Indonesia’s Marapi Volcano Erupted, Ash Up To 300 Metres

JAKARTA – The Marapi volcano, in Indonesia’s West Sumatra province, erupted for about 45 seconds yesterday, throwing ash up to 300 metres above its peak, according to the Centre for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation.

 

“The eruption happened at 6:11 a.m. local time (23:11 GMT). The ejection of ash, accompanied by sand, has the potential to hit the surrounding area,” the centre said in a press release.

 

As high as 2,891 metres above sea level, this mountain has been active since Dec 25, 2022.

 

Currently, Marapi is in the second level of danger status.

 

The authorities urge tourists not to go within a radius of three km from the Verbeek Crater.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Thailand Introduces New Entry Regulations as China Reopens Border

Thailand will require international travelers to show proof they are fully vaccinated for COVID before flying to Thailand, according to the country’s aviation regulator, as it prepares for more tourists after China reopened its border on Sunday.

The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand said in a statement Saturday that starting early Monday, all foreign arrivals starting early on Monday must prove they are vaccinated or provide a letter certifying that they have recovered from COVID within six months.

Unvaccinated travelers must show a medical certificate explaining why they have not received the vaccine.

CAAT said airlines would be responsible for checking documents before passengers board and has released a list of how many doses are required for various types of COVID-19 vaccines on its website.

The new measure will remain in effect at least until the end of January, CAAT said.

The vaccination requirement was scrapped by Thailand last October but has been revived as China reopens its border following the easing of its zero-COVID policy.

The first commercial flight from China to Thailand, Xiamen Airlines flight MF833, will arrive to Bangkok from Xiamen on Monday carrying 286 passengers, government spokeswoman Traisuree Taisaranakul said Sunday.

Foreigners traveling to Thailand from a country where a negative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction test result is a condition for entry are required to show proof of health insurance that covers COVID-19 treatment, the Health Ministry said.

The new entry requirements do not apply to Thai passport holders or passengers transiting through Thailand.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Workers Clash With Police at COVID Test Kit Factory in China

Scores of workers have clashed with police at a COVID test kit factory in China, video spreading on social media showed Sunday, as the country navigates a path out of its hardline virus policy.

Footage geolocated by AFP to an industrial park in the southwestern city of Chongqing shows people tossing crates at a group of uniformed men, sending a shower of what appear to be test kits flying.

Another clip shows a crowd in front of a line of police at night as loudspeakers play a warning demanding they “cease illegal activities.”

A man who posted video from the scene said in an accompanying caption that many workers had not been paid.

Other posts alleged that Chongqing-based pharmaceutical company Zybio suddenly fired workers who had been recruited in recent weeks.

Zybio did not immediately respond to calls from AFP, while the local police department declined to comment.

“All the workers’ demands are economic in nature,” said a man in one video who called himself a “Marxist-Leninist-Maoist.” He insisted there was no political motive behind the protest.

AFP could not confirm exactly when the videos were captured, though multiple social media users said the clash took place Saturday night into Sunday morning.

Distinctly patterned brown-and-white industrial buildings can be seen in the background of the videos, matching previous images of Zybio’s facility in the Dadukou District Jianqiao Industrial Park.

The hashtag “Chongqing Dadukou Pharmaceutical Factory” appeared to be censored on the popular Weibo social media platform Sunday, with only one post from the previous day still visible describing the protest as an “interesting topic.”

One video posted on a TikTok account belonging to a state-owned news outlet showed what it claimed was a street littered with antigen tests in a Chongqing industrial park.

“Sources say a labor dispute triggered conflict,” the caption read. The video was taken down within hours.

COVID-19 infections have soared across China as the government moves away from its zero-tolerance approach to the virus, prompting a spike in demand for testing kits and drugs.

Authorities last month took over production lines at more than a dozen pharmaceutical firms, while some companies brought on new hires to meet surging demand.

Protests centered on labor issues and targeting individual companies occur frequently in China despite official efforts to clamp down on unrest.

Similar scenes unfolded at iPhone maker Foxconn’s factory in central China last year, as furious workers unhappy with a COVID lockdown and pay dispute clashed with police.

China’s strict COVID curbs sparked some of the country’s worst unrest in years in November, with hundreds taking to the streets nationwide against lockdowns and mandatory testing.

The virus curbs were relaxed soon after the protests.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Boat With 185 Rohingya Refugees Lands in Indonesia’s Aceh

A boat with 185 Rohingya refugees landed on the shores of Indonesia’s Aceh province on Sunday, a local disaster agency official said, following hundreds who arrived late last year fleeing desperate conditions in refugee camps in Bangladesh.

