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Delta fuels China’s broadest outbreak since Wuhan

REUTERS

CHINA is confronting its broadest coronavirus outbreak since the pathogen emerged in late 2019 after the Delta variant broke through the country’s defenses, with cases now in 14 of 32 provinces.

While the overall number of infections — more than 300 so far — is much lower than outbreaks elsewhere, the wide spread indicates that the variant has been on the loose for some time and is alarming officials who wield the strictest containment measures in the world.

It’s the biggest challenge for the world’s second-largest economy since the virus was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in Dec. 2019. China’s strict regulations, including mass testing, aggressive contact tracing, quarantines and occasional lockdowns, crushed more than 30 previous flareups.

The arrival of the more infectious Delta variant, however, is testing that approach. The new strain may be exploiting the population’s recent willingness to lower their guards when it comes to masking and distancing, since much of the country has been COVID-free for months. That, along with increased travel during the summer months, created a perfect storm for delta to gain a foothold.

The initial infection arrived via an overseas flight from Moscow into the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing in mid-July, and took hold there among the airport cleaning staff.

China reported 99 infections on Monday alone, including 44 people who tested positive but have no symptoms. By number of cases, it is the biggest outbreak since the flareup in Hebei in northern China in January, when 2,000 people were infected. The broad spread is more concerning, with infections having reached the highly protected capital, Beijing, and as far as Hainan province in the south, 1,900 kilometers away from Nanjing.

It remains to be seen if the country’s vaccination rate, close to 60% and among the highest in the world, can slow delta’s spread and keep serious illness and death at bay. Most of those infected in Nanjing have been immunized. The shots do appear to protect against serious disease, with 4% of those infected battling severe disease so far. Many of them have preexisting conditions such as asthma, diabetes or high blood pressure, said Guo Yanhong, an official with the National Health Commission, at a briefing in Beijing on Saturday.

While all COVID vaccines have seen their effectiveness dented by Delta, concerns are high that non-MRNA vaccines like the Chinese ones and AstraZeneca Plc’s shot will be less able to slow transmission.

State-owned Sinopharm said its inactivated COVID-19 shot, a mainstay for the Chinese population, is 68% effective against Delta, citing a study in Sri Lanka. Sinovac Biotech Ltd., the other major Chinese supplier of shots, said that sera samples from people inoculated with its inactivated vaccine can still neutralize the delta strain in laboratory studies, state media Global Times reported, without more detail.

All COVID vaccines have seen their effectiveness dented by delta, showing that immunizations alone won’t bring the outbreak to heel. Last week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed its earlier position and said fully vaccinated people should go back to wearing masks indoors in places where infections are rising.

“Delta accounts for 80% of cases in the US, and they re-instituted a requirement for masks,” said Wang Huaqing, chief immunization expert at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, at the Saturday briefing. “That means delta’s spread is severe and personal protection can not be slackened even with vaccination.”

NEW CLUSTER
Adding to the concern is a separate cluster in the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou — also of the Delta strain — where hospital and cleaning staff have been infected. Cases were reported in the broader Henan province as well, where the ability to curb the virus’s spread may be weakened due to the fallout from torrential rain that has killed nearly a hundred people and destroyed infrastructure.

Residents in Nanjing, where the recent outbreak began, have been placed under lockdown. Also affected are those living in Zhangjiajie, a scenic area famous for its verdant mountain ridges, where a live outdoor performance a week ago with more than 3,000 spectators fueled the virus’s spread.

Officials in the Chinese capital of Beijing, which has detected five Delta cases, vowed to cut off the virus’ transmission with “fastest pace, strictest measures and the most decisive actions.” It will tighten entry restrictions for those traveling from places currently battling outbreaks, and government and state company employees have been barred from leaving the city. — Bloomberg

US Republican report says coronavirus leaked from China laboratory

WASHINGTON — A preponderance of evidence proves the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic leaked from a Chinese research facility, said a report by US Republicans released on Monday, a conclusion that US intelligence agencies have not reached.

The report also cited “ample evidence” that Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) scientists — aided by US experts and Chinese and US government funds — were working to modify coronaviruses to infect humans and such manipulation could be hidden.

