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NCFP nominates Frayna and Bersamina for FIDE World Chess Cup

THE National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) has nominated Woman Grandmaster Janelle Mae Frayna and International Master Paulo Bersamina to represent the country in the men and women International Chess Federation (FIDE) World Chess Cup.

NCFP chief executive officer Grandmaster Jayson Gonzales said they have decided to nominate Ms. Frayna and Mr. Bersamina for the two slots allotted to the country because they have no more time to hold tryouts.

Ms. Frayna, who turned 24 on Wednesday, will be the country’s lone bet in the women’s World Cup slated July 10 to Aug. 6 in Sochi, Russia, while Mr. Bersamina will join IMs Daniel Quizon and Michael Concio, Jr. in the men’s edition of the same event from Aug. 1-28 in Minsk, Belarus. Quizon, 16, and Concio, 15, clinched their spots by topping the Asian Zonal 3.3 Championships two weeks ago.

Ms. Frayna was actually in the final month of her Army training, but had to cut it short after she was called upon for the World Cup and the Hanoi Southeast Asian Games in November.

Aside from being the country’s first and only WGM, Ms. Frayna will also make history as the first Filipina to see action in the World Cup.

Meanwhile, about 15 Filipinos headed by IM John Marvin Miciano are eyeing to clinch one of the 10 slots to Minsk in the Asian Continental Championship unfolding on Friday.

Sports bodies, AFP seal agreement on detailed service of soldier-athletes

(Clockwise from top left) Philippine Olympic Committee President Abraham Tolentino, Philippine Paralympic Committee President Michael Barredo, Philippine Sports Commission Chairman William Ramirez and Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff General Cirilito Sobejana during Thursday’s virtual signing ceremony of their organizations’ agreement on the detailed service of 117 solider-athletes. (PSC)

THE Philippine Sports Commission, the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Philippine Olympic Committee, and the Philippine Paralympic Committee on Thursday signed the Memorandum of Understanding officially placing on detailed service (DS) 117 military athletes and coaches of the national team.

Represented by PSC Chairman William Ramirez, AFP Chief of Staff General Cirilito Sobejana, POC President Abraham Tolentino and PPC President Michael Barredo, respectively, the four organizations signed the agreement in a virtual signing ceremony.

General Sobejana, in his speech, highlighted the importance of the MoU as it symbolizes the united commitment of all parties to pursue the common goal of bringing pride to the country.

The agreement, which is aimed to “develop potential gold medalists in international sports competitions,” has among its provisions the option to terminate the DS of certain athletes should there be a case of conflict in their national sports associations or on cases of misconduct or breach of discipline as provided for in AFP regulations.

The PSC chief who has had the chance to sign a number of previous agreements for detailed service recognized the unprecedented partnership in this new agreement. He said that the partnership has evolved into a very valuable venture benefitting Philippine sports. Mr. Ramirez also stressed that the PSC will have tighter monitoring of everyone on detailed service as the athletes should “act as befitting a soldier. They are soldiers first before they are athletes.”

Among those under the detailed service agreement are three-time weightlifting Olympian and Tokyo Olympics qualifier Hidilyn Diaz, Southeast Asian Games perennial champion boxer Josie Gabuco, 2019 SEA Games gold medalists Melcah Jen Caballero (rowing), and Jermyn Prado (cycling).

“Sports is a battle that brings glory to the country. We are grateful to the AFP for allowing them to be with us in our battle of friendship and diplomacy. They are our frontliners in sports,” Mr. Tolentino, for his part, said.

Mr. Barredo, meanwhile, expressed his gratitude, “We are thankful, honored, and privileged that we are part of this quadripartite agreement. Our soldiers with disabilities will continue to fight, represent and hopefully get the first gold medal (for the country) in the Paralympic games.”

The agreement will be in effect for three years or until 2024.

