Chinese Wuhan Virus Thread

I think Maharashtra & Gujarat have entered the community transmission stage..
Or very bad lock down.

Better to check wide scale in these 2 states. And enforce strict lock down.


Between I heard in Chennai , because doctor s are checking for covid before surgery, many cases are getting discovered.
 
Geopolitics after Covid-19: Who can NZ trust?
For those wondering whether Covid-19 has changed everything, geopolitics may be one notable exception. With every day passing, we’re being bombarded with arguments that the already intensifying competition between China and the United States hasn’t gone away. In fact, as some would have it, their contest has just got nastier.

Already criticised for its non-transparent early response to the Wuhan outbreak, China is now being portrayed as the early opportunist, turning a crisis causing great suffering elsewhere to its own advantage. Peter Jennings, the Director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, argues Beijing is using the distraction of Covid-19 to advance its ambitions in East Asia and beyond.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration is looking to distract attention from the fact it was asleep at the wheel for much of the critical month of February. What better target than Xi’s Communist Party of China, along with its alleged partner the World Health Organization? Criticism of a similar sort has already got close US ally Australia into a war of words with Beijing.

Before Covid-19, Washington was already looking for ways to disentangle the United States from China’s economy. That decoupling agenda seems even stronger today. The current crisis has driven home America’s uncomfortable reliance on the supply chains where China is the central provider of PPE, antibiotics and so much more.
Prepare to see cooperation evolve on an issue-by-issue basis. This will be about order emerging from a patchwork of smaller ties. It won’t be simple: just working with fellow democracies won’t cut it.
And we should expect these themes to strengthen in the run-up to November’s presidential election. The Republican Party has issued a long memo to surrogates suggesting their best chance to win is not by defending President Trump, but by pouring blame on China. Don’t expect a completely different tune from Joe Biden either. The presumptive Democratic nominee will want to reassert America’s commitment to global cooperation if he is elected. But right now he is competing with Trump in a contest of who can be toughest on Beijing.

Viewed through this lens, Covid-19 simply magnifies the existing challenge confronting New Zealand’s foreign policy-makers. In one corner, an increasingly illiberal and assertive China that has held many of the keys to New Zealand’s economic prosperity. In the other, a militarily powerful, but increasingly unreliable United States, whose president has been trashing the rules-based order upon which New Zealand's interests depend.

There is not much ballast for Wellington anywhere else. Major like-minded partners who might offer alternatives to the US-China duopoly are in short supply. The pandemic has exposed the weakness of the world’s existing institutional architecture, from the United Nations Security Council to ASEAN and the EU. Here in the South Pacific, New Zealand’s neighbours already have a full plate wrestling with the twin challenges of climate change and external competition.

But there are reasons to question whether geopolitical considerations will have as much clarity and sway as some are already convinced they will. The Covid-19 crisis has weakened both Beijing and Washington as international actors. Their ability to dominate the landscape will be smaller after the coronavirus than it was before.

America’s decline in this regard is especially precipitous. It is not just that the President’s ill-informed rants threaten public health. Far worse from an international perspective is that the great power from which one used to expect international leadership is currently unwilling and unable to step up during one of the largest international crises any of us can remember.

Over the last three years, as Trump has raised tariffs and belittled alliances, many of America’s traditional partners have begun to feel as if they are treated as adversaries. Even as the Covid-19 crisis grew, Trump couldn’t avoid the temptation of dissing traditional allies (South Korea) and berating longstanding partners (the EU). And the stop on WHO funding, which may become permanent, is the latest in a string of own goals where the Trump administration has weakened the institutions that have been so favourable to western interests, thereby ceding ground to China.

America’s international clout is as small as we can remember, and it is getting smaller. How then will Washington persuade its formerly like-minded partners to join an economic quarantine of China? Restrictions in sensitive areas will be likely on some occasions: British firms are being advised not to get too close to their Chinese information technology counterparts. But many European countries have been only too happy to accept Beijing’s PPE assistance.

In the developing world, where the Covid-19 toll will be especially punishing, the idea of recovering economic ground without active links to China is absurd. This applies not just in Africa and the Middle East, but in parts of South Asia, Southeast Asia and the South Pacific also. Even more so in the global south than anywhere else, the Trump administration will find it has very little convening power in turning the Covid-19 crisis into an economic Cold War.

