Cartier and Amazon Target Knock-offs in US Lawsuits

Amazon and Cartier joined forces Wednesday in U.S. court to accuse a social media influencer of working with Chinese firms to sell knock-offs of the luxury brand’s jewelry on the e-commerce giant’s site.

The online personality used sites like Instagram to pitch Cartier jewelry such as “Love bracelets” to followers and then provided links that led to counterfeit versions on Amazon, one of two lawsuits alleged.

The influencer appeared to be a woman in Handan, China, and the merchants involved in the “counterfeiting scheme” were traced to other Chinese cities, according to court documents.

“By using social media to promote counterfeit products, bad actors undermine trust and mislead customers,” Amazon associate general counsel Kebharu Smith said in a statement.

“We don’t just want to chase them away from Amazon — we want to stop them for good,” Smith added.

The Seattle-based e-commerce giant has booted vendors targeted in the suit from its platform and teamed with Cartier to urge a federal court to make them pay damages and legal costs for hawking knock-off jewelry there from June 2020 through June 2021.

The “sophisticated campaign” sought to avoid detection by having the social media influencer pitch jewelry as being Cartier, but the vendors made no mention of the luxury brand at their shops at Amazon, the lawsuit said.

Buyers, however, were sent jewelry bearing Cartier trademarks, the companies alleged in court documents.

A second lawsuit accuses an Amazon store operating under the name “YFXF” last year of selling counterfeit Cartier goods, disguising jewelry as unbranded at the website but sending buyers knock-offs bearing the company’s trademark.

Those involved in the scheme “advertised their counterfeit products on third-party social media websites by using ‘hidden links’ to direct their followers to the counterfeit Cartier products, while disguising the products as non-branded in the listings in the Amazon Store,” the lawsuit said.

The companies said that Instagram direct messages and shared links were used to instruct social media followers about how to buy knock-offs at Amazon.

Source: Voice of America

North Korea COVID-19 Vaccination Plan Facing Challenges

As North Korea faces a rising number of COVID-19 cases, simply having vaccines may be insufficient to roll out a countrywide immunization process that experts say needs to be accompanied by adequate cold storage units and trained medical and technical staff that the nation lacks.

Pyongyang announced on Tuesday that “more than 32,810 fevered cases” were detected in the country from June 12 to 13, through its state media Korea Central News Agency (KCNA). The total, “since late April,” surged past 4.5 million as of June 14, added the KCNA.

Outbreak first reported in May

North Korea first reported the outbreak of the virus on May 12. Until Pyongyang acknowledged the outbreak, it claimed zero cases since the global pandemic in early 2020.

The regime is battling the spread with “vigorous” anti-epidemic work by conducting tests to “confirm coronavirus infected cases” in Pyongyang, border areas and high-risk regions. It is also implementing quarantine measures such as installing “more than 11,300 temporary quarantine wards,” said the KCNA on a separate report on Tuesday.

Gavi, a global vaccine distribution network, told VOA’s Korean Service that North Korea “has accepted an offer of vaccines from China and has started to administer doses.”

Gavi, attributing comments to a spokesperson, did not say when the immunization began and what kind of WHO-approved Chinese vaccines such as Sinopharm, Sinovac or CanSino were sent.

North Korea, however, did not indicate it has begun a countrywide vaccination program that experts say is the only viable way to try to prevent severe illnesses and deaths.

Arthur Reingold, division head of epidemiology at University of California who served as a member of the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) from 2005 to 2012, said, “Vaccination with an effective SARS-Cov-2 vaccine is really the only approach that can limit morbidity, hospitalization, (and) death at this point.”

SARS-CoV-2 is the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 that causes coronavirus disease 2019, which came to be called COVID-19.

Gavi ‘ready to support’

Pyongyang has not accepted vaccine offers from the U.S., South Korea or international vaccine sharing programs such as Gavi. The Gavi spokesperson said it “has always been ready to support Pyongyang should it request our assistance, but so far,” did not receive “formal request for COVID-19 vaccine support.”

Heeje Lee is a researcher with the Korea Health Policy Project at Harvard Medical School who has traveled to North Korea multiple times since 2016 to teach at Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, North Korea. He told VOA’s Korean Service that the regime might have opted out of conducting a massive vaccination program due to medical challenges.

“Considering and weighing benefits and risks, they might have selected the zero-COVID strategy instead of nationwide vaccination,” Lee said. “They are very good at mobilization. It might have been easier for them to control behavior of the population such as lockdown and border closure than handling medical accidents from the vaccination.”

Experts said North Korea needs to overcome several medical and technical hurdles if it wants to begin a COVID-19 immunization program as it would need to import cold storage units and medical and technical experts. This is especially true if Pyongyang wants to use the mRNA vaccines, which need careful handling.

David Salisbury, associate fellow of Global Health Program at Chatham House, a policy institute in London, and director of immunization at the U.K.’s Department of Health until 2013, said, “Given the very demanding cold chain requirements for mRNA vaccines, this is likely to be very difficult for North Korea.”

The most effective vaccines, such as Pfizer and Moderna, use mRNA technology that instructs cells in the body to produce protein, which triggers immunity against the virus.

Pfizer vaccines are shipped at temperatures between minus 90-60 degrees Celsius and can be stored in the freezer between minus 25-15 degrees Celsius for up to two weeks.

Moderna vaccines are shipped at temperatures between minus 50-15 degrees Celsius and can be stored in the freezer at the same temperature.

