Laos posts a trade surplus of around US$100 m in 1st Q

Laos logged a trade surplus of around US$100 million in the first quarter of 2022, according to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce.

Laos’ total value of imports and exports in the first quarter of the year reached US$1.1 billion including US$600 million for exports and US$500 million for imports.

Main exports included mixed gold, gold bars, paper and paper products, bronze ores, wood pulps and waste paper, rubber, cassava, bananas, clothing, fertilizers and sugar.

Meanwhile imports were dominated by automobiles, diesel, mechanical equipment, auto parts, steel and steel products, plastics, plastic utensils, petroleum products, premium gasoline, wood pulps and food industry wastes, and chemical products.

Source: Lao News Agency

Laos’ export value tops US$7 billion

Laos recorded an export value of more than US$7.6 billion with goods shipped to more than 90 countries worldwide last year, according to the Lao Trade Portal, Ministry of Industry and Commerce.

Laos’ major export markets included Thailand with US$2.8 billion, China US$2.2 billion, Vietnam US$1.2 billion, Australia US$350 million, Cambodia US$160 million and Switzerland US$116 million.

Main exports included electricity valued at US$2.2 billion, gold and silver US$ 962 million, paper and paper products US$529 million, gold ores US$ 329 million, wood pulps US$329 million, and waste paper US$297 million.

Source: Lao News Agency

Vietnamese NA’s Chairman hosts Lao Vice President

The National Assembly of Vietnam Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue on Apr 26 hosted a reception for Vice President of Laos Pany Yathortou, who is on an official visit to Vietnam.

Hue congratulated the Lao Party, State and people on their great achievements across fields, and highlighted significant contributions of the Lao NA through all periods in general and during the tenure when Pany Yathortou worked as the Chairwoman of the NA in particular.

The Vietnamese top legislator pledged to make every effort to enhance the relationship between Vietnam and Laos.

Noting her delight to see Vietnam’s developments amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Pany Yathortou said as a close friend of Vietnam, she is proud of the country’s socio-economic achievements under the leadership of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV).

She suggested the two NAs and People’s Councils of cities and provinces, especially border localities, continue their cooperation and exchange of experience in law-making and supervision.

The legislatures should continue to monitor the implementation of cooperation projects rolled out by the Governments to ensure their progress, she said, suggesting Vietnamese and Lao NA deputies, including female legislators, tighten collaboration and continue with experience exchange, particularly in protecting rights and interests of women.

Pany Yathortou lauded Hue’s initiative to establish a cooperation mechanism between legislative bodies of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia to share opinions and experience in a more timely and effective manner.

Hue stressed that the Vietnamese legislature is ready to consider and remove institutional obstacles in order to facilitate cooperation between businesses of the two countries, contributing to raising the two-way trade and advancing the economic, trade and investment ties.

The Vietnamese NA also supports the enhancement of training of Lao students as well as the exchange of professional skills between officials of the two countries, Hue continued.

Both agreed that Vietnam and Laos will coordinate to organise activities in the Vietnam-Laos Solidarity and Friendship Year 2022 to mark the 60th anniversary of the bilateral diplomatic ties and 45 years of the signing of the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation.

On the occasion of Laos’ traditional New Year (Boun Pi May), Hue asked Pany Yathortou to convey his greetings to NA Chairman Xaysomphone Phomvihane and other leaders of Laos.

Source: Lao News Agency

Vietnam’s President receives Lao Vice President Pany Yathortou

Vietnam and Laos need to maintain the regular exchange of delegations and high-ranking officials and strive to turn economic, trade and investment cooperation into a pillar of bilateral relations, Vietnamese President Nguyen Xuan Phuc said on Apr 26.

President Phuc made the statement while hosting a reception in Hanoi for Vice President of Laos Pany Yathortou, who is paying an official visit to Vietnam.

The Vietnamese President spoke highly of the contributions made by the Lao Vice President to the development of Laos-Vietnam special relations and congratulated Laos on the country’s important achievements in recent years.