Representative Mike McCaul, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, released the report by the panel’s Republican staff. It urged a bipartisan investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic that has killed 4.4 million people worldwide.

China denies a genetically modified coronavirus leaked from the facility in Wuhan — where the first COVID-19 cases were detected in 2019 — a leading but unproven theory among some experts. Beijing also denies allegations of a cover-up.

Other experts suspect the pandemic was caused by an animal virus likely transmitted to humans at a seafood market near the WIV.

“We now believe it’s time to completely dismiss the wet market as the source,” said the report. “We also believe the preponderance of the evidence proves the virus did leak from the WIV and that it did so sometime before Sept. 12, 2019.”

The report cited what it called new and under-reported information about safety protocols at the lab, including a July 2019 request for a $1.5-million overhaul of a hazardous waste treatment system for the facility, which was less than two years old.

In April, the top US intelligence agency said it concurred with the scientific consensus that the virus was not man-made or genetically modified. US President Joseph R. Biden in May ordered US intelligence agencies to accelerate their hunt for the origins of the virus and report back in 90 days.

A source familiar with current intelligence assessments said the US intelligence community has not reached any conclusion whether the virus came from animals or the WIV. — Reuters

Pfizer and Moderna raise prices of COVID-19 vaccines in EU

PFIZER, INC. and Moderna, Inc. have raised the prices of their coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines in their latest European Union (EU) supply contracts, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

The new price for the Pfizer shot was 19.50 euros ($23.15) against 15.50 euros previously, the newspaper said, citing portions of the contracts seen.

The price of a Moderna vaccine was $25.50 a dose, the contracts show, up from about 19 euros in the first procurement deal but lower than the previously agreed $28.50 because the order had grown, the report said, citing one official close to the matter.

Pfizer declined to comment on the contract with the European Commission (EC), citing confidentiality. “Beyond the redacted contract(s) published by the EC, the content remains confidential and so we won’t be commenting,” the company said.

Moderna was not immediately available for comment to Reuters.

The European Commission said on Tuesday that the EU is on course to hit a target of fully vaccinating at least 70% of the adult population by the end of the summer.

In May, the EU said it expects to have received more than a billion doses of vaccines by the end of September from four drugmakers. — Reuters

Britain may toughen summer travel rules for Spain

YASSINE KHALFALLI-UNSPLASH

LONDON — British ministers plan to warn holiday makers against visiting destinations such as Spain and may create a new list of countries at high risk of moving to the government’s quarantine list, The Times newspaper reported.

Britain has one of the fastest vaccination programs in the world but the government has effectively prevented travel to many countries by imposing a maze of different rules that the travel industry says is hobbling Britain’s economy.

Finance Minister Rishi Sunak has written to Prime Minister Boris Johnson calling for an urgent easing of travel restrictions which he said were damaging the economy, The Sunday Times reported.

Under current rules, which will be reviewed on Thursday, double-vaccinated travelers can return from amber-list countries without quarantining, but those returning from red-list countries must pay 1,750 pounds to spend ten days in a hotel.

An amber watchlist was due to be signed off at a meeting on Thursday but a split in the government could delay a decision, The Times said.

Spain would be put on the new list under the plans, a move that would be likely to cause an exodus of up to 1 million British tourists who are on holiday there, The Times reported. — Reuters

Tiktok partners with human rights org to fight online sexual exploitation 

International Justice Mission (IJM), a global organization focused on human rights and enforcement, and TikTok, a short-video sharing platform, launched a campaign called #Report2Protect to increase awareness and reporting of online sexual exploitation of children.  

Both IJM and TikTok influencers will release educational videos that show the hotline of the Philippine National Police – Women and Children Protection Center (PNP-WCPC), to urge anyone with information to contact authorities at 0919-777-7377 and 0966-725-5961.   

Filipino creators supporting the campaign include John Lloyd Castillo (@jlcastillooo), an online video creator; Mark Kelvin A. Aliliran (@kelvinmarkulit), an events photographer and videographer; Raethan Christian R. Supatan (@ethan_pptart), a PowerPoint artist and content creator; and Jan Abigail Maravilla (@coachubby), an accountant and software coach.  