After thawing, both vaccines can be kept in the refrigerator between 2-8 degrees Celsius for up to one month.

“Those [mRNA] vaccines need to be shipped and stored in very cold freezers and then thawed and delivered, by needle injection within several hours, perhaps a day,” said John Moore, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City.

“There are real logistical challenges to providing and using these freezers,” he said. “The mRNA (vaccines) may just be more than what the North Koreans can actually handle.”

Chinese vaccines and Novavax must also be kept in refrigerator temperature of approximately 4 degrees Celsius, said Moore.

Nagi Shafik, former project manager for WHO and UNICEF in North Korea, said, “If we are going to use the mRNA vaccines (such as) Pfizer or Moderna, (North Korea) will need ultra-cold refrigerators, which UNICEF can provide as they did with other countries.”

In 2021, UNICEF delivered 800 ultra-cold storage units to about 70 countries to store COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.

The Gavi spokesperson told VOA’s Korean Service on Friday that “regarding challenges of mRNA vaccines … that’s something we’d only be able to comment on if/when (North Korea) submits an updated national vaccine deployment plan as part of a request for support.”

VOA’s Korean Service contacted North Korea’s mission to the U.N., asking whether it is willing to accept mRNA vaccines if they are offered but did not receive a reply.

Turning to other vaccines

Due to the challenges of using mRNA vaccines, Moore said North Korea could resort to other vaccines.

“Chinese vaccines … are easier to use,” Moore said. “Those vaccines are mediocre by our standards but would be able to reduce the incidence of severe and fatal infections.” Sinopharm vaccines have an efficacy rate of 79%, and Sinovac vaccines are 51% effective, according to the WHO.

“There’s also another highly effective Western vaccine called Novavax,” which is “more potent” than Chinese vaccines, said Moore. Novavax vaccines have a 90% efficacy rate. In comparison, Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines both have a 95% efficacy rate.

However, to be used properly, all these vaccines — particularly the mRNA vaccines — would require North Korea to accept outside medical experts who can administer immunizations, according to experts.

Country ‘will need help’

“North Korea will need help from global partners to acquire all the necessary knowledge for the vaccination” as well as “technical experts to make sure the cold chain works properly,” said Lee.

North Korea “would need few medical experts to administer the process of vaccination and storing vaccine,” said Shafik.

Experts said Pyongyang would also need to obtain power sufficient to run cold storage units – for both mRNA and non-mRNA vaccines – throughout the nation of nearly 26 million people.

North Korea lacks a reliable power supply, often struggling to keep lights on. According to the CIA World Factbook, only 26% of its total population had access to electricity in 2019.

Lee said North Korea has “solar refrigeration and solar panels” that are available in case of interruption on the electricity supply. However, Shafik said, solar-powered cold units may need to be supplemented for mass immunization.

“UNICEF had provided some solar energy (powered) refrigerators and (they are) working well for a ‘regular’ vaccination program,” Shafik said. “But for mass vaccination, there could be some modifications and other arrangement(s) to be considered before the campaign.”

Source: Voice of America

Media to Strengthen Promotion of COVID-19 Vaccination in Laos

The Ministry of Health (MOH) in collaboration with the Mass Media Department of the Ministry of Information, Culture and Tourism (MICT) and UNICEF on Jun 14 organised a briefing for news editors from national media outlets to strengthen the COVID-19 vaccination campaign in the Lao PDR.

The meeting was co-chaired by Mr. Somsavath Phongsa, Director General of the Mass Media Department of MICT, Dr. Phonepaseuth Ounaphom, Director General of the Hygiene and Health Promotion Department of MOH, along with Mr. Bisrat Abiy, Officer-in-Charge for UNICEF Lao PDR’s Health Section.

The briefing was aimed at presenting the latest updates on the national vaccination rollout, particularly in the seven northern provinces of Luang Prabang, Phongsaly, Luang Namtha, Oudomxay, Xayaboury, Bokeo and Vientiane, following a recent discovery that vaccination rates in these provinces are still below the intended target for 2021.

“Vaccination is key to the Lao PDR’s recovery from the impacts of COVID-19. While there are still challenges to the rollout of vaccination in 32 districts of the country where vaccination rate is lower than 50% in 2021. There are also opportunities and we must continue encouraging our community members to get vaccinated to reach more than 80% in 2022,” stated Dr. Phonepaseuth Ounaphom, Director General of the Hygiene and Health Promotion Department of MOH.

The meeting participants further discussed how to improve the delivery of vaccination to community members to help achieve current national targets, the role of the media in driving the nationwide vaccination campaign, alongside future vaccination plans, particularly among children.

“Mass Media, with its wide public reach, plays a vital role in disseminating accurate and trustworthy information on COVID-19 to the public. It is important that media outlets throughout the country strengthen their engagement with the public to aid progress towards our national vaccination targets,” stated Mr. Somsavath Phongsa, Director General of the Mass Media Department of MICT.

“Vaccines remain an indispensable tool in handling COVID-19 and it is crucial that everyone in the community, from children to the elderly, get vaccinated. UNICEF remains committed to working with the Government of the Lao PDR on the COVID-19 vaccination campaign and engaging communities to build trust in vaccines,” stated Mr. Bisrat Abiy, Officer-in-Charge for UNICEF Lao PDR’s Health Section.

Source: Lao News Agency