Selasa, 04 Februari 2020

WHO says Wuhan coronavirus outbreak is not yet a pandemic - CNN

The agency acknowledges that it is challenging to contain the virus because of global mass movement.
Second Wuhan coronavirus death outside of mainland China confirmed
"We are not in a pandemic," Dr. Sylvie Briand, director of the World Health Organization's Infectious Hazards Management Department said in a press conference on Tuesday, explaining that the virus is currently considered to be an epidemic with multiple locations.
"We will try to extinguish the transmission in each of these," she said, adding that the agency believes this "can be done with containment measures currently in place."
Current control measures in place include early case detection, early isolation and treatment of cases, contact tracing and social detention measures in places where there is risk of transmission, Briand said. These are the core elements of any outbreak response and might be enough to stop an infection from spreading.
A pandemic is define as the worldwide spread of a new disease, but it's not quite as simple as that. The finer details are debated as many factors, including population immunity and disease severity, need to be taken into account.
An epidemic is more than a normal number cases of an illness, specific health-related behavior or other health-related events in a community or region. A disease outbreak is the occurrence of disease cases in excess of what's normally expected, according to WHO.
The last pandemic reported was the H1N1 flu pandemic in 2009, which killed hundreds of thousand worldwide.
WHO last week declared the novel coronavirus outbreak to be a public health emergency of international concern, which it calls "an extraordinary event" that constitutes a "public health risk to other States through the international spread of disease" and "to potentially require a coordinated international response."
Previous emergencies have included Ebola, Zika and H1N1.
The new virus has infected more than 20,000 people across 26 countries and territories and killed more than 420, but the majority of cases -- currently an estimated 78% -- are coming from Hubei province in China, Briand explained.
"This is the epicentre of the outbreak," she said during Tuesday's press conference.
This is where Wuhan coronavirus cases have been confirmed worldwide
Briand described cases outside of Hubei as "spillover cases" -- people who were mostly infected in Hubei before there was a lockdown there and moved to other places with the disease, causing clusters of cases in other regions. The same can be said of the cases reported in other countries.
Briand believes that in Hubei and places that have spillover, "we can stop transmission," which will prevent the situation from becoming a pandemic.
Many experts believe we've not yet reached pandemic levels, due to the current spread of the outbreak but also because we don't yet know enough about the coronavirus.
"The virus has traveled across multiple continents, but these instances of long-range travel seem to have only resulted in very focal outbreaks," Paul Digard, chair of virology of The Roslin Institute at University of Edinburgh, said in an email. "Unless/until it has been shown to have set up widespread onward transmission chains in other countries, I think it's reasonable to remain calling it an outbreak."
A pandemic "typically refers to sustained transmission of a new infectious disease across numerous countries," added Dr. Michael Head, senior research fellow in global health at University of Southampton. "Here, we have the coronavirus that has been imported into numerous countries, and we have seen some very limited amount of human transmission outside of China, but not really enough yet for the World Health Organisation to declare a pandemic."
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease in the United States, believes we could be heading toward a pandemic.
"My bottom line is the way this is continuing to evolve every day, it looks like it's heading towards what we would call a pandemic," Fauci said.
But Fauci also said the term itself comes down to semantics -- it "means different things to different people," and that we're in a "gray zone."

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2020-02-04 16:36:00Z
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Netanyahu sees Kushner as blocking settlement annexation: Israeli media - The - The Washington Post

Matty Stern U.S. Embassy Jerusalem/Reuters Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with White House senior adviser Jared Kushner in Jerusalem in May 2019.

JERUSALEM — Supporters of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have grown increasingly frustrated at White House pushback over plans to immediately annex Jewish settlements in the West Bank as envisioned in President Trump’s peace plan, with their ire focused in particular on presidential adviser Jared Kushner.

Israeli media has extensively reported grumblings among key Netanyahu backers, with David Elhayani, the chairman of the powerful Yesha Council, which oversees more than 150 settlements, accusing Kushner of betraying Netanyahu and not being honest with him.

“Kushner took a knife and put it in Netanyahu’s back,” he told The Washington Post. “Kushner misled the prime minister. He misled everybody. He knew for a long time that Netanyahu wanted to declare sovereignty over the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea — he said it many times over the last year. Gentlemen just don’t act this way.”