But that doesn’t leave the stage open for China. Notwithstanding efforts at disinformation and ‘narrative management’, Xi Jinping’s leadership, party and country have suffered significant reputational damage over the last few months. The crisis makes it clear that the consolidation of power under Xi, where underlings cannot afford to criticise the centre, has the capacity to make the rest of the world suffer. Its recent actions in the South China Sea further underscore its willingness to push its neighbours around.

China will still have plenty of trade partners: the demand it generates and its crucial role in supply chains are simply too important to vanish overnight. But Beijing will have few real friends. New Zealand will be among many Asia-Pacific countries wanting to ensure their exposure to China is not too great, even if this means some more modest rates of initial regrowth.

This all makes the choice of early post-Covid-19 partners more important as New Zealand looks to see who can join its international bubble. These choices will set an early pattern for the relationships that can be relied on the most. They will say something important about New Zealand’s view of the re-emerging order.

Australia, which has also performed well in the initial fight against Covid-19, is the most obvious early partner. Extending it cautiously to the South Pacific might also be possible. But beyond the shared Tasman world, the picture looks fairly bleak right now. Given our inability to expect responsible leadership from Xi’s China or Trump’s America, and the risks of reigniting the spread of the virus before a vaccine arrives, coalitions of the trusted will only emerge slowly.

Prepare to see cooperation evolve on an issue-by-issue basis. This will be about order emerging from a patchwork of smaller ties. It won’t be simple: just working with fellow democracies won’t cut it. And it won’t be easy. Geopolitics has not gone away, but it’s not the geopolitics we used to know.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gautam
Greg Hunt blindsided as Chinese consul-general crashes press conference
Billionaire miner Andrew Forrest has been accused of ambushing the Australian government after he parachuted one of China’s top diplomats into an official event, blindsiding Health Minister Greg Hunt.

Mr Forrest, the Fortescue chairman, surprised Mr Hunt by inviting China’s consul-general for Victoria Zhou Long to speak alongside him on Wednesday after he secured 10 million coronavirus tests from China, a 20-fold increase in Australia’s testing capacity.

Health Minister Greg Hunt walks away from Chinese consul-general Zhou Long and Andrew Forrest after the press conference.


Health Minister Greg Hunt walks away from Chinese consul-general Zhou Long and Andrew Forrest after the press conference.Credit:AAP

The audacious bid to mend a deteriorating political relationship between Beijing and Canberra follows increasing pressure from corporate leaders for Australia to back down on its public threats to pursue China’s role in the coronavirus outbreak.

Beijing has spent the past week accusing Australia of being a bully pushing US interests in the region and warned Chinese consumers could walk out on Australian brands if it continues to lobby for a global independent inquiry into the disease.

Mr Hunt did not introduce Mr Zhou and did not allow him to take questions. The Foreign Minister's Office and the Prime Minister's Office also were not informed of Mr Zhou's attendance at the media event, which was held at the Commonwealth Parliament Offices in Melbourne.

Mr Zhou used the opportunity to repudiate the Australian government's criticisms and praise China's handling of the crisis. The consul-general said China had worked in an "open, transparent and responsible" manner with the World Health Organisation.
https://www.strategicfront.org/forums/javascript:void(0);
China has stepped up its diplomatic assault on Australia over Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s demands for an investigation into how COVID-19 started.

Government sources said the hijacking of the press conference could work in Australia's favour by demonstrating it was willing to put a week of escalating tensions behind it.

Mr Forrest, who has made significant investments in China through iron ore, urged Australia and global health authorities to delay any inquiry into the virus until after the US election in November and said it should not just be focussed on China.

"That would make it instantly political," he said. "Australia needs to walk that line where we have a best friend in America, a best friend in China, best friends across South-East Asia."

Victorian Liberal senator James Paterson said Mr Forrest "is worth listening to on how to run a successful mining company. I don’t think the government will be following his advice on foreign policy.”

China’s consul-general for Victoria Zhou Long (right) and Health Minister Greg Hunt.


China’s consul-general for Victoria Zhou Long (right) and Health Minister Greg Hunt.Credit:AAP

Another Liberal MP, Tim Wilson, said "in a diplomatic disagreement it's a pretty basic expectation for Australians to be loyal and back their own, not invite a platform for a foreign spokesperson”.