He expressed his belief that under the leadership of the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party (LPRP), its people will effectively carry out the resolution issued at the 11th National Congress of the LPRP as well as the socio-economic development plan for 2021–2025, bring the COVID-19 pandemic under control, and revive the economy.

Welcoming the results of talks held earlier the same day between the Lao Vice President and her Vietnamese counterpart Vo Thi Anh Xuan, President Phuc underlined that, to promote the efficiency of the bilateral cooperation, the two sides should collaborate in order to carry out agreements reached by high-ranking officials, particularly the outcomes of a State visit by the Vietnamese President to Laos in August 2021.

The two countries were urged to seek new sources and orientations for cooperation projects, especially strategic infrastructure that connects the two economies and capitalise on the seaport system and 17 free trade agreements Vietnam has signed, including the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), so as to expand markets for exports of both Vietnam and Laos.

He stressed the need to enhance cooperation in defence, security, education-training, healthcare, people-to-people exchanges, partnerships between localities, and continue supporting each other at international forums, especially in maintaining solidarity and the central role of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

For her part, Vice President Yathortou voiced her delight at paying an official visit to Vietnam in her new position and conveyed regards from General Secretary of the LPRP Central Committee and President of Laos Thongloun Sisoulith to President Phuc and high-ranking officials of Vietnam.

She highly valued the Vietnamese people’s recent achievements in all fields, especially in the implementation of the resolution issued at the 13th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam.

She also thanked the Vietnamese Party, State and people for their support to Laos during the past struggle for national independence as well as the current cause of national construction, protection and development, pledging that she will spare no efforts in strengthening the Laos-Vietnam great friendship, special solidarity and comprehensive cooperation.

The two sides underscored the significance of the ‘Vietnam – Laos, Laos – Vietnam Solidarity and Friendship Year 2022’ and agreed to hold activities marking the 60th founding anniversary of their diplomatic ties, and 45 years of the signing of the Vietnam – Laos Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, thereby contributing to bolstering sentiments among people of the two countries, particularly younger generations.

Source: Lao News Agency

Musk’s Twitter Ambitions Likely to Collide with Europe’s Tech Rules

A hands-off approach to moderating content at Elon Musk’s Twitter could clash with ambitious new laws in Europe meant to protect users from disinformation, hate speech and other harmful material.

Musk, who describes himself as a “free speech absolutist,” pledged to buy Twitter for $44 billion this week, with European Union officials and digital campaigners quick to say that any focus on free speech to the detriment of online safety would not fly after the 27-nation bloc solidified its status as a global leader in the effort to rein in the power of tech giants.

“If his approach will be ‘just stop moderating it,’ he will likely find himself in a lot of legal trouble in the EU,” said Jan Penfrat, senior policy adviser at digital rights group EDRi.

Musk will soon be confronted with Europe’s Digital Services Act, which will require big tech companies like Twitter, Google and Facebook parent Meta to police their platforms more strictly or face billions in fines.

Other crackdowns

Officials agreed just days ago on the landmark legislation, expected to take effect by 2024. It’s unclear how soon it could spark a similar crackdown elsewhere, with U.S. lawmakers divided on efforts to address competition, online privacy, disinformation and more.

That means the job of reining in a Musk-led Twitter could fall to Europe — something officials signaled they’re ready for.

“Be it cars or social media, any company operating in Europe needs to comply with our rules — regardless of their shareholding,” Thierry Breton, the EU’s internal market commissioner, tweeted Tuesday. “Mr Musk knows this well. He is familiar with European rules on automotive, and will quickly adapt to the Digital Services Act.”

Musk’s plans for Twitter haven’t been fleshed out beyond a few ideas for new features, opening its algorithm to public inspection and defeating “bots” posing as real users.

France’s digital minister, Cedric O, said Musk has “interesting things” that he wants to push for Twitter, “but let’s remember that #DigitalServicesAct — and therefore the obligation to fight misinformation, online hate, etc. — will apply regardless of the ideology of its owner.”

EU Green Party lawmaker Alexandra Geese, who was involved in negotiating the law, said, “Elon Musk’s idea of free speech without content moderation would exclude large parts of the population from public discourse,” such as women and people of color.

