Over 600 new Covid-19 cases, two new deaths confirmed

Some 619 new cases of Covid-19 and two new fatalities have been confirmed over the previous 24 hours with 593 classified as domestic infections and 26 imported cases.

The total caseload of Covid-19 accumulated since late March 2020 is 204,893 including over 1,500 active cases and 732 deaths.

Vientiane continues to lead provinces with the higher number of Covid-19 infections at 365, followed by Vientiane (province) 43, Savannakhet 30, Xayaboury 22, Xekong 21, Khammuan 19 and Attapeu 18.

On Friday, some 266 Covid-19 patients were discharged from hospitals nationwide.

Dr. Sisavath Soutthanilaxay, Deputy Director General, Department of Communicable Diseases Control, Ministry of Health said that over 5.75 million people across the country have been given with at least one dose of the Covid vaccine. The vaccinated represents 78.50% of population in the country. Meanwhile over 4.78 million people, 64.21 % of population, have been given all recommended doses of the vaccine.

Source: Lao News Agency

Shanghai Reports 12 New COVID Deaths as Frustrations Boil Over

The major financial hub of Shanghai reported 12 new COVID-19 related deaths on April 22, up from 11 the previous day, as frustrations among residents continued to boil over amid a harsh lockdown and strict censorship online.

The city, battling China’s biggest coronavirus outbreak so far, recorded 20,634 new local asymptomatic infections on Friday, rebounding from 15,698 a day earlier. Total new symptomatic cases reached 2,736, up from 1,931 on April 21, official data showed.

The patients who died had an average age of 88, the Shanghai government said. All had underlying health conditions, and none had been vaccinated.

“One strategy that needs immediate implementation is to increase rates of the booster vaccination dose to the elderly and other vulnerable groups and to see if mRNA vaccines can be used,” said Jaya Dantas, a public health expert at the Curtin School of Population Health in Australia, who is monitoring the Shanghai outbreak.

China has yet to introduce its own mRNA vaccines and has chosen not to import those developed overseas.

In a study published by China’s Disease Prevention and Control Center on Friday, medical experts in the northeastern city of Jilin, the location of another recent outbreak, said China’s vaccines have been effective so far, though new emerging COVID-19 variants remained unpredictable.

They said, “the data is strong enough to indicate the public significance of the strategy of full and booster vaccination, particularly for the elder population.”

Pressures mounting

Though frustrations continued to bubble over in Shanghai’s sealed off residential compounds, local officials maintain there will be no relaxation until new cases outside of quarantine areas have all been cleared.

“The more critical the period becomes, the more we need to grit our teeth and focus our strength,” Shanghai Mayor Gong Zheng was quoted as saying on Shanghai’s official government WeChat channel late on Friday.

The number of cases outside quarantine areas stood at 218 on Friday, down from 250 the previous day.

Shanghai’s full-city lockdown began at the start of April, though many residents have been confined to their homes for much longer.

But even after shutting down for more than 30 days, some compounds are still reporting new cases, casting doubt on the efficacy of China’s approach.

“This is a significant amount of time and does have mental health impacts: people are exhausted and frustrated,” said Dantas.

On social media, netizens battled against censors overnight to share a six-minute video entitled “The Voice of April”, a montage of voices recorded over the course of the Shanghai outbreak.

Panning across Shanghai’s silent skyscrapers, the video consists of residents complaining about the lack of food and medicine, as well as the heavy-handed tactics of city authorities.

All direct references to the film were removed from the Weibo microblogging service by Saturday morning, though some comments criticizing the censorship survived.

“I can only say that if you don’t even want to listen to just a small amount of real voices, then it is really hopeless,” said one.

Source: Voice of America

Iraq Exhibits Restored Art Pillaged After 2003 Invasion

Verdant landscapes, stylized portraits of peasant women, curved sculptures — an exhibition in Baghdad is allowing art aficionados to rediscover the pioneers of contemporary Iraqi art.

Around 100 items are on display in the capital, returned and restored nearly two decades after they were looted.