Fil-Am hoop stars Clarkson, Green to take part in Jr. NBA PH online clinics

Utah Jazz’s Jordan Clarkson (in photo) and 2021 NBA Draft prospect and fellow Filipino-American Jalen Green will join Jr. NBA coaches in teaching Filipino youth basketball drills and life lessons in the first-ever Jr. NBA Philippines Clinics Online this year. (Utah Jazz Facebook page)

THE National Basketball Association announced that its Jr. NBA Philippines program will make its return this year via online clinics with Filipino-American basketball stars Jordan Clarkson and Jalen Green taking part in the proceedings.

Forced to take a backseat last year because of the pandemic, the Jr. NBA Philippines program has been recalibrated as a series of free virtual basketball clinics for now for 13 to 17-year-old boys and girls across the country so as to resume its mission of promoting healthy and active lifestyles among the youth.

Utah Jazz’s Clarkson and 2021 NBA Draft prospect Green will join Jr. NBA coaches in leading Filipino youth through basketball drills while also participating in a life session to discuss the importance of fundamental skills training in their professional careers during the online event slated for May 29.

WNBA Legend Ticha Penicheiro, meanwhile, will headline a Jr. NBA session designed for girls on June 12.

“We’re excited to bring together players from across the NBA, WNBA and NBA G League to inspire our young athletes participating in the first-ever Jr. NBA Philippines Clinics Online,” said Scott Levy, NBA Philippines managing director, in a statement. “Shifting the Jr. NBA program to a virtual event will allow us to safely engage young boys and girls through basketball while continuing to promote the importance of an active and healthy lifestyle.”

To be introduced this year is a social media contest to help identify 10 boys and 10 girls who will participate in the Jr. NBA Asia Pacific Camp Online, a one-day virtual basketball event that features advanced basketball instruction, skills challenges and interactive sessions with select NBA and WNBA players.

The camp will be conducted on July 31 via videoconferencing and will feature 120 participants from seven countries across the region including Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. Contest mechanics will be announced at a later date.

Mr. Clarkson, who represented the Philippines in the 2018 Asian Games, has been having a stellar season for the Jazz, helping the team earn the top seed in the Western Conference playoffs and is a strong contender for the Sixth Man of the Year award with averages of 18 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.4 assists.

Mr. Green, meanwhile, made a great impression as a member of G League Ignite, a team dedicated to the development of elite youth prospects, in the 2021 G League season, averaging 17.9 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game.

The Jr. NBA Philippines program was launched in 2007 and has since reached more than two million youth, parents and coaches across the country, teaching the fundamental skills and core values of the game: sportsmanship, teamwork, a positive attitude, and respect (S.T.A.R.).

Participants can now register for the Jr. NBA Philippines Clinics Online at www.jrnbaasia.com, and follow Jr. NBA Philippines on Facebook and the NBA at www.nba.com and on Facebook and Twitter. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Lakers nip Warriors for West’s 7th seed on LeBron James’ trey

LEBRON James beat the shot clock with a 34-foot, tie-breaking 3-pointer with 58.2 seconds remaining Wednesday night, sending the Los Angeles Lakers to a 103-100 victory over the visiting Golden State Warriors in a Western Conference play-in game.

The victory gives the Lakers the seventh seed in the West playoffs main draw and a first-round matchup with the second-seeded Phoenix Suns in a series that begins Sunday.

The Warriors, who finished eighth in the regular season, will get a second shot at a playoff berth, but they now must beat No. 9 Memphis in San Francisco on Friday.

The Grizzlies earned the right to face the Warriors in the win-or-go-home game by beating the 10th-seeded San Antonio Spurs 100-96 earlier Wednesday evening.

Down 55-42 at half time, the Lakers rallied within 79-77 by the third quarter’s end and then into a lead early in the fourth period.

However, the Warriors, who finished the regular season with six consecutive wins, forged one last tie at 100-all on two Stephen Curry free throws with 1:23 remaining.

That’s when James, standing well outside the 3-point arc, took a pass late in the shot clock and threw up a desperation attempt that went through the hoop and gave Los Angeles the lead for good.