“We at IJM are pleased to team up with TikTok to educate more Filipinos, especially the youth, about this threat and empower members of the community to contact authorities when they know a child is being sexually abused and exploited by traffickers who want easy money from online sex offenders,” said Atty. Samson R. Inocencio Jr., Regional Vice President of IJM Global Programs Against Online Sexual Exploitation of Children. “This crime inflicts deep trauma on child victims. Timely intervention is critical.”  

TikTok, one of the most popular apps among teenagers, has been under fire for having underage users despite its terms of service stating that users must be at least 13 years old to sign up for an account. Earlier this year, TikTok removed nearly 7.3 million accounts globally that were suspected to belong to underage children, accounting for less than 1% of all users.  

In 2020, the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) released a study that showed a surge in online child pornography transactions in the Philippines from March 15 to May 15, during the lockdown caused by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. During that period, 5,902 child pornography-related online transactions were recorded, compared to 369 transactions a year prior.  

IJM’s support since 2011 has helped Philippine authorities to rescue at least 828 victims, arrest 293 suspected perpetrators, and convict 115 of them. As a violation of the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act or Republic Act (RA) No. 9208, online sexual exploitation of children is a crime with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of P2 to P5 million.  

“This campaign not only encourages the community to report incidences of online sexual exploitation of children; it also sends a strong warning to traffickers that there is growing vigilance against this crime,” said Police Colonel Maria Sheila T. Portento, chief of the WCPC Anti-Trafficking in Persons Division.  

Any sexualized material that depicts or otherwise represents children falls under the term “child sexual abuse material” or “child sexual exploitation material,” according to the Terminology Guidelines for the Protection of Children from Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse, also known as the Luxembourg Guidelines 

“Online sexual exploitation of children is a serious problem in the country and the impact on its victims is devastating,” said Kristoffer Eduard M. Rada, TikTok’s head for public policy. “This partnership reiterates our commitment to combating this serious issue, and the opportunity for TikTok to strengthen our commitment in promoting a positive and safer online environment for children; keeping the platform a fun, creative and an inspiring place for creating and consuming content for everyone.” — Brontë H. Lacsamana 

Asian factory activity hit by rising costs, Delta variant

REUTERS

TOKYO — Asia’s factories hit a rough patch in July as rising input costs and a new wave of coronavirus infections overshadowed solid global demand, highlighting the fragile nature of the region’s recovery.  

Manufacturing activity rose in export powerhouses Japan and South Korea, though firms suffered from supply chain disruptions and raw material shortages that pushed up costs.  

China’s factory activity growth slipped sharply in July as demand contracted for the first time in over a year, a private survey showed, broadly aligning with an official survey released on Saturday showing a slowdown in activity.  

“Supply bottlenecks remain a constraint. But the PMIs (Purchasing Managers Index) suggest demand is cooling too, taking the heat out of price gains and weighing on activity in industry and construction,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics.  

Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia saw factory activity shrink in July due to a resurgence in infections and stricter COVID-19 restrictions, according to private surveys.  

The surveys highlight the divergence emerging across the global economy on the pace of recovery from pandemic-induced strains, which led the International Monetary Fund to downgrade this year’s growth forecast for emerging Asia.  

“The risk is that growth scars linger for longer even if activity recovers in the coming months,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian Economics Research at HSBC.  

“Plus, cooling export momentum, far from a temporary blip, provides a hint of what to expect in quarters to come,” he said, adding that such uncertainty over the outlook would prod Asian central banks to maintain loose monetary policy.  

China’s Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 50.3 in July from 51.3 in June, marking the lowest level in 15 months, as rising costs clouded the outlook for the world’s manufacturing hub.  

The final au Jibun Bank Japan PMI rose to 53.0 in July from 52.4 in the previous month, though manufacturers saw input prices rise at the fastest pace since 2008.  

Japan also faces a surge in Delta variant cases that has forced the government to expand state of emergency curbs to wider areas through Aug. 31, casting a shadow over the Olympic Games and dashing hopes for a sharp rebound in July–September growth.  

South Korea’s PMI stood at 53.0 in July, holding above the 50 mark indicating an expansion in activity for the 10th straight month. But a sub-index on input prices rose at the second highest on record in a sign of the strain firms are feeling from rising raw material costs.  