Elhayani, who traveled to Washington last week for the plan’s White House unveiling, said that by putting the brakes on annexing the settlements, Kushner could cost Netanyahu the March 2 elections.

Israel is about to engage in an unprecedented third election in less than a year, with Netanyahu fighting bitterly for his political future, even as he faces three criminal indictments and possibly a public trial.

[In the West Bank, Trump’s plan has validated settlers’ dreams — and crushed the hopes of Palestinians]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/unpacking-trumps-deal-of-the-century-for-the-middle-east/2020/01/29/9cbc323a-865d-4144-9f15-f088fc4ba75e_video.html

Hours after standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Trump at the White House on Jan. 28 as the plan was formally released, Netanyahu told reporters that he planned to bring a vote on annexation before his cabinet within days. At the same time, U.S. Ambassador David Friedman told reporters that the day and the timing was up to Israel.

“If Israelis apply Israeli law to the settlements and territory allocated to Israel under the plan . . . then we will recognize Israeli sovereignty,” he said.

Elhayani said that when he met with Netanyahu in Washington, the prime minister was very excited: “He said it was a historic time.”

Elhayani and other settler leaders also met with a senior U.S. official in Washington who told them that if the Palestinians did not accept the plan within 48 hours, Israel would be allowed to declare sovereignty over 30 percent of the West Bank.

“But something happened after that; they changed their minds,” said Elhayani.

Kushner, in interviews and reportedly in conversations with Israeli officials, put the brakes on, saying that the move should wait for a new government to be formed after next month’s vote.

For his part, the ambassador a day later walked back his earlier comments, saying the measure would require coordination with a joint American-Israeli committee. Analysts accused Netanyahu of jumping the gun in response to pressure from settlement groups, and his own defense minister, to enact the annexation measure immediately.

A senior Israeli official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter in more depth, said that Netanyahu had briefed reporters in Washington that he would raise the annexation matter at the next Israeli cabinet meeting, but that so far no cabinet meeting has been held since his return on Friday.

The official said there have been discussions with the U.S. administration since 2017 on the issue of annexation, and the prime minister wanted to move forward with the administration’s support.

Contacted for a response, a spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem said, “We don’t comment on internal discussions.”

The Palestinian leadership has rejected the plan out of hand as fatally biased in Israel’s favor. And signs that some of Israel’s Arab neighbors would support it, or at least remain neutral, were weakened when foreign ministers within the Arab League voted unanimously Saturday to reject it.

Now, with the schedule for Israel’s annexation plans growing more unclear, the future of the long-awaited peace plan, which was painted as a moment of triumph and a political boost for Netanyahu, appears in doubt.

Right-wing leaders, who head a key block of support for the prime minister, have demanded that Netanyahu act now on their long-standing goal of annexing all the settlements dotted across a third of the West Bank and other parts of the territory as defined by the plan.

Elhayani said it was important to move forward with this part of the plan before the election because otherwise the process will be slowed down by an already dysfunctional political system, or worse.

If the results are not in Netanyahu’s favor after next month’s vote, the process would be managed by Netanyahu’s political rival Benny Gantz, head of the centrist Blue and White party.

Gantz, who also traveled to Washington to be briefed by Trump on the peace plan, said last week that he planned to bring the entire proposal to the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, for approval.

If that happens, said Elhayani, the plan would most probably be nixed by lawmakers, because while it greenlights annexation, it also allows for the potential of a Palestinian state on 70 percent of the territory.

Calling for “sovereignty now,” settler leaders on Tuesday ramped up pressure on Netanyahu to move forward with annexing the Jordan Valley and the West Bank settlements, erecting several protest tents outside the prime minister’s official residence in Jerusalem.

