Laos logs new heights of 1,645 Covid-19 cases

Laos has confirmed 1,645 new Covid-19 cases, including one imported, and seven fatalities over the previous 24 hours, bringing the total to 86,148 including 231 deaths, the National Taskforce Committee for Covid-19 Prevention and Control reported Dec 10.

Of the new infections, 924 were reported in Vientiane, 141 in Luang Namtha, 108 in Oudomxay, 84 in Bokeo, 70 in Xieng Khuang, 64 in Luang Prabang, and 48 in Vientiane (province).

The newly reported deaths included two documented in Vientiane, three in Bokeo and two in Luang Prabang.

Director General of the Department of Communicable Disease Control, Ministry of Health, Dr Rattanaxay Phetsouvanh told a press conference today that the newly recorded infections were detected among 6,734 people tested for Covid-19 yesterday.

Some 751 patients were discharged from hospital yesterday.

Globally, over 268 million have been infected with Covid-19 since the first case was detected in China’s Wuhan in late 2019. The number includes 5.28 million deaths. Meanwhile, 8.32 billion people have been vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Source: Lao News Agency

Investing in the Reproductive Health Essential to Recovery of Garment and Tourism Sectors

A workshop to discuss the partnership with the private sector, to promote the accessibility of sexual and reproductive health information and services amongst factory workers was conducted today and co-chaired by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Lao Women’s Union (LWU) Vientiane on Dec 9, with representatives of the Ministry of Health, Lao Youth Union, Lao Trade Union, Lao Front for National Development, and Vientiane Youth Centre (VYC).

The workshop aims to increase investment in the Adolescent and Youth Friendly Service programmes (AYFS) combined with COVID-19 prevention and response, in partnership with the private sector to ensure factory workers are safe, healthy and able to work in the sectors.

Ms Dalavanh Keonakhone, Vice President of Lao Women’s Union, Vientiane said that the LWU Vientiane has been working to ensure that women and girls aged between 15 – 24 years receive essential information and youth-friendly services on SRH through mobile outreach and social media, counseling services via hotline 1361, and 137, continue services at the Vientiane Youth Clinic.

Despite efforts, Ms Dalavanh recognized that challenges remain to make information and services universally accessible by all women, girls and youth. “Many women and girls still do not have access to information and services that can protect them. During the COVID-19 pandemic, female factory workers are among the high-risk group. We must find ways to reach and meet the needs of women and girls with SRH information and services,” she added.

Mariam A. Khan, UNFPA Representative for Lao PDR, acknowledged the resilience of the LWU and VYC to incorporate digital modalities for continuity of SRH services to young people during the COVID-19 pandemic. “COVID-19 impact includes increase of unplanned pregnancies and increase in abortions and stillbirths especially among younger women, at the same time MOH data shows the largest clusters of COVID-19 transmission are amongst the young factory workers.” In addressing these issues, Ms. Khan calls for strengthening partnership with private sector “investing in the wellbeing of female workforce by ensuring the availability of quality health information and services, innovative tools as hotline and telehealth, protects the young women, healthy staff in turn protect the factories ability to continue operations and thus facilitates the economic recovery of Lao PDR.”

She added the need, under the leadership of LWU and in partnership with the private sector to increase accessibility of youth friendly information and services including on COVID19 prevention. Youth below the age of 24 are almost half of Laos’s total population, investment and protection of young people can yield a demographic dividend i.e. accelerated economic growth. As COVID-19 has negatively impacted the health and well-being of young people with young women most impacted, as seen through the increased unplanned pregnancies and higher STIs and HIV infections. Young women are the majority workforce in the two critical sectors of Garment and the Tourism sectors. Investing in these young women is an investment in the recovery of the Tourism and Garment sectors.

UNFPA Laos, supports the government to implement national AYFS programs to strengthen the system and quality of youth-friendly service provision for adolescents and young people. The programs have innovated to provide SRH information and services via telehealth, hotlines, and the Noi Yakhoo mobile application to ensure the continuity of services during the pandemic.