Underscoring the pandemic’s strain on emerging Asia, Indonesia’s PMI plunged to 40.1 in July from 53.5 in June.  

Manufacturing activity also shrank in Vietnam and Malaysia, the PMI July surveys showed.  

While still grappling with infections, easing restrictions helped India’s factory activity bounced back in July as demand surged both at home and abroad.  

Once seen as a driver of global growth, Asian’s emerging economies are lagging their advanced peers in recovering from the pandemic’s pain as delays in vaccine rollouts hurt domestic demand and countries reliant on tourism. — Leika Kihara/Reuters 

Smart buildings: Cohesion CEO on the office of the future

Image via Cohesion

NEW YORK — Before the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, Thru Shivakumar, co-founder and chief executive officer of Cohesion, was already working on apps to convert office buildings into smart spaces, powered by technology that enables interaction with tenants through phones and computers.  

Since the pandemic began, however, she is learning that the smart buildings of the future are going to look different from the ones she was planning prior to 2020.  

Chicago-based Cohesion, which works with companies worldwide to create software for “intelligent” buildings, sees an increase in the number of people who would use a building smartphone app to track cleanliness, air quality, and building security. Pre-pandemic, employees were more interested in amenities, such as restaurants and gyms.  

Ms. Shivakumar, 39, talked to Reuters about the workplace of the future. Edited excerpts are below.  

  1. How will offices change as they reopen?
  2. After every crisis, the pendulum doesn’t swing too far from the center. I don’t think that offices are gone and remote work is here to stay for good, but people will want more flexibility, more communication and more transparency. A smart building app is no longer nice to have. It’s a must-have. 
  3. What do employees want when they return to the office?
  4. Our research shows that over 60% of people have said they want to come back full-time. When employees return, their new priorities are health, wellness and security. People want outdoor spaces to get fresh air. 

We also know that people want to interact less with the office staff and have more ability to do their own thing — maybe they want to have an in-app key card, so you don’t have to take out a physical key card to enter.  

They don’t want to touch elevator buttons. They would like touchless controls or an application-driven elevator that knows where you’re going.  

Smart bathrooms where they can touch fewer things and surfaces are important, too. So is the ability to see what kind of air they are breathing.  

We’ve also heard that people don’t want to be inundated with all this information, but they want to know it’s there when they want to go see it.  

  1. What is the best job advice you’ve gotten? 
  2. One of my mentors early on told me to never say “no” to any project, and to deliver what I said I would deliver and when I said I would deliver it. 

In my 20s, I did so many mundane projects, but because I always delivered, I got a seat at the table. I never said I couldn’t get it done because I needed sleep. I just delivered.  

As you progress through your career, you’re not the individual contributor any more. You’ve got to make sure that your team delivers. Stay communicative and never think that anything is beneath you to do. There’s a lot of administrative work even in my job now. I never say it’s not my job to do it.  

  1. Have you developed any interesting work habits since the pandemic began? 
  2. Since I was in the office, I never got to cook in the middle of the day, but now I’m doing a lot ofinstapotcooking — a lot of cutting vegetables and dumping things in a pot, and I can still take a call with my AirPods while I’m doing it.  

Because we’re on video calls all day, my staff has seen me cooking an omelet in the morning.  

  1. You won a 200-person charity poker tournament in 2007 — what did you learn from that?
  2. It was a tournament to benefit sarcoma research in Chicago. I was one of the few females in it, and the only female at the final table. 

It was a fun experience. There was so much going on, and I could get distracted, but I had to have this sustained focus.  

Early on, I played some hands that some people wouldn’t have — I took some risks and, in the end, it was me against a professional poker player, and they said both of us won. 

My takeaway was that to be an entrepreneur you really have to be a risk-taker. — Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan/Reuters 

Downtrodden peso may extend drop on Philippine rating risk

BW FILE PHOTO

July was a brutal month for the Philippine peso and there appears to be little respite on the horizon. 

After capping its steepest monthly decline in over three years, the currency could extend losses due to a worsening virus outbreak and the risk of a sovereign rating downgrade. It may drop toward 51 per dollar, a level last reached in April 2020, according to ING Groep NV, Security Bank Corp. and Malaysian Banking Bhd. 