The Warriors had two chances to tie, but Jordan Poole misfired on a 3-point attempt with 35.5 seconds remaining, and Golden State couldn’t get off a shot on a final possession that began when they inbounded the ball with 2.1 seconds to go.

Anthony Davis finished with a team-high 25 points and James had 22 for the Lakers, the defending NBA champions who had just the seventh-best record in the West in the regular season.

James completed a triple-double with 11 rebounds and a game-high 10 assists, while Davis grabbed a team-high 12 rebounds.

Alex Caruso chipped in with 14 points off the bench, Dennis Schroder had 12 and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope 10 for the Lakers, who won despite being outshot 44.6 percent to 40.7 percent overall and were outscored 45-30 on 3-pointers.

Curry poured in a game-high 37 points for the Warriors, who beat Memphis at home on the final day of the regular season to earn the eighth seed in the play-in tournament.

Andrew Wiggins put up 21 points, while Poole and Kent Bazemore added 10 apiece for Golden State. Kevon Looney was the game’s leading rebounder with 13.

Having lost their last two regular-season meetings to the Lakers by a combined 57 points, the Warriors wasted no time asserting themselves on the biggest stage, bolting out to a 15-4 advantage en route to a 55-42 halftime lead.

Curry had 15 points in the half, outscoring James (six) and Davis (five) combined.

The Lakers shot just 32.6 percent in the half. James was 1-for-7, Davis 2-for-12. — Reuters

Yankees’ Corey Kluber stops Rangers to join no-hit parade

ANOTHER day, another no-hitter.

New York Yankees right-hander Corey Kluber became the sixth pitcher to fire a no-hitter this season, beating the Texas Rangers (2-0) on Wednesday in Arlington, Texas.

It was the second no-no in two days after the Detroit Tigers’ Spencer Turnbull accomplished the feat on Tuesday against the Seattle Mariners.

Kluber (4-2) walked one and struck out nine, facing one batter over the minimum. Charlie Culberson was the lone Texas baserunner, as he drew a one-out walk in the third inning. Kluber, who retired the final 20 batters he faced, threw 71 of his 101 pitches for strikes.

Kluber began the ninth at 93 pitches and needed two pitches to get Culberson on a grounder to second. He got the second out when right fielder Tyler Wade made a running catch on a liner by pinch hitter David Dahl, then completed his gem by retiring Willie Calhoun on a groundout to second.

After the game ended, Kluber was mobbed by his teammates and received a standing ovation from the crowd.

“I think it was a special night,” Kluber said. “I’ve never been part of (a no-hitter), witnessed one or thrown one, so I think more than anything just a lot of fun to be a part of.”

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said, “I had butterflies in that ninth inning. I’m getting a little emotional now. Getting to witness that was really, really special.

“Man, what a performance, what can you say. I’m just so happy for him. He’s such a pro and (we’re) talking about a guy that’s been an amazing pitcher in his career and he’s got another defining and special moment.”

The no-hitter was the first for the Yankees since David Cone’s perfect game against the Montreal Expos on July 18, 1999. Kluber authored the 12th no-hitter in franchise history, including Don Larsen’s perfect game in the 1956 World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The Yankees backed Kluber with two runs in the sixth. Kyle Higashioka walked to open the inning. Wade, who entered the game after right fielder Ryan LaMarre injured his right hamstring running to first base in the third, roped a triple to right-center field to drive in Higashioka.

Wade made it 2-0 when he scored on DJ LeMahieu’s sacrifice fly to shallow left field.

Kluber, 35, was making his ninth start as a Yankee after joining the team as a free agent on a one-year, $11-million deal in January.

The American League Cy Young Award winner for the Cleveland Indians in 2014 and 2017, Kluber was with the Rangers last year. He made just one appearance, lasting one inning, before a shoulder ailment sent him to the injured list for the remainder of the season.