Other MPs said Mr Hunt was clearly ambushed and given little warning.

The chairman of medical company BGI, Wang Jian, praised the strength of the business relationship between Mr Forrest and China. Mr Wang sold the test kits to Mr Forrest's philanthropic Minderoo Foundation for $320 million.

"We were able to protect supply chains for this extremely rare equipment and have Andrew deliver it straight to Australia," he said.

The privately sourced kits will see Australia's testing capacity bolstered by 10 million more tests as it looks to expand asymptomatic testing and re-open the economy. As of Wednesday, Australia has conducted more than 500,000 tests.
Tony Battaglene, chief executive of industry group Australian Grape and Wine, said he was concerned about the ongoing broader diplomatic spat between China and Australia being played out in public.

"[The market] is even more important now with COVID-19, in that China is going to be the first export market to recover in the world and we need to be in a position to take advantage of that. Because that will drive our recovery," he said.
China is going to be the first export market to recover in the world and we need to be in a position to take advantage of that.
Tony Battaglene, chief executive of Australian Grape and Wine
"I don't think tit-for-tat stuff through the media is the right way to treat a respected trading partner. And I think if Australia wants to talk about these things then it needs to actually go to China individually, or else work through a coalition with the UN."

Bega Cheese chairman Barry Irvin said he hoped the dispute would be resolved and "good relations are restored in a reasonable amount of time".

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Wednesday Australia would press ahead with its pursuit of the inquiry after calling European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen overnight.

Businessman Andrew Forrest of the Minderoo Foundation.

Businessman Andrew Forrest of the Minderoo Foundation.Credit:AAP

"We discussed this issue," he said. "The Europeans are bringing forward a motion on this matter at the world health assembly. I think it is a very good motion."

China's Foreign Ministry has become increasingly agitated about Australia's push for the global inquiry.

"Australian side's erroneous words and deeds recently have upset the Chinese people and that may impact bilateral relations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Tuesday night.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said China’s criticisms of Australia were "ludicrous".

"The reality is Australia thinks it’s prudent and sensible for there to be an independent and transparent investigation into the origins of this global pandemic that has killed thousands and thousands of people across the world,” he told Sky News.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Gautam
Okay.

Does not impress me. Have my own resources which point to it being synthetized.
I agree with you. How can anyone explain the presence of HIV genome in it which is found in Monkies if it was a natural virus.
I think Maharashtra & Gujarat have entered the community transmission stage..
Or very bad lock down.
Yes but they are cluster community transfers and not the actual community transfer. Majority of cases are from muslim clusters.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Hellfire
Wuhan Institute of Virology was a reputed one and had Tie ups with US, European Union, multiple universities across the world research grants, funding from US and others. Like any other reputable institute gets.

If virus got leaked from this institute China will be rightly worried and will try to stop any such probe as it will pin all the blame on China while everyone participated in research and research data. China's authoritarian image, censorship, lying, propaganda only makes China less credible.

Also West doesn't really need to prove that virus originated in Wuhan lab, they proved WMD in Iraq, they prove "Muslim persecution" in India, they can prove a anything, alag hi duniya hai inki, sacchai se koi wasta nhi.
 
Wuhan Institute of Virology was a reputed one and had Tie ups with US, European Union, multiple universities across the world research grants, funding from US and others. Like any other reputable institute gets.

If virus got leaked from this institute China will be rightly worried and will try to stop any such probe as it will pin all the blame on China while everyone participated in research and research data. China's authoritarian image, censorship, lying, propaganda only makes China less credible.

Also West doesn't really need to prove that virus originated in Wuhan lab, they proved WMD in Iraq, they prove "Muslim persecution" in India, they can prove a anything, alag hi duniya hai inki, sacchai se koi wasta nhi.
just another day for spin masters, where truth is non-existent only this time both are equally matched.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BlackOpsIndia
Okay.

Does not impress me. Have my own resources which point to it being synthetized.
I looked into it myself in early days. I also sort of thought that. Because it has quite a few motifs common with HIV. I then consulted with a guy I know in UCSF. His opinion is that such inferences are incorrect. That said, it cann't be denied that Chinese were working with coronavirus and were working quite irresponsibly which speeded up its evolution. It seems, they messed up in containing it.
 