The peso’s resilience is being tested as the authorities struggle to contain the spread of the delta variant and slowing economic growth erodes government revenue. Volatility in the currency has increased, suggesting that traders could be bracing for more downside in the months ahead. 

“We do see the peso on the back foot from here on as growth will likely take a hit from the Delta variant, while investors become more worried about the fast deteriorating fiscal metrics,” said Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa, senior economist at ING in Manila. “A stark drawdown in gross international reserves may also open the floodgates for further peso weakness.” 

The peso declined 2.3% in July, its biggest monthly drop since January 2018 and the worst performance among Asian currencies after the Thai baht. It fell to as low as 50.5, its weakest level in more than a year. 

A key risk for the Philippine currency is the threat of a sovereign rating downgrade as the outbreak takes a toll on growth. Fitch Ratings revised the nation’s credit outlook to negative from stable in July, citing the impact of the pandemic on the economy and public finances. 

The Manila capital region, which accounts for about a third of the economy, will be in a strict lockdown from Aug. 6 to 20 and extra curbs on movements will be imposed in the interim, the authorities said last week. The restrictions on the capital will cost the Philippine economy P105 billion ($2.1 billion) a week, according to Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick T. Chua. 

A slower pace of expansion could hurt public revenues and add to the debt burden. In its downgrade of the nation’s credit outlook, Fitch estimated that the general government debt-to-GDP ratio will rise to 52.7% and 54.5% in 2021 and 2022, respectively, from 34.1% in 2019. 

The peso gained 0.1% to 50.030 as at noon in Manila on Monday. The median forecast of a Bloomberg survey of strategists is for the currency to climb to 48.8 by year-end. 

WATCH LIST
For now, the peso may also be weighed down by weaker sentiment after the Philippines was added to the watch list for terror financing by the Financial Action Task Force, a global anti-money laundering body, in June. The inclusion may hurt investment, and make it harder to access financing from institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. 

“We could have seen an outflow as some companies may not be allowed to deal in jurisdictions that have been tagged as part of the grey list,” said ING’s Mr. Mapa. 

The Philippines could be removed from the FATF’s monitoring list on or before January 2023 or “upon successful completion of all action plans” that counter money laundering and terrorism financing, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)  Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in June. 

“The threat of the Delta virus variant could also lead to hot money outflows,” said Robert Dan Roces, chief economist at Security Bank in Manila. “It’s a highly uncertain environment,” adding that the peso may slide to the 51 level in the fourth quarter. — Bloomberg

Australia cranks up COVID curbs with Brisbane lockdown extended, army patrols in Sydney

Image via Steve Penton/CC BY 2.0/Flickr

SYDNEY — Australia’s Queensland state on Monday extended a coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown in Brisbane, while soldiers began patrolling Sydney to enforce stay-at-home rules as Australia struggles to stop the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus spreading.  

Queensland said it had detected 13 new locally acquired COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours — the biggest one-day rise the state has recorded in a year. The lockdown of Brisbane, Australia’s third-biggest city, was due to end on Tuesday but will now stay in place until late on Sunday.  

“It’s starting to become clear that the initial lockdown will be insufficient for the outbreak,” Queensland state Deputy Premier Steven Miles told reporters in Brisbane.  

The rising new case numbers in two of the country’s biggest cities comes as disquiet grows on how the government of Prime Minister Scott Morrison is handling the pandemic.  

Although Australia’s vaccination drive has lagged many other developed economies, it has so far fared much better in keeping its coronavirus numbers relatively low, with just under 34,400 cases. The death toll rose to 925 following the death of a man in his 90s in Sydney.  

Australia is going through a cycle of stop-start lockdowns in several cities after the emergence of the fast-moving Delta strain, and such restrictions are likely to persist until the country reaches a much higher level of vaccination coverage.  

Prime Minister Morrison has promised lockdowns would be “less likely” once the country inoculates 70% of its population above 16 years of age — a percentage which now stands at 19%. Mr. Morrison expects to hit the 70% mark by the end of the year.  

Meanwhile the lockdown of Brisbane and several surrounding areas comes as Sydney, the biggest city in the country, begins its sixth week under stay-at-home orders.  