Kluber joins the 2021 no-hitter list that includes the San Diego Padres’ Joe Musgrove (April 9 against the Rangers), the Chicago White Sox’s Carlos Rodon (April 14 against the Cleveland Indians), the Baltimore Orioles’ John Means (May 5 against the Mariners) the Cincinnati Reds’ Wade Miley (May 7 against the Indians) and Turnbull.

The Rangers joined the Indians and Mariners in having been no-hit twice this season. The Texas franchise was held hitless for the sixth time, including once when the team was the Washington Senators.

The Arizona Diamondbacks’ Madison Bumgarner threw a seven-inning no-hitter against the Atlanta Braves in the second game of an April 25 doubleheader, but Major League Baseball doesn’t count that game as an official no-hitter.

Texas rookie Hyeon-Jong Yang (0-1) allowed two runs and three hits in 5 1/3 innings. He walked four and struck out two while throwing a career-high 74 pitches in his second career start. — Reuters

Mbappe magic sets up PSG for French Cup victory

PARIS — Kylian Mbappe set up the first goal and grabbed one of his own as Paris St.-Germain retained the French Cup with a 2-0 victory over Monaco in Wednesday’s final at the Stade de France.

Quick thinking by Mbappe   disposes Axel Disasi in his own penalty area, as the Monaco defender let a short pass from goalkeeper Radoslaw Majecki slip under his feet, set up a 19th-minute opener for Mauro Icardi.

Mbappe took the ball away and, displaying quick feet, passed square for Icardi to tuck the ball home from close range.

With team mate Neymar suspended and watching from the empty stands, Mbappe was able to dominate the contest with his talent and pace and added the second goal in the 81st minute.

Angel Di Maria set him up with a short through-ball and the World Cup winner lifted his finish over Majecki to make sure of the outcome.

Mbappe’s goal came a minute after he had hit the crossbar with a clever chip from outside the penalty area having spotted Majecki off his line.

It was one of few chances in a largely dour final, played behind closed doors, that only came alive in the last 15 minutes.

PSG retained their title and extended to 14 their record number of wins in the cup. Monaco had won five previous times but last in 1991. They were last in the final in 2010 when PSG also beat them.

“We work every day to experience this type of emotion, reward and recognition. The work of a whole group, the staff, and the supporters who could not be here. We think about them a lot, this title is also for them,” Mbappe said.

“When you play for PSG, one of the biggest clubs in the world, the biggest club in the country, every title counts to go down in history. We want to be part of this story, it’s a great step today.”

PSG defender Alessandro Florenzi had a powerful shot tipped over by Majecki in the first half while Monaco created the better opportunities after the break.

PSG goalkeeper Keylor Navas made two good saves from Wissam Ben Yedder and Krepin Diatta and saw an errant cross rebound back into play off his crossbar.

But any hopes of a comeback were swiftly ended by the pace and vision of Mbappe as he settled the outcome.

Both clubs now turn their attention to the end of the Ligue 1 season on Sunday where they hold out hopes of winning the title. PSG are second, one point behind leaders Lille, while Monaco are three points adrift. — Reuters

West Ham close in on Europa League spot with win over West Brom

WEST BROMWICH, England — Late goals by Angelo Ogbonna and Michail Antonio secured a 3-1 Premier League victory for West Ham United at relegated West Bromwich Albion to move them closer to securing a Europa League spot on Wednesday.

West Ham’s Declan Rice struck the post with a penalty in the opening minute and the visitors fell behind after 27 minutes when Matheus Pereira’s corner went in off Tomas Soucek.

Big Czech Soucek made amends, however, by equalizing in first-half stoppage time.

Ogbonna bundled West Ham in front in the 82nd minute before Antonio wrapped up the points six minutes later.

West Ham moved into sixth spot on 62 points, three ahead of Tottenham Hotspur and Everton, with one game left.

One point against Southampton on Sunday would secure West Ham a place in next season’s Europa League and their highest top-flight finish since they ended fifth in 1999.