Twitter declined to comment. Musk tweeted that “the extreme antibody reaction from those who fear free speech says it all.” He added that by free speech, he means “that which matches the law” and that he’s against censorship going “far beyond the law.”

The United Kingdom also has an online safety law in the works that threatens senior managers at tech companies with prison if they don’t comply. Users would get more power to block anonymous trolls, and tech companies would be forced to proactively take down illegal content.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s office stressed the need for Twitter to remain “responsible” and protect users.

“Regardless of ownership, all social media platforms must be responsible,” Johnson spokesman Max Blain said Tuesday.

Need seen for cleanup

Damian Collins, a British lawmaker who led a parliamentary committee working on the bill, said that if Musk really wants to make Twitter a free speech haven, “he will need to clean up the digital town square.”

Collins said Twitter has become a place where users are drowned out by coordinated armies of “bot” accounts spreading disinformation and division and that users refrain from expressing themselves “because of the hate and abuse they will receive.”

The laws in the U.K. and EU target such abuse. Under the EU’s Digital Services Act, tech companies must put in place systems so illegal content can be easily flagged for swift removal.

Experts said Twitter will have to go beyond taking down clearly defined illegal content like hate speech, terrorism and child sexual abuse and grapple with material that falls into a gray zone.

The law includes requirements for big tech platforms to carry out annual risk assessments to determine how much their products and design choices contribute to the spread of divisive material that can affect issues like health or public debate.

“This is all about assessing to what extent your users are seeing, for example, Russian propaganda in the context of the Ukraine war,” online harassment or COVID-19 misinformation, said Mathias Vermeulen, public policy director at data rights agency AWO.

Violations would incur fines of up to 6% of a company’s global annual revenue. Repeat offenders can be banned from the EU.

More openness

The Digital Services Act also requires tech companies to be more transparent by giving regulators and researchers access to data on how their systems recommend content to users.

Musk has similar thoughts, saying his plans include “making the algorithms open source to increase trust.”

Penfrat said it’s a great idea that could pave the way to a new ecosystem of ranking and recommendation options.

But he panned another Musk idea — “authenticating all humans” — saying that taking away anonymity or pseudonyms from people, including society’s most marginalized, was the dream of every autocrat.

Source: Voice of America

In Shanghai, Leaving Home for Testing Means COVID Exposure

“Going down to get tested is really the only time when you encounter other people,” said Jackson Nemeth, who lives in one of Shanghai’s locked down neighborhoods.

When Nemeth, a 27-year-old American from Cleveland, Ohio, arrived in Shanghai last September to start a job in China’s financial center, he never expected that the bustling city would become a ghost town almost overnight.

“Locked down since April 1. They told us originally that it will be a four-day lockdown. So, people got four days’ worth of supplies, and since then until now, it’s been exactly three weeks today,” Nemeth told VOA Mandarin in a phone interview Thursday. “Pretty much every day they’re finding positive (cases), which is just frustrating.”

According to Nemeth, people don’t know when the lockdown will end.

Nemeth, who has a master’s degree in Chinese and a job connected to trade policy, lives in Shanghai’s Jing’an district. Because authorities have been finding new COVID-19 cases each day, the neighborhood is now under complete lockdown.

On April 11, Shanghai sectors were categorized into three types of zones — lockdown zones, controlled zones and precautionary zones — based on their total positive cases, according to the state-controlled China Daily.

Some 11.88 million people live in lockdown zones, where residents must remain at home except in special circumstances such as a life-threatening illness.

Shanghai, with more than 25 million residents, is China’s most populous city.

For Nemeth, getting a nucleic acid COVID-19 test is his only opportunity to leave home. A nucleic acid test is a diagnostic test for the virus that causes COVID-19.

‘Blunt authoritarian tools’

Dr. Amesh Adalja, a physician with Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security who focuses on emerging infectious disease, said that any social interaction is an opportunity for the virus to spread, and the omicron variant is highly contagious.

“There are likely a lot of unknown chains of transmission circulating throughout (Shanghai), and the draconian methods the Chinese government has forced on its population provides no incentive for cases to come forward, especially mild ones,” Adalja told VOA Mandarin via email last week.