Over half of those who arrived around 2:30 p.m. Sunday were women and children, Ridwan Jamil, head of Aceh Besar disaster agency, told Reuters.

Photos Ridwan shared showed the refugees sitting in groups and lying down on the sand.

Hundreds of Rohingya have reached Aceh in the past few months, including a boat that washed ashore carrying 174 in late December.

The United Nations refugee agency said that 2022 could be one of the deadliest years at sea in almost a decade for the Rohingya, who have long been persecuted in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

For years many Rohingya have fled to neighboring states such as Thailand and Bangladesh, and to Muslim-majority Malaysia and Indonesia.

Fishermen in Aceh had spotted three boats they strongly suspected were carrying Rohingya refugees in waters near Rondo Island, state news agency Antara reported late Saturday.

It was unclear whether the boat that landed was one of them.

Nearly 1 million Rohingya live in crowded conditions in Bangladesh, including many of the hundreds of thousands who fled a deadly crackdown in 2017 by Myanmar’s military, which denies committing crimes against humanity.

Rights groups have recorded a significant increase in the number leaving the camps. It is not clear what is driving the larger exodus, but some activists believe the lifting of COVID restrictions around Southeast Asia could be a factor.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

7.0-Magnitude Quake Strikes Pacific Nation of Vanuatu

Frightened villagers fled to higher ground fearing a tsunami when a 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck late Sunday just off the coast of the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu.

The violent quake’s epicenter was in the sea just off the northern bay of the largest island Espiritu Santo, some 400 kilometers (250 miles) north of the archipelago’s capital Port Vila.

Kayson Pore, a 22-year-old student from the village of Hog Harbour in Espiritu Santo, said he was looking for crab on the beach with half a dozen friends when the earth shook.

“It was very huge,” Pore told AFP by telephone.

“We were right on the sea, we were looking for crab on the coast,” he said.

“We ran for our lives and then we ran to our homes.”

At his home in the village of about 1,000 people, the quake had knocked objects to the ground, breaking cups in the kitchen, Pore said.

“People were moving to higher ground,” he added, for fear of a tsunami tidal wave.

But Pore said he had seen no structural damage to homes in his village.

The shallow quake hit around 11:30 pm local time (1230 GMT) around 27 kilometers (17 miles) deep, according to the US Geological Survey, which placed it about 25 kilometers from the Espiritu Santo village of Port-Olry.

People could feel the quake as far away as Port Vila, on the island of Etafe, said Natasha Joel, a receptionist at the Grand Hotel and Casino in the capital.

However, the tremor was “a bit small” there and no guests were evacuated from the hotel, she said.

A tsunami warning was initially issued for Vanuatu, New Caledonia and the Solomon Islands but cancelled about an hour and a half after the quake.

‘A Big One!’

“Tsunami waves reaching 0.3 to one meter above the tide level are possible for some coasts of Vanuatu,” the NWS Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre in Hawaii said.

Waves smaller than 0.3 meters were possible for New Caledonia and the Solomon Islands, it added.

The French embassy in Vanuatu advised people to stay away from the coasts in a post on its official Facebook page.

Residents reported on social media that there had been damage.

“A Big One!!” one person posted on Facebook. “Lots of things broken all around.”

New Zealand’s National Emergency Management Agency said there was no tsunami threat to its country.

Vanuatu is part of the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, where tectonic plates collide, and experiences frequent seismic and volcanic activity.

The Solomon Islands, an island nation just north of Vanuatu, was hit in November with a 7.0-magnitude quake, though there were no reports of serious injuries or major structural damage.

In 2018, a 7.5-magnitude quake and subsequent tsunami on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island left more than 4,300 people dead or missing.

Vanuatu is ranked as one of the countries most susceptible to natural disasters like earthquakes, storm damage, flooding and tsunamis, according to the annual World Risk Report.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Japan’s Kishida Highlights Security Concerns on Trip to Europe, US

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida begins a weeklong trip Monday to strengthen military ties with Europe and Britain and bring into focus the Japan-U.S. alliance at a summit in Washington, as Japan breaks from its postwar restraint to take on more offensive roles with an eye toward China.

Kishida’s talks with U.S. President Joe Biden on Friday will highlight his five-nation tour that also takes him to France, Italy, Britain and Canada — some of the Group of Seven nations Japan has stepped up defense ties with in recent years. His first stop is Paris on Monday evening.

Kishida said his summit with Biden will underscore the strength of the Japan-U.S. alliance and how the two countries can work more closely under Japan’s new security and defense strategies.

Japan in December adopted key security and defense reforms, including a counterstrike capability that makes a break from the country’s exclusively self-defense-only postwar principle. Japan says the current deployment of missile interceptors is insufficient to defend it from rapid weapons advancement in China and North Korea.