West Brom manager Sam Allardyce, who took charge in December after Slaven Bilic was sacked, confirmed after the game that he would step down at the end of the season.

“I am not long-term. They need long term. They need planning for next season to get back up and beyond,” Allardyce said.

West Ham’s bid for an unlikely top-four finish had fizzled out after a run of one win in five league games before their trip to a West Brom side managed by their old boss.

Tottenham’s earlier defeat at home by Aston Villa opened the door for David Moyes’ side and they are now tantalizingly close to a return to European competition for the first time since they were involved in the Europa League in 2016.

“We have been playing really well but tonight we did not play really well, but it shows we can win in other ways,” Moyes, in his second spell as West Ham boss, told reporters.

“I am delighted but it is not done. I will go away and sit back and enjoy it and look at the permutations, we have to win our game and then there is no danger.”

When Rice smashed his penalty against the post and Pereira gave West Brom the lead it looked as though West Ham might squander their chance to take advantage of Tottenham’s result.

Soucek scored from point-blank range in first-half stoppage time with his 10th goal of the season.

West Ham struggled to impose themselves after the break although Aaron Cresswell curled a sublime free kick against the outside of the post and Pablo Fornals wasted a chance.

Ogbonna was on hand to bundle in a corner in the 82nd minute to put West Ham in front and they sealed the points on the counter-attack as Jesse Lingard fed Antonio to score.

With their home fans roaring them on on Sunday, West Ham’s European destiny is in their own hands.

“Overall, we have earned it this year but we have a bit to do yet and hopefully, we can get over the line,” Moyes said. — Reuters

IOC reassures anxious Japan that Olympics will be safe

TOKYO — The International Olympic Committee (IOC) reassured an anxious Japan on Wednesday that the Tokyo Olympics would be safe for athletes as well as the host community, amid mounting opposition to the Games and fears it will fuel a spike in COVID-19 cases.

Speaking via videoconference that was broadcast alongside senior Japanese officials in Tokyo, IOC chief Thomas Bach said he believed more than 80% of residents of the Olympic Village would be vaccinated or booked for vaccination ahead of the Games set to start on July 23.

He rejected growing calls to cancel the global sporting showpiece, already delayed once due to the pandemic, saying that other sporting events had proved the Olympics could go ahead with strong COVID precautions.

Bach’s comments came as Japan kept up its battle on a fourth wave of infections, although a slow vaccination campaign has undermined already shaky public confidence that the Games should proceed.

“Together with our Japanese partners and friends, I can only re-emphasize this full commitment of the IOC to organize safe Olympic and Paralympic games for everybody,” Bach said.

“To accomplish this, we are now fully focused on the delivery of the Olympic Games.”

Less than 30% of medics in Japan’s major cities have been vaccinated against the coronavirus, with just 65 days left to the start of the Olympics, the Nikkei newspaper said.

Cabinet figures showed this week that three months into Japan’s vaccination push, less than 40% of its medical workers were fully inoculated.

The problem is especially pronounced in the capital, Tokyo, which plays host to the Games, and other large population centres, where the rate of fully vaccinated medical workers was less than 30%, the Nikkei added.

Much of the vaccine supply was concentrated in large hospitals, and there had been problems in the reservation systems for medical staff, it said.

The slow pace of vaccinations of doctors and nurses has been among the complaints cited by medical groups that oppose the Games.

Requests for about 200 doctors and 500 nurses to help out with the Games are unrealistic, said Kenyu Sumie, the chairman of a group representing more than 100,000 doctors and dentists in Japan.

“It’s impossible to think about dispatching them (to the Olympics) when they haven’t even received their own two shots,” Sumie told Reuters on Wednesday. “There is no way that the Olympics can be safely held at this point.”

Bach said the IOC would do its part to keep the Japanese public safe, by having additional medical personnel as part of the NOC delegations to support the medical operations and the strict implementation of the COVID 19 countermeasures.