New South Wales state, home to Sydney, said on Monday it detected 207 COVID-19 infections in the past 24 hours as daily new cases continue to linger near a 16-month high recorded late last week.  

The state has recorded more than 3,500 infections since the outbreak began in June, when a limousine driver contracted the virus while transporting an overseas airline crew, and has asked for military personnel to aid efforts to enforce the restrictions.  

Some 300 army personnel, who will be unarmed and under police command, on Monday began door-to-door visits to ensure people who have tested positive are isolating at their homes.  

Army personnel also accompanied police officers around the streets of the areas of Sydney were most COVID-19 cases have been recorded. Footage published online showed police asking the few people encountered on the street as to why they were out of their homes in the largely deserted streets in Sydney’s south west. — Renju Jose and Colin Packham/Reuters 

After months of work, US senators unveil $1 trillion infrastructure bill

IMAGE VIA ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL

WASHINGTON — US senators introduced a sweeping $1-trillion bipartisan plan to invest in roads, bridges, ports, high-speed internet, and other infrastructure, with some predicting the chamber could pass this week the largest public works legislation in decades.  

The massive infrastructure package, a goal that has eluded Congress for years, is a top legislative priority for Democratic President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., who billed it on Sunday as the largest such investment in a century.  

Senators said the 2,702-page bill included $550 billion in new spending over five years for items such as roads, rail, electric vehicle charging stations and replacing lead water pipes on top of $450 billion in previously approved funds.  

“I believe we can quickly process relevant amendments and pass this bill in days,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said of the legislation after it was announced by a bipartisan group of senators.  

“This is a really important bill because it takes our big, aging, and outdated infrastructure in this country and modernizes it. That’s good for everybody,” said Senator Rob Portman, the lead Republican negotiator.  

However, some Republicans criticized the bill as too costly.  

“I’ve got real concerns with this bill,” Republican Senator Mike Lee said in a floor speech. “All is not well with the way we spend money.”  

It was not yet clear whether senators outside the bipartisan group that negotiated the bill will offer amendments that could possibly upset the delicate coalition that was cobbled together.  

If the bill passes the Senate, it must be considered in the House of Representatives, where some Democrats have blasted it as too small and the Democratic leadership has paired it with a $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” bill to pour money into education, child care, climate change, and other priorities.  

Democrats want to offset that social spending with tax hikes on corporations and wealthy Americans earning more than $400,000 a year, measures opposed by Republicans, leaving the fate of both bills up in the air.  

Sunday night’s developments capped months of negotiating, and infighting, among several groups of senators and the White House.  

Initially, Mr. Biden said he was seeking about $2 trillion in a bipartisan bill, an amount that Republicans rejected as wasteful and unnecessary.  

A group of Republican senators then worked on a plan to spend far less, an effort that eventually died, raising questions if Congress could fashion a deal allowing the Democratic president to fulfill his Jan. 20 inauguration promise of working cooperatively with Republicans.  

A bipartisan group of senators, led by Arizona Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, a moderate, and the conservative Mr. Portman toiled for months, adding input from House centrists, on a new plan closer to what Mr. Biden would accept.  

Late in June the group said it had reached a $1.2-trillion deal, but filling in details took more than a month.  

With prodding from Messrs. Schumer and Biden, the negotiators put their staffs to work, nearly around-the-clock, culminating in Sunday’s final deal. — David Morgan and Richard Cowan/Reuters 

Death toll in Turkey wildfires rises to eight, coastal resorts affected 

Image via Gogolplex/CC BY-SA 4.0/via Wikimedia Commons

ISTANBUL — The death toll from wildfires on Turkey’s southern coast rose to eight on Sunday as firefighters battled for a fifth day to contain blazes still raging in coastal resort towns.  

Two more people died on Sunday due to wildfires in the southern town of Manavgat, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said, adding that 10 others were receiving treatment in hospitals in the area.  

Most of more than 100 blazes that erupted in Turkey in the last five days have been contained, authorities said. However, fires were still blazing in Manavgat and in Marmaris and the inland town of Milas, Forestry Minister Bekir Pakdemirli said, prompting the evacuation of some residential areas and hotels.  