Many of the works, including pieces by renowned artists Jawad Selim and Fayiq Hassan, disappeared in 2003 when museums and other institutions were pillaged in the chaos that followed the U.S.-led invasion to topple dictator Saddam Hussein.

Thousands of pieces were stolen, and organized criminal networks often sold them outside Iraq.

Tracked down in Switzerland, the U.S., Qatar and neighboring Jordan, sculptures and paintings dating between the 1940s and 1960s have been on display since late March at the Ministry of Culture, in a vast room that used to serve as a restaurant.

“These works are part of the history of contemporary art in Iraq,” ministry official Fakher Mohamed said.

Artistic renaissance

Pictures and sculptures were in 2003 spirited away from the Saddam Arts Centre, one of Baghdad’s most prestigious cultural venues at the time.

While he crushed all political dissent, Saddam cultivated the image of a patron of the arts. The invasion and years of violence that followed ended a flourishing arts scene, particularly in Baghdad.

Now, relative stability has led to a fledgling artistic renaissance, including book fairs and concerts, of which the exhibition organized by the ministry is an example.

It helps recall a golden age when Baghdad was considered one of the Arab world’s cultural capitals.

Among canvases of realist, surrealist or expressionist inspiration, a picturesque scene in shimmering colors shows a boat sailing in front of several “mudhif,” the traditional reed dwellings found in Iraq’s southern marshes.

Other paintings, in dark colors, depict terrified residents surrounded by corpses, fleeing a burning village.

Elsewhere, a woman is shown prostrate in a scene of destruction, kneeling in front of an arm protruding from stones.

There is also a wooden sculpture of a gazelle with undulating curves, and the “maternal statue” — a work by Jawad Selim that represents a woman with a slender neck and raised arms.

The latter, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, was rediscovered in a Baghdad district known for its antiques and second-hand goods shops. It was in the possession of a dealer unaware of its true value, according to sculptor Taha Wahib, who bought it for just $200.

‘Priceless works’

Looters in some cases had taken pictures out of their frames, sometimes with cutters, to steal them more easily.

“Some pieces were damaged during the events of 2003 — or they were stored in poor conditions for many years,” Mohamed, the culture ministry official, told AFP.

But “they were restored in record time,” he said.

Other works are being held back for now, with some waiting to be restored — but they will be exhibited once more, Mohamed pledged.

He wants to open more exhibition rooms to show the entire collection of recovered items.

“Museums must be open to the public — these works shouldn’t remain imprisoned in warehouses,” he said.

The 7,000 items stolen in 2003 included “priceless works,” and about 2,300 have been returned to Iraq, according to exhibition curator Lamiaa al-Jawari.

In 2004, she joined a committee of artists committed to retrieving the many stolen national treasures.

“Some have been recovered through official channels” including the Swiss embassy, she said, but individuals also helped.

Authorities coordinate with Interpol and the last restitutions took place in 2021.

The selection on display will be changed from time to time, “to show visitors all this artistic heritage,” Jawari said.

Ali Al-Najar, an 82-year-old artist who has lived in Sweden the past 20 years, has been on holiday in his homeland.

He welcomed the exhibition.

“The pioneers are those who initiated Iraqi art. If we forget them, we lose our foundations” as a society, Najar said.

Source: Voice of America

Laos expresses sympathy to the Philippines over loss, damages caused by Agaton

Minister of Foreign Affairs Saleumxay Kommasith has sent a message of sympathy to the Philippines’ Secretary of Foreign Affairs Teodoro L. Locsin, Jr. over the loss and damages caused by Tropical Storm Agaton in Leyte, the Philippines early this month.

The message, dated Apr 21, 2022, read, “I have learned about flooding and landslides caused by Tropical Storm Agaton in Leyte province of the Republic of Philippines which have brought loss to life and property of the Filipinos in the area.

On behalf of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic and on my own behalf, I would like to express deep sympathy through you to the government and people of the Philippines especially to the families of the victims of this natural disaster.