Source: Lao News Agency

Government Prioritizes Ensuring Access to Legal Aid for Citizens by 2025

A workshop held on Thursday, Dec 9 explored how the Ministry of Justice and partners will work together to achieve national goals related to legal aid for the period 2021-25.

The workshop highlighted that the next five years will prove critical to the development of legal aid in the Lao PDR, and the targets related to legal aid formulated in the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the 9th National Social Economic Development Plan and MOJ Strategic Development Plan for the Justice Sector provide the overall framework for this work during this period. The question of ‘how’ these targets will be met must now be agreed among key stakeholders.

The workshop was held to outline the current state of play and key national goals and targets related to legal aid services, and explore global trends and approaches in legal aid provision to answer this ‘how’ question.

Vice Minister of Justice Ketsana Phommachan acted as Chair of the workshop, with First Secretary of Delegation of European Union Baiba Zarina, and Deputy Resident Representative of UNDP Catherine Phuong as Co-Chairs. All stakeholders shared their understanding of the current national situation for legal aid provision as well as international trends, and agreed the necessity to promote legal aid services to help the Government continue to advance a Rule of Law in the Lao PDR.

Vice Minister of Justice, Mr. Ketsana Phommachan underlined the importance of Legal Aid in stating that “the 5 years Strategic Development Plan of the Justice Sector (2021-2025), adopted in August 2021 highlighted the direction on legal aid, and focuses on the strengthening of capacity of legal aid offices and officials at provincial and district levels as well as increasing the legal aid service provision to society widely and in various channels.”

Ms. Catherine Phuong of UNDP called for “greater coordination between partners, to help to clarify each other’s roles and responsibilities.” She added that “to strengthen coordination and build on the experiences of other countries, we must explore the possibility of developing a dedicated sub-plan on legal aid, which will be crucial in making sure everyone is on the same page over the next 5 years.”

Ms. Baiba Zarina, of the European Union, emphasized that the “EU attaches great importance to good governance and rule of law, as a way to ensure sustainable development in the Lao PDR. Access to Justice, and with it access to Legal Aid, is a fundamental right and an essential part in advancing the rule of law.” She added that “we cannot promote Rule of Law without promoting Access to Justice at the same time.”

The Ministry of Justice, the EU and UNDP, together with other key partners, agreed to continue to make efforts for the improvement of legal aid provision through strengthened coordination, and that working closely together would be crucial to achieving the ambitious legal aid targets set by the government.

This workshop was organized by the Legal and Institutional Oversight Sub Sector Working Group, under the Governance Sector Working Group of the Lao PDR.

Source: Lao News Agency

As Democracy Summit Wraps, US Restricts Exports of Cyber Tools Used for Repression

As the two-day virtual Summit for Democracy hosted by President Joe Biden wrapped up on Friday, the U.S., Australia, Denmark and Norway announced an export control program to monitor and restrict the spread of technologies used to violate human rights.

“We focused on the need to empower human rights defenders” and ensure that technology “is used to advance democracies to lift people up, not to hold them down,” Biden said during his closing remarks.

The Export Controls and Human Rights Initiative seeks to address the problem of authoritarian governments misusing dual-use technologies to surveil and hack into the communications of political opponents, journalists, activists and minority communities.

The signees will work to develop a voluntary, written code of conduct intended to use human rights criteria to guide export licensing policy and practices, according to the White House.

The goal is to achieve a stronger agreement involving more governments to better control licenses for these technologies that can be used to violate human rights, said a senior administration official in a briefing to reporters.

“To make sure that these technologies are used for good and not for ill,” the official said.

These restrictions are needed, said Brett Bruen, director of global engagement during the Obama administration and president of the consulting firm Global Situation Room.

“If indeed democratic ideals or, at the very least, less violation of human rights norms is what we are going to require and expect from countries around the world, then there have to be some consequences,” he said.

The U.S. has taken action recently to put NSO, an Israeli company and maker of the Pegasus spyware, on a list of restricted companies. Pegasus was used to infect the smartphones of journalists and officials, essentially turning them into spying devices, allowing the user to read the targets’ messages and files, track their location, even turn on their cameras without their knowledge.