Adalja said Chinese authorities should be teaching the population harm reduction and risk tolerance, adding that they need to move away from “blunt authoritarian tools” that are not supported by science.

“The exit strategy is to vaccinate their high-risk population with mRNA vaccines, deploy home tests, antivirals, and monoclonal antibodies,” Adalja said. The mRNA vaccines — which include the Pfizer and Moderna versions — teach a person’s cells how to make a protein that will trigger an immune response inside their body, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and have proven to be effective against COVID-19.

Xinhua News Agency quoted Gao Chunfang, director of the Testing and Experiment Center of Yueyang Hospital, which is affiliated with the Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, as saying that high-frequency nucleic acid testing is “very necessary” because all pathogens have an incubation period, and if the viral load is relatively low, the initial test may fail.

China’s zero-COVID policy, a countrywide COVID-19 control measure, has been in place since 2020. It has led to lockdowns in cities throughout the nation, but most notoriously in Shanghai. On March 28, China’s financial hub imposed its first temporary lockdown, which blossomed into a widespread lockdown of indefinite length.

And even as factory and logistical shutdowns threaten China’s economic growth, Chinese President Xi Jinping has repeatedly ruled out moving away from the zero-COVID policy.

According to the daily statistics released by the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, on Tuesday, there were 1,606 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and 11,956 asymptomatic infections. Among the confirmed cases, 1,253 were previously reported as asymptomatic infections. The city’s official death tally stands at 238 as of Tuesday, putting the fatality rate at 0.045%.

Huang Yanzhong, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, points out those numbers may not give a complete picture of the outbreak’s toll.

Worldwide, the fatality rate of omicron for unvaccinated people over 80 years old is 20%, he said.

“If you do the math, the death toll could be as high as 120,000,” Huang told VOA Mandarin.

According to Huang, because a large portion of the Chinese population has not been exposed to this virus, relaxing restrictions would lead to an immediate surge in cases and deaths. He stressed that to get out of this vicious cycle, China must protect the vulnerable population and build resilience to the virus.

In the meantime, Shanghai undertakes daily polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and antigen testing of millions and accelerates transfers of people who test positive for COVID-19 to large quarantine centers.

“I do think there is a real risk that the mass public testing is actually spreading COVID rather than controlling it,” said Lawrence Gostin in an email. Gostin is a professor of global health law at Georgetown University and the director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center for National and Global Health Law.

“Antigen tests can also be done rapidly at home and is an important public health tool,” Gostin said. “PCR tests require laboratories, and it poses a risk if people gather together for PCR tests.”

Doubting comments online

“Nucleic acid testing is carried out every day in the lockdown and controlled zones. However, the risk of cross-infection caused by this channel is very high, but this loophole has not been well prevented,” said a netizen commenting on Weibo, a Twitter-like platform.

“We are taking PCR tests daily. What’s the scientific basis here? Are we just doing testing for fun?” asked another netizen.

On April 6, Zhong Nanshan, a Chinese respiratory disease expert who was in charge of controlling a 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and assisted in formulating the zero-COVID policy in early 2020, published a signed article in the journal National Science Review arguing that a long-term zero-COVID policy could not be achieved, and that China needed to reopen for normal socioeconomic development.

Zhong said in the English-language article that because omicron is so contagious, long-term dynamic clearing, or maintaining a long-term zero-COVID policy, is impossible. The article suggests China should take control measures that include increasing the vaccination rate, prioritizing the use of antigen kits in the community, speeding up drug research and development, and conducting follow-up investigations on cases to adjust the minimum quarantine time.

The Chinese translation of the article began circulating on the Chinese internet on April 19.

On the same day, the Chinese government website posted an article saying its general policy of dynamic clearing remains unchanged. The article quoted China’s Xi as saying that the zero-COVID policy protects people’s lives and health to the greatest extent possible.

Nemeth said that since the lockdown, people in his community have been taken away to quarantine centers almost every day.

“I see people being taken away a lot,” he said. “My desk is right in front of the window, and every day I see buses coming and taking away people with suitcases.”

Source: Voice of America