Read more

Israel rushes to capitalize on peace plan as Palestinians express anger

Trump’s Middle East peace plan expected to offer Palestinians conditional statehood

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-02-04 16:06:00Z
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Coronavirus whistleblower doctor is online hero in China - CNN

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2020-02-04 15:26:54Z
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Iran Upholds Death Sentence For Man Accused Of Giving Nuclear Secrets To CIA - NPR

Iranian judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili says that an Iranian man named Amir Rahimpour will be executed for spying on behalf of the CIA and that the sentence and would be carried out soon. Hamed Ataei/Mizan News Agency via AP hide caption

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Hamed Ataei/Mizan News Agency via AP

Iran's Supreme Court has affirmed a death sentence for a man accused of giving secrets about the country's nuclear program to the CIA, a government spokesman announced Tuesday.

"Amir Rahimpour who spied for the CIA and received huge amounts of money and attempted to provide the U.S. intelligence service with a part of Iran's nuclear information was tried and had been sentenced to death," judiciary spokesman Gholam Hossein Esmayeeli said at a news conference in Tehran, according to Iran's semiofficial FARS News Agency.

Esmayeeli said the sentence will be carried out "soon," but did not provide an exact date or any other details.

"It's the first Iranian death sentence for spying on behalf of America in nearly a decade," NPR's Peter Kenyon reports from Istanbul.

The public announcement is the latest salvo in Iran's dispute with the United States, which ratcheted up after President Trump abandoned an international nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions on Iran in 2018. Last month, a U.S. drone strike killed a top Iranian commander and Iran retaliated with missile strikes against Iraqi bases housing American personnel.

Iran has made numerous claims of counterintelligence coups against the U.S. in recent years.

Last April, Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi announced his agency had disrupted CIA operations by identifying 290 spies operating in Iran and other countries. He said Iran had shared that information with other nations. And last June, Iran said it "dismantled" a CIA espionage network – a claim that a U.S. official denied.

Last July, Iran's Intelligence Ministry said it had detained 17 Iranians, accusing them of spying for the U.S. In response, Trump said the announcement was "totally false."

As he announced the death sentence for Rahimpour, the Iranian judiciary spokesman added that two other Iranians have also been punished for espionage, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency.

"They did their spying activities in form of charity organizations; they were sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment for espionage and another five years for acting against security," IRNA reports.

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2020-02-04 14:46:00Z
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Coronavirus outbreak not yet pandemic, World Health Organization says - BBC News

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The deadly coronavirus outbreak that has spread from China does not yet constitute a "pandemic", the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.

A pandemic is the worldwide spread of a new disease, according to the WHO.

At least 427 people have died with more than 20,000 confirmed cases around the world, most of them in China.

More than two dozen nations have reported cases but, so far, no confirmations have been made across Africa or Latin America.

On Tuesday, three more Asian countries - Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand - confirmed infections among citizens who had not travelled to China.

Officials say 425 people have died in China and one in Hong Kong. One death has also been confirmed in the Philippines.

The new coronavirus causes severe acute respiratory infection and symptoms usually start with a fever, followed by a dry cough.

Among the main developments on Tuesday:

  • Taiwan said that from Friday it would deny entry to all foreign nationals who have been to mainland China in the past 14 days
  • Macau - a special administrative region of China and one of Asia's biggest gambling hubs - announced that it would temporarily close down all its casinos
  • The UK government told all Britons in China to leave the country if they can. Many other nations are continuing to evacuate their citizens from affected areas of China
  • Health officials are screening about 3,700 people on board a cruise ship off Japan after a passenger tested positive for the virus

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On Monday, China's top leadership admitted "shortcomings and deficiencies" in the country's response to the outbreak, which is believed to have originated in Wuhan, Hubei province.

The rare admission came from the Politburo Standing Committee, which called for an improvement in China's emergency management system and ordered a "severe" crackdown on illegal wildlife markets, where the virus is thought to have emerged.

What did the WHO say?

Sylvie Briand, head of WHO's Global Infectious Hazard Preparedness division, acknowledged that there was rapid spread of transmission in Hubei but said the situation "currently" was not a pandemic.

She praised how Chinese authorities had responded to the outbreak, voicing hopes that the world could "get rid of this virus". She also stressed the importance of tackling unfounded rumours.

"When you deal with an epidemic, you rapidly see that in addition to the epidemic of diseases, we often have an epidemic of information. And this is what we call 'infodemic'," she said.

"And so we have realised over time that this infodemic could be really an obstacle for good response and hamper effective implementation of counter-measures."