Initiative for Democratic Renewal

During the summit, leaders were encouraged to make pledges and commitments to bolster democracy and human rights.

For its part, the U.S. announced the establishment of the Presidential Initiative for Democratic Renewal, a series of foreign assistance initiatives of up to $424.4 million in the coming year, subject to congressional approval.

The initiative includes funds to support independent media, strengthen anti-corruption efforts, empower reformers, labor unions and marginalized groups, and advance technology that supports democracy and defends free and fair elections.

Transparency International, a global civil society organization working in the fight against corruption, said the summit’s initial outcomes are promising, but more needs to be done.

“Other countries did not step up and commit to specific commitments the way the U.S. has, and so that is a concern,” Gary Kalman, director of Transparency International’s U.S. office, told VOA. “What are they actually going to come up with? They have a little bit more time; the U.S. government is giving them until January to come back with commitments.”

But Bruen said $424.4 million would barely meet the needs of bolstering democracy globally and characterized it as “regifting.”

“These are initiatives and monies that have been allocated already, generally, for democracy, for the rule of law and human rights,” Bruen said. “They [the Biden administration] get to repurpose them for a new announcement but what we’re not seeing here are really substantial sums that are being put on the table.”

Democracy is also under attack by the global rise of populism, white supremacy and extremism, said U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

“Polarization is undermining democratic institutions. Science and reason are under siege,” Guterres said. “All of this is eroding trust between people and democratic leaders and institutions.”

An in-person summit is planned, a year from now.

Source: Voice of America

‘The Internet’s on Fire’ as Techs Race to Fix Software Flaw

A software vulnerability exploited in the online game Minecraft is rapidly emerging as a major threat to internet-connected devices around the world.

“The internet’s on fire right now,” said Adam Meyers, senior vice president of intelligence at the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike. “People are scrambling to patch and there are … all kinds of people scrambling to exploit it.”

In the 12 hours since the bug’s existence was disclosed, he said Friday morning, it had been “fully weaponized,” meaning that malefactors have developed and distributed tools to exploit.

The flaw may be the worst computer vulnerability discovered in years. It opens a loophole in software code that is ubiquitous in cloud servers and enterprise software used across industry and government. It could allow criminals or spies to loot valuable data, plant malware or erase crucial information, and much more.

“I’d be hard-pressed to think of a company that’s not at risk,” said Joe Sullivan, chief security officer for Cloudflare, whose online infrastructure protects websites from malicious actors. Untold millions of servers have it installed, and experts said the fallout would not be known for several days.

Amit Yoran, CEO of the cybersecurity firm Tenable, called it “the single biggest, most critical vulnerability of the last decade” — and possibly the biggest in the history of modern computing.

The vulnerability, dubbed “Log4Shell,” was rated 10 on a scale of one to 10 by the Apache Software Foundation, which oversees development of the software. Anyone with the exploit can obtain full access to an unpatched computer that uses the software.

New Zealand’s computer emergency response team was among the first to report that the flaw was being “actively exploited in the wild” just hours after it was publicly reported Thursday and a patch released.

The vulnerability, in open-source Apache software used to run websites and other web services, was discovered Nov. 24 by the Chinese tech giant Alibaba, the foundation said.

Finding and patching the software could be a complicated task. While most organizations and cloud providers should be able to update their web servers easily, the same Apache software is also often embedded in third-party programs, which often can only be updated by their owners.

Yoran, of Tenable, said organizations need to presume they’ve been compromised and act quickly.

The flaw’s exploitation was apparently first discovered in Minecraft, an online game hugely popular with kids and owned by Microsoft.

Meyers and security expert Marcus Hutchins said Minecraft users had been using it to execute programs on the computers of other users by pasting a short message in a chat box.

Microsoft said it had issued a software update for Minecraft users. “Customers who apply the fix are protected,” it said.

Researchers reported finding evidence the vulnerability could be exploited in servers run by companies such as Apple, Amazon, Twitter and Cloudflare.

Cloudflare’s Sullivan said there we no indication his company’s servers had been compromised. Apple, Amazon and Twitter did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Source: Voice of America