STATES OF EMERGENCY
Much of Japan, including the key cities of Tokyo and Osaka, is under a state of emergency until month-end to rein in infections. The southern prefecture of Okinawa will request its own emergency declaration as new infections reached record highs, it said on Wednesday.

Japan aims to inoculate most of its 36 million people older than 65 by the end of July. To reach that target, it hopes to deliver about a million shots a day, or three times faster than the current pace.

So far, just 3.7% of the population of 126 million have received at least one vaccine shot, the lowest rate among wealthy countries. Initially, the holdup was scant supplies of the vaccine developed by Pfizer, Inc and BioNTech SE , the only one approved by regulators.

But arrivals of the Pfizer vaccine have increased dramatically in May, and Japan is expected to approve Moderna, Inc’s candidate this week for use in mass vaccination centers. The shot developed by AstraZeneca PLC is also being considered by domestic regulators.

As supply bottlenecks eased, problems with vaccine reservation systems and manpower shortages have cropped up. The government is looking into letting pharmacists give the injections, after a similar move regarding dentists last month. — Reuters

Lakers prevailed

The Lakers flirted with danger from the get-go. They certainly couldn’t have had a worse start, with LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Dennis Schröder — their three primary scorers — all misfiring. And considering their inability to play up to potential, they were fortunate to be down by just 13 at the break; had their defense been any less outstanding, the Warriors would have been able to pad the deficit.

For the Lakers, half time provided much-needed introspection and adjustment. If yesterday’s play-in match ultimately wound up in their favor, it was because of their versatility. They went the small ball route from the third quarter on, sacrificing the playing time of centers Andre Drummond and Montrezl Harrell in favor of putting Davis at the slot and thereby freeing the lane for incursions by playmakers James and Schröder.

At the same time, the Lakers benefited from their depth. With Schröder continuing to play below par, they possessed the luxury of turning to such notables as Alex Caruso and Wesley Matthews in order to offset the lack of production. That said, they needed extraordinary contributions from their proven one-two punch in Davis and James. The former came up with timely shots en route to 13 points in the fourth period, while the latter — apart from finishing with a triple-double — delivered a 34-foot three-point shot under duress for the game winner.

In the aftermath, the Lakers looked relieved; they knew they dodged a bullet, with scoring champion Stephen Curry starting slow and ending sloppy. Still, the Most Valuable Player candidate did all he could to keep the Warriors close until the final play; double, even triple coverage could not prevent him from putting up a whopping 37 points on six of nine shooting from beyond the arc and 12 of 23 overall.

Considering how much the Lakers had to lean on Davis and James, it’s fair to argue if the exertion will affect their competitiveness in the first round of the playoffs. With the red-hot Suns lying in wait, they need to be at their sharpest simply to keep pace. Else, they may find their confidence exposed as irrational, and their campaign to defend their title meeting an abrupt end.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Vaccine hesitancy makes citizens ‘sitting ducks,’ doctors’ group says

REUTERS
PEOPLE are silhouetted against the Sydney Opera House at sunset in Australia, Nov. 2, 2016. — REUTERS

SYDNEY — Australia’s peak medical body on Thursday warned the country’s residents were “sitting ducks” for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), as business leaders call for the international border to be reopened faster despite a sluggish national vaccination drive.

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) said it was worried many Australians were delaying getting vaccinated because of the country’s success in stamping out the virus, and urged authorities to roll out a more effective advertising campaign.

“Seeing what is happening overseas where there is a tsunami of COVID and also the development of variants, we’re sitting ducks … until we get a significant portion of the population vaccinated, particularly those over 50,” AMA Vice President Chris Moy told ABC Radio.

Australia closed its international borders in March 2020 to mostly non-citizens and permanent residents, helping keep COVID-19 cases relatively low. It has recorded just under 30,000 cases and 910 deaths.

However, it has reported a spate of small infection outbreaks in recent months linked to health security breaches at hotels where returning travelers are required to serve a two-week quarantine period.

The AMA said vaccine hesitancy increases the risks of those breaches.