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2020-02-04 13:41:15Z
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Iran to execute Amir Rahimpour, convicted of spying for the CIA - New York Post

Iran’s top court has confirmed a death sentence for a man convicted of spying for the CIA and trying to pass on information about the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program.

Judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili said Amir Rahimpour would be executed soon.

“Amir Rahimpour, who was a CIA spy and got big pay and tried to present part of Iran’s nuclear information to the American service, had been tried and sentenced to death,” Esmaili said.

In a separate case, two people working for a charity were sentenced to prison terms of 10 years for spying and five years for acting against national security on similar charges, Esmaili said, according to the semi-official Fars news agency.

Speaking at a press conference, Esmaili said the names of the two individuals working for a charity would not be released yet because their sentences had not been finalized.

He also did not provide information about their nationalities. Iran does not recognize dual nationality and the judiciary prosecutes dual citizens as Iranians.

Last summer, Tehran announced it had broken up a CIA spy ring of 17 people and that some had been sentenced to death.

The CIA did not immediately comment on Esmaili’s remarks.

After Iran’s announcement last summer. President Trump tweeted: “The Report of Iran capturing CIA spies is totally false. Zero truth.”

In the past, Iran has sentenced alleged US and Israeli spies to death.

Shahram Amiri
Shahram AmiriGetty Images

The last such spy executed was Shahram Amiri, who defected to the US at the height of Western efforts to thwart Tehran’s nuclear program.

When he returned in 2010, he was welcomed by government leaders and even went on the local talk-show circuit before mysteriously disappearing.

He was hanged in August 2016, the same week that Iran executed a group of militants and a year after the country agreed to a landmark accord to limit uranium enrichment in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

Tensions remain high between Iran and the US since Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from Tehran’s nuclear deal.

In January, a US drone strike killed Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad, prompting Tehran to retaliate with a ballistic missile strike on Iraqi bases housing American troops.

With Post wires

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2020-02-04 13:23:00Z
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Iran to execute man who allegedly spied for CIA - NBCNews.com

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran said Tuesday that its top court confirmed a death sentence for an Iranian man convicted of spying for the CIA, with state media alleging that he had shared details of the Islamic Republic's nuclear program with the American spy agency.

Judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili identified the purported spy as Amir Rahimpour and said he would be executed soon. Esmaili did not elaborate on what Rahimpour was accused of doing, nor on his age or background. Officials also offered no evidence linking him to the CIA.

State media did not immediately name Rahimpour’s lawyer.

A report by the state-run IRNA news agency alleged that Rahimpour received money from the CIA to share details of Iran's nuclear program.

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July 22, 201902:01

“While being in touch with the spy agency, he earned a lot of money as wages as he tried to deliver some information from Iran’s nuclear program to the American agency,” the IRNA report said. Rahimpour “had been identified and prosecuted and sentenced to death and recently, the country’s National Supreme Court confirmed the sentence and, God willing, he will be punishéd soon.”

The CIA had no comment on the news.

Esmaili said two other alleged spies for the CIA each received 15-year prison sentences — 10 years for spying and five years for acting against national security charges.

Esmaili did not name those arrested, only saying they worked in the “charitable field,” without elaborating.

Iran in the past has sentenced alleged American and Israeli spies to death. The last such spy executed was Shahram Amiri, who defected to the U.S. at the height of Western efforts to thwart Iran’s nuclear program. When he returned in 2010, he was welcomed with flowers by government leaders and even went on the Iranian talk-show circuit. Then he mysteriously disappeared.

He was hanged in August 2016, the same week that Tehran executed a group of militants and a year after Iran agreed to a landmark accord to limit uranium enrichment in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

Tensions remain high between Iran and the U.S. since President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from Tehran's nuclear deal. A U.S. drone strike in January killed Iranian Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad, a targeted killing that prompted Tehran to launch a retaliatory ballistic missile strike on Iraqi bases housing American troops.

Before the deal, a computer virus believed to be designed by the U.S. and Israel destroyed Iranian centrifuges. Meanwhile, Iranian nuclear scientists were targeted in a series of assassinations.

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2020-02-04 12:46:00Z
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