In the popular resort town of Bodrum, a group of tourists and hotel staff was evacuated by boat as flames spread and plumes of smoke filled the sky, footage showed. Pakdemirli said the blaze in the area had been contained by Sunday morning.  

The fires had already claimed the lives of five people in Manavgat and one person in Marmaris in recent days. Efforts were being made to put out six fires still blazing in Turkey on Sunday, according to Forestry Ministry data.  

Since Wednesday thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes. Locals as well as support teams from Russia, Ukraine, Iran, and Azerbaijan were deployed to help firefighters. The Turkish government pledged to rebuild damaged homes and compensate for losses in areas affected by the fires.  

Mr. Pakdemirli said at least 13 planes, 45 helicopters, drones, and 828 fire-fighting vehicles were involved in firefighting efforts.  

The EU said it had helped mobilize three fire-fighting planes on Sunday, one from Croatia and two from Spain, after Turkey activated a disaster response scheme to request help from other European countries. Turkey is not a member of the EU.  

In neighboring Greece, firefighters were trying to contain a wildfire burning in the west of the country that destroyed houses and left 15 citizens in hospital with breathing problems on Saturday, authorities said. Temperatures have been high in much of the country in recent days and are expected to reach 44 degrees Celsius on Monday and Tuesday.  

On the Italian island of Sicily, firemen said on Saturday they were battling for a second straight day wildfires that reached the town of Catania, forcing people to leave their homes and the local airport to temporarily shut down. — Reuters 

[B-SIDE Podcast] Olympic dreams deferred: Mary Joy R. Tabal   

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For every athlete whose Olympic dreams came true in Tokyo — like weightlifter Hidilyn F. Diaz and boxer Nesthy A. Petecio — there are so many others whose dreams were either dashed or delayed because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. 

Tokyo 2020 was supposed to be part of the redemption arc of Mary Joy R. Tabal, who was looking to make up for Rio 2016, where she crossed the finish line well off her personal best. But canceled race after canceled race forced her to adjust her goals.  

Ms. Tabal, who made history in the 2016 Rio Games by becoming the first Filipino female marathoner to compete in the Olympics, shares the lessons she learned with BusinessWorld senior reporter Michael Angelo S. Murillo — lessons that we can apply to our own lives. 

TAKEAWAYS 

Goals can change mid-race. 

In Rio, Ms. Tabal remembers that cramping early in the race made her shift her mindset from bettering or matching her personal best to just finishing the 42-kilometer race and earning the title “Olympian.”  

She did it and had to be transported out of the race area in a wheelchair. 

This mental resilience served her again when the pandemic threw a wrench into her plans for Tokyo 2020. 

“I was really training and preparing to qualify for the Olympics but unfortunately so many races were canceled and I just had to deal with the reality that Tokyo was not for me. Sayang [too bad],” said Ms. Tabal. 

“The future is so uncertain; it keeps on changing. What’s important is to live one day at a time. You just have to focus on bettering yourself today and focus on doing something today. … Life is like a marathon,” she added.  

After disappointment, move on. 

Despite the disappointment and frustrations of not being allowed to at least vie for an Olympic spot, athletes just have to move on and take on new challenges. 

“After the disappointment, I had to focus my attention on other things, including the 2021 SEA Games in Vietnam (which has since been deferred to next year because of the pandemic). It is something to look forward to,” said Ms. Tabal. 

“One of the learnings here is to just be prepared. Things can change anytime. An opportunity can be taken anytime. Just take it a day at a time and focus on improving.” 

Keep your eye on the prize. 

Having experienced the Olympics, Ms. Tabal said that focus is paramount if you want to excel in elite competitions. “Be an Olympian and give your 100% so there won’t be any regrets after,” she said. 

While the Tokyo Games got away from her, the Olympic bid is still alive for Ms. Tabal, 32, who has heart set on competing in Paris 2024, finishing the six major marathons (she’s done Boston, which leaves Tokyo, London, Berlin, Chicago, and New York), and competing in the SEA Games and Asian Games.  

“And after maybe I’ll be given the chance to give back and help nurture young athletes to realize their dreams as well,” she said. 

 

Recorded remotely on July 16, 2021. Produced by Paolo L. Lopez and Sam L. Marcelo. 

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