Australia’s federal government budget assumes vaccination of the country’s 20 million adult population will be completed by the end of year. The rollout has speeded up in recent weeks — around a third of the 3.3 million doses administered so far were given in the last three weeks — but remains behind many other developed nations.

Industries hit by the pandemic have been pressing the federal government to fast-track border reopening plans from the current schedule of the middle of next year.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has so far rejected those requests, citing the emergence of new variants overseas.

Qantas on Thursday said Australia should open its borders once the vaccine rollout is complete, with the airlines aligning the resumption of its international flights based on the country’s immunization drive.

A report in the Guardian newspaper said the global airline industry body IATA is in talks with the Australian government about a new digital certificate that could unlock quarantine-free overseas travel for vaccinated Australians. 

Morrison’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Guardian report. — Reuters

China says US warship illegally enters its territory in S. China Sea

PIXABAY

BEIJING — China said on Thursday a US warship had illegally entered its territorial waters in the South China Sea, the latest salvo in the two nations’ dispute over Beijing’s territorial claims in the busy waterway.

In a statement, the Chinese military’s Southern Theater Command said the USS Curtis Wilbur entered the waters near the Paracel Islands without permission, adding that its ships and planes followed the US vessel.

It added that China opposed the US action, which it said violated its sovereignty and undermined regional peace and stability.

South China Sea has emerged as one of many flashpoints in the testy Sino-US relations, with Washington rejecting what it has called unlawful territorial claims asserted by Beijing in the resources-rich waters. US warships have passed through the South China Sea with increasing frequency in recent years, a show of force against the Chinese claims.

The US Navy said later on Thursday the USS Curtis Wilbur “asserted navigational rights and freedoms” near the Paracel Islands, over which China, Taiwan and Vietnam all claim sovereignty.

“The unilateral imposition of any authorization or advance-notification requirement for innocent passage is not permitted by international law,” the US Navy’s 7th Fleet said in a statement. — Reuters

US weighs changes to COVID-19 travel restrictions

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Stefan Fluck from Unsplash

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration has been weighing changes to sweeping travel restrictions that bar much of the world’s population from coming to the United States, but has reached no decisions, government and industry officials told Reuters.

European Union (EU) countries agreed on Wednesday to ease COVID-19 travel restrictions on non-EU visitors ahead of the summer tourist season, a move that could open the bloc’s door to all Britons and to vaccinated Americans.

Ambassadors from the 27 EU countries approved a European Commission proposal from May 3 to loosen the criteria to determine “safe” countries and to let in fully vaccinated tourists from elsewhere, EU sources said.

Biden administration agencies have been holding meetings for more than a month and reaching out to industry officials about when and how they could begin to unwind the travel restrictions first imposed in early 2020 in response to COVID-19 that bar much of the world’s population from entering the United States.

Asked whether the United States would allow vaccinated Europeans to enter, a White House spokesman said there were no changes in travel restrictions planned at the moment.

The US Travel Association said it hoped the “European Union’s risk-based, science-driven plan to reopen international travel will hopefully spur the US to heed the many calls for a plan and timetable to safely reopen our borders.”

US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told a news conference on Wednesday that any decision to lift restrictions “ultimately is a public health decision and there is an interagency process and obviously the CDC (US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)” is taking a leading role.

Mr. Buttigieg added: “There are two ways of looking at this — one is to look at countries, the other is to look at travelers,” in terms of trying to maximize safety and allow for more travel.

A coalition of US and European travel, airline, union, business and airport groups has called for a full reopening of the US-UK air travel market “as soon as safely possible” — and hopes both government will lift restrictions by early June.

Nearly all of Europe still bans most US travelers from visiting, while Britain allows American visitors but requires a 10-day quarantine on arrival and two COVID-19 tests.

Since early 2020, the United States has barred nearly all non-US citizens who have recently been in the UK and much of Europe, as well as China, Iran and Brazil. This year, Washington added South Africa and India to the list. — Reuters

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