4 in the opening round of the 32-draw tournament and Ajla Tomljanovic beat Heather Watson 6-4 7-6 (5).
Barty, who has a first-round bye, hasn’t played a tournament since losing in the third at the US Open in early September.
“In the next couple weeks I’ll have to be patient with myself, it has been awhile since I’ve played a competitive match,” Barty said yesterday.
“But I feel good. I feel ready. Now it’s just about going out there and enjoying it.”
US Open champion Emma Raducanu withdrew from the Melbourne tournament, having just come out of isolation after testing positive for COVID-19.
Raducanu, who became the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam tournament when she won at Flushing Meadows in September, had pulled out of an Abu Dhabi tournament in late December after contracting the virus.
The Royal Customs and Excise Department (RCED), through its law Enforcement Division seized a haul of contraband and detained a number of individuals allegedly involved in the cases in four separate locations on December 24 and 25, 2021.
Enforcement personnel found 49 cartons of cigarettes inside an abandoned vehicle during an operation in Kampong Katimahar on December 24, 2021.
Customs enforcement personnel raided a foreign worker house and detained two men – a 31-year-old Indonesian and a 36-year old Malaysian – for allegedly storing and selling contraband on December 25, 2021. The contraband comprised 11 cartons, one pack and 13 sticks of cigarettes as well as 29 bottles of alcohol.
On the same day, an operation in Jalan Pasir Berakas found two Indonesian men – aged 31 and 36 – in possession of contraband, including 208 cartons and 37 packs of cigarettes as well as BND4,400 believed to be proceeds from the sales of the contraband.
Meanwhile, in Mukim Sengkurong, the RCED detained a 41-year-old Malaysian found in possession of contraband, including 154 carton of cigarettes, 439 bottles of alcohol and BND5,340 believed to be the proceeds from sales of contraband.
The contraband was seized and the suspects brought to the Law Enforcement Division for investigation.
AP – United States (US) President Joe Biden (AP; pic below) will meet virtually with independent farmers and ranchers to discuss initiatives to reduce food prices by increasing competition within the meat industry, part of a broader effort to show the administration is trying to combat inflation.
The White House event occurs as higher-than-expected inflation has thwarted Biden’s agenda.
Consumer prices in November rose 6.8 per cent over the prior 12 months – a 39-year high.
Inflation has hurt Biden’s public approval, become fodder for Republican attacks and prompted Senator Joe Manchin to cite higher prices as a reason to sideline the Democratic president’s tax, social and economic programmes. Biden is building off a July executive order that directed the Agriculture Department to more aggressively look at possible violations of the 1921 Packers and Stockyards Act, which was designed to ensure fair competition and protect consumers.
Meat prices have climbed 16 per cent from a year ago, with beef prices up 20.9 per cent.
The administration is targetting meat processing plants, which can shape the prices paid to farmers and charged to consumers.
The White House issued a fact sheet saying that the top four companies control 85 per cent of the beef market. In poultry, the biggest four processing firms control 54 per cent of the market.
Biden plans to stress the plans to distribute USD1 billion from the coronavirus relief package to help independent meat processors expand. He also plans to highlight funding to train workers in the industry and improve conditions, as well as issue new rules for meatpackers and labelling requirements for being designated a “Product of USA”.
The Justice Department and the Agriculture Department will launch a joint effort to make it easier to report anti-competitive actions to the government.
The administration will also seek to improve the transparency of the cattle market.
The effort is part of a broader attempt to regain control of America’s economic narrative.
Besides inflation, the repeated waves of coronavirus outbreak have dampened people’s opinions about the economy despite strong growth over the past year.
Biden will have an opportunity to highlight the economy’s strengths with the December jobs report being released on Friday. Economists surveyed by FactSet expect that the US added 362,000 jobs last month with the unemployment rate ticking down to 4.1 per cent.
Gains of that magnitude would indicate that the US added roughly 6.5 million jobs last year, more than in any other previous year in a reflection of population growth and government spending.
UPI – The phrases “Wait? What” and “no worries” are now on a list of “banished” words for 2022 published by a Michigan university on Friday.
Following tradition, Lake Superior State University (LSSU) has listed 10 words phrases it deemed misused, overused and useless for 2022.
“Wait, what?” topped that list, a decision that officials defended by stating that the two four-letter words should “not go together under any circumstances”.
Other phrases included “new normal”, “you’re on mute”, “asking for a friend”, “supply chain”, “at the end of the day”, “that being said”, “circle back”, and “deep dive”.
“Avoid error in and exploitation of everyday language,” the university wrote. “In short, do the opposite of what the public and the media did this year.”
Last year, seven of the 10 phrases chosen reflected real-world concerns over COVID-19, whereas this year, three out of 10 phrases were COVID-19 related. The majority were conversational-based.
The university has published the list since 1976, citing the need to “uphold, protect and support excellence in language”.
LSSU vets thousands of submissions and has published over 1,000 entries, including one submitted by late comedian George Carlin in 1994.