PM Modi gets a SOS message from UAE for Indian healthcare personnel

The UAE, a federation of seven emirates with a population of less than 10 million people, has already reported 11,000 Covid-19 cases and has been adding an average of 500 patients every day.

Updated: Apr 28, 2020 20:14 IST
By Shishir Gupta
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
View attachment 15638
Prime Minister Narendra Modi being seen off by the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan on conclusion of his 3-nation visit at Abu Dhabi in UAE in August 2019.(PIB)

The United Arab Emirates has requested the government to send Indian doctors and nurses to help the Emirates fight the Covid-19 pandemic, a senior government official said on Tuesday.

The UAE, a federation of seven emirates with a population of less than 10 million people, has already reported 11,000 Covid-19 cases and has been adding an average of 500 patients every day.

It relies heavily on foreign-educated doctors and paramedics including those from India to staff its hospitals.

Some of them were on leave when governments in Delhi and Abu Dhabi cancelled all commercial flights to stop the coronavirus diseases from spreading their respective countries.

“We have received two requests. One, to allow the healthcare providers who were travelling to India when commercial flights were cancelled to return to UAE to resume their duties,” a top government functionary told Hindustan Times.

The second, is permission to hire or avail the services of doctors and nurses for a shorter duration to tide over the immediate crisis.
“The requests are being considered of the government,” the official said.

Officials said Abu Dhabi had offered to send a special plane to fly the Indian healthcare professionals employed by its hospitals.

Considering the nature of the relationship between the two countries, the first request is likely to be processed first, another official said.

The request for additional doctors and paramedical staff, however, requires wider consultations within the government, the official said. The decision would be made after evaluating India’s requirements at this stage.

But the effort is to find a way out to help UAE at this crucial juncture.

Just a fortnight back, India had sent a 15-member team of military doctors and paramedics to Kuwait and promised to deploy more personnel should the need arise.

These gestures, a foreign ministry official said, should be seen against the backdrop of how ties between India and the Gulf countries had deepened over the last five-six years.

Right from the beginning of the NDA government’s first term, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his key advisers have invested diplomatic energy in improving ties with countries in West Asia, particularly Saudi Arabia, UAE, Jordan, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman

In 2015, Narendra Modi was the first Indian PM to visit the UAE - also home to 3.4 million Indian workers - in over three decades. In all, the six Gulf countries - Saudi Arabia. Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain - have about 12.6 million Indians.

The personal relations started paying off within a few years when National Security Adviser Ajit Doval was able to persuade the Gulf countries to either push out anti-Indian elements or send them over to India.

It was a reflection of this high-octane diplomacy at work that Dubai handed over Dawood Ibrahim associate and 1993 Mumbai blasts accused, Mohammed Farooq and Saudi Arabia deported Lashkar-e-Taiba operative Habibur Rahman. In all, over a 100 wanted persons have been deported to India by the Gulf countries over the last six years. Last year, UAE allowed Indian agencies to fly out AgustaWestland case accused Rajiv Saxena and prominent aviation lobbyist Deepak Talwar in a special plane.

More recently, UAE made an exception for Indians when it started packing off foreign nationals from nearly every other country including Pakistan after the outbreak of coronavirus disease. Since state governments in India weren’t geared up to accommodate the Indian citizens abroad, the Indian government had requested to take care of them for some more time. India, on its part, had assured the Gulf countries that New Delhi would maintain uninterrupted supply of food and essential items from India.

PM Modi gets a SOS message from UAE for Indian healthcare personnel
Every country uses its resources to maximize its potential. India is quite contrary to it. Always helping the world indirectly while starving itself of valuable resources. Even thought it might get us some brownie points but thats where it ends.

Irony is that the same countries want to throw out the blue collared Indian workers but want Indian doctors. Unless India is not safeguarding & fulfilling its own interests its progress & survival is a big question mark.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BlackOpsIndia

I think it was symbolic follow, like an acknowledgement, when White House was not following any world leader it would have presented other US friends as inferior.
Yup



White House explained that it follows the accounts of officials from host countries for a brief period during a presidential trip to retweet their messages in support of the visit.