I believe that with the attention from the government, the Filipinos will soon overcome difficulties and bring normalcy to the disaster-hit area.

Source: Lao News Agency

CDC: COVID-19 Third Leading Cause of Death Again in US in 2021

COVID-19 was the third leading cause of death in the United States for the second year in a row in 2021, with death rates rising for most age groups, a government study showed on Friday.

COVID-19 was the underlying or contributing cause of 460,513 deaths in the United States last year, a nearly 20% jump compared to 2020, the study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed.

The researchers analyzed death certificate data for deaths occurring among residents in the United States during January to December last year. They found that 2021 saw the highest overall death rate since 2003, with heart disease and cancer being the first and the second leading cause of death, respectively.

The overall death rate was lowest among children aged 5 to 14 years old, and highest among people aged 85 and above, a trend similar to 2020, the report found. Deaths peaked in the months of January and September.

COVID-19 was associated with 111.4 per 100,000 deaths in the United States in 2021, compared to 93.2 per 100,000 deaths in 2020, CDC data showed. COVID death rates were lowest among those aged 1 to 4 years and 5 to 14 years.

While COVID death rates were the highest for those 85 years and older in 2021, those rates fell from 2020. There were 94,884 COVID-19 related deaths last year among those aged 85 and above compared with 122,707 in 2020, data showed.

Age groups under 75 saw significant increases in deaths, the researchers found.

The report also found that the overall age-adjusted U.S. death rate rose nearly 1% from 2020 to 2021.

Source: Voice of America

U.S. Ambassador’s Op-Ed on Earth Day

April 22 is Earth Day – a day to remind us to protect the air we breathe, the water we drink, the places in nature we visit, and the wildlife we see.

It has been celebrated in America since 1970, helping to transform the ways the United States and many countries interact with the world around us and changing how we view our impact on the natural world.

This year on Earth Day, the United States resolves to build on the progress made over the past half-century by reaffirming our commitment to take actions that will ensure a clean and healthy Earth for our children and grandchildren. Climate change and habitat loss threaten the extinction of between one-third and one-half of all species on Earth by the end of this century.

In the Lao PDR, I have been inspired by your commitment to saving the fragile systems that you take care for the world to keep some of the Earth’s treasured animals from extinction.

For World Wildlife Day last month, I visited the Lao Conservation Trust for Wildlife (LCTW) in Vientiane province, Free the Bears Wildlife Sanctuary in Luang Prabang province, and the Elephant Conservation Centre in Xayaboury province.

LCTW has recently seen an increased number of citizens taking action to report wildlife crime, and the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry has promoted LCTW’s ‘1601 rescue hotline’ number. Free the Bears has rescued over 100 bears in Laos, most of them since 2017. These organizations rely on cooperation with law enforcement authorities to act on wildlife crime tips, and the increases in seizures and rescues shows the Lao government’s growing will and capacity to combat the illegal wildlife trade.

In addition, the Lao people show their interest in protecting animals from wildlife traffickers by calling in the tips.

As Americans who are entrusted to live responsibly in your country, we are working to reduce our environmental footprint by improving our energy, water, and waste management strategies at the Embassy. Each individual can help make a difference. But in the end, multilateralism is the only way to jointly advance our environmental priorities.

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted how interconnected our world is. We are all global citizens of a planet facing multiple stressors. We must continue to work together to stop and reverse the damage already done. Each action we take to improve our communities helps build a foundation that can lead to stronger national and international action. We’ve seen time and again what the world can achieve when we come together around a cause.

Earth Day reminds all global citizens that as long as we stay united and focused on protecting the one planet we have, we can leave it in better shape for future generations. This Earth Day, let us marshal our best efforts toward building a safer, more stable, and more sustainable world.

The United States remains committed to working with the Lao PDR and other countries around the world to help achieve our common environmental goals.

Dr. Peter M. Haymond, U.S. Ambassador to the Lao PDR

Source: Lao News Agency