Kishida said he will explain to Biden the new strategy, under which Japan is also reinforcing defenses on its southwestern islands close to Taiwan, including Yonaguni and Ishigaki, where new bases are being constructed.

“Will will discuss further strengthening of the Japan-U.S. alliance, and how we work together to achieve a fee and open Indo-Pacific,” Kishida told a NHK national television talk show Sunday, referring to a vision of national and economic security cooperation the two countries promote to counter China’s growing military and economic influence.

Under the new strategies, Japan plans to start deploying in 2026 long-range cruise missiles that can reach potential targets in China, nearly double its defense budget within five years to a NATO standard of about 2% of GDP from the current 1%, and improve cyberspace and intelligence capabilities.

The idea is to do as much as possible in a short time as some experts see growing risks that Chinese President Xi Jinping may take action against self-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of its territory.

Japan’s new strategy has been well received by the Biden administration and some members of the Congress. Experts say it would also widen cooperation with their main regional partners Australia and possibly South Korea.

“This is an opportunity to rethink and update the structure and the mechanisms of the alliance to reflect a much more capable partner that’s coming,” said Christopher Johnstone, senior adviser and Japan chair for the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

He said, however, that Japan’s focus on the strike capability and budget is a welcome but “a daunting agenda” that will require a lot of cooperation with the United States.

Paving the way for the summit, Japanese Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada and Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi will fly to Washington to meet their American counterparts, Lloyd Austin and Antony Blinken, respectively, on Wednesday, followed by separate defense ministers’ talks on Thursday.

The Biden administration, which also adopted its security strategy in October, expects Japan to assist in the supply and storage of fuel and munitions in case of a Taiwan emergency, experts say. Japan and the United States are also reportedly considering establishing a joint command.

During the talks at the White House, the two leaders are also expected to discuss China, North Korea’s nuclear and missile development as well as Russia’s war on Ukraine, Japanese officials said.

Cooperation in the area of supply chain and economic security will be also on the table. Last week, Japanese Economy and Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo discussed in Washington the importance to work together to promote and protect critical and emerging technologies, including semiconductors, and export controls to address competitiveness and security concerns.

During his trip, Kishida will seek to further strengthen bilateral military ties with four other countries, Japanese officials say.

Japan’s joint development and production of its F-X next-generation fighter jet with Britain and Italy for a planned deployment in 2035 will be a top agenda item during his visits in Rome and London on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Japan and Britain have also been discussing a Reciprocal Access Agreement that would remove obstacles to holding joint military exercises in either country. Besides the Japan-U.S. security treaty that allows U.S. troops to station in Japan, Tokyo has a similar agreement only with Australia, and Britain would be second.

During his talks with French President Emmanuel Macron, Kishida is expected to share concern over China’s growing activity in the South Pacific and confirm stepping up joint military exercise between the two sides.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Myanmar Welcome Over 170,000 Int’l Tourists In Eight Months

Myanmar attracted 170,357 international visitors in the first eight months of the 2022-2023 fiscal year, starting in Apr, 2022, data from the country’s Ministry of Hotels and Tourism showed, yesterday.

 

The figure was up from 82,048 visitors who arrived in the country in the same period of the previous fiscal year, the figures showed.

 

Official data showed that, more than 4.36 million tourists visited Myanmar in 2019, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of tourists who visited Myanmar sharply dropped to 900,000 in 2020 and 130,000 in 2021, due to the pandemic, official figures showed.

 

As of yesterday, Myanmar had recorded a total of 633,709 COVID-19 infections, including 19,490 deaths, and 608,341 recoveries, according to the health ministry.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Cambodian, Chinese Business Executives Met To Explore Trade, Investment Opportunities

A Cambodia and south China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region business forum was held here yesterday, aimed at promoting trade and investment ties between Cambodia and China.

 

Approximately 150 Cambodian and Chinese officials and business executives attended the half-day event.

 

Fu Jinming, deputy director of the Department of Commerce of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said, the forum was a platform for entrepreneurs from both countries to seek opportunities for business partnerships.

 

He also encouraged the entrepreneurs to leverage the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, a free trade pact that came into force in Jan, 2022.

 

Fu said, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region is willing to further broaden cooperation with Cambodia in trade, investment, tourism and culture.

 

Kao Kosal, director-general of the General Directorate of Trade Promotion at Cambodia’s Ministry of Commerce, said, the forum was vital to further strengthen economic, trade, investment, and tourism relations between Cambodia and China.

 

“I’d like to express my heartfelt gratitude to the government, investors, and people of China, for having supported Cambodia in its economic and trade development,” he said.

 

During the forum, several Cambodian companies signed cooperation agreements with their Chinese counterparts.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK