• ‘Run philosophy’: the Chinese citizens seeking to leave amid Covid uncertainty | China | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/20/run-philosophy-the-chinese-citizens-seeking-to-leave-amid-covid-uncerta
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/fec277c7d980588b1fa1f45cab82b38cc94dad6a/0_274_8192_4916/master/8192.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    The Guardian - China ‘Run philosophy’: the Chinese citizens seeking to leave amid Covid uncertainty
    With Beijing’s zero Covid policy set to continue, many disillusioned citizens have begun planning to leave the country. Last modified on Wed 20 Jul 2022 05.42 BST
    When Wendy Luo*, a 29-year-old Chinese woman, handed over her passport to a border control officer in Shanghai airport last month, her heart began to beat fast. “I felt like my fate would be determined at that moment. Leave or stay, all at the officer’s mercy.”
    After enduring months of lockdowns and weeks of food shortages, Luo had begun to look for an exit strategy from China. She was lucky, she said, because she quickly managed to find a job in Paris, having spent six years studying and working in France and being in possession of a resident visa.
    “The border control officer in Shanghai asked many questions,” Luo said. “They included why I was leaving China, what did I do in Shanghai in the last couple of years, and what I was going to do in France. Most importantly, whether I plan to return to China any time soon. I pretended to be calm when giving my answers, but I was actually extremely nervous.”
    Until last year, China’s zero-Covid policy had won much support from its citizens. When western countries such as the US and the UK recorded hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions of infections, the ruling Communist party used the opportunity to emphasise the virtues of its system of government.Yet when strict lockdowns began to be enforced across many cities in China, including Shanghai, from the start of 2022, doubts and criticisms began to rise. China’s economy was hit hard, and young graduates complained about not being able to find work. The economy showed signs of rebound in June, but since the more transmissible Omicron subvariant, BA.5, was discovered this month, many have begun to speculate again whether renewed lockdowns in cities such as Shanghai are on the way.
    Many disillusioned urban Chinese citizens have started planning to leave the country. Online, “run philosophy”, or “run xue” – a coded way of talking about emigrating – has become a buzzword. On Zhihu, a post explaining the phenomenon has been read more than 9m times since January.
    Elsewhere on Chinese language social media, forums have been set up to exchange tips about how to maximise the chances of being admitted to overseas academic programmes. Immigration agencies reported the number of business inquiries had shot up too over the past few months.
    Mark Li*, a 24-year-old history teacher in the southern province of Hainan, jokingly calls himself a member of the “run philosophy club”. After spending four years as an undergraduate student in the US, Li came back to China in the summer of 2020 to build a career in teaching.“Initially, the idea of leaving China started with the frustration of censorship that began to build in my day-to-day job. And when lockdowns in Shanghai began, I started to think harder about it: people’s rights can be so easily taken away, even in the most outward-looking city like Shanghai,” he told the Guardian.
    The last straw, according to Li, was the recent announcement in Beijing that it would “unremittingly grasp the normalisation of epidemic prevention and control in the next five years”. The line caught the eyes of China’s Covid-fatigued citizens. After an outcry online, the reference to “five years” was removed from Chinese media, and a related hashtag on Weibo was deleted.
    Yet Li was determined. He saw all of this as a sign of deeper changes that are taking place in China today. “When I came back to China two years ago I was planning on a life and career in the country. I was very optimistic … But Covid seemed to have revealed the rotten core of Chinese politics and turned the country upside down – in a short span of two years.”It is difficult to know how many of those who pondered leaving did leave in the end. Official emigration figures for this year are not immediately available. According to the United Nations population fund (UNFPA), there was only a total Chinese emigration of 6.9 million over the years from 2000 to 2021. And measured as a share of China’s total population, the UNFPA said, it is “negligible”. In May, Beijing said it would “strictly limit” unnecessary travel outside the country by Chinese citizens.Rachel Murphy, a professor of Chinese development and society at Oxford University, said the rise of the run philosophy “sits alongside other sentiments that have in recent years become popular in China’s social media, such as ‘lying flat’” – taking an extended break from relentless work. The popularity of run philosophy, she said, indicated that people want to opt out of a social order that has become hyper-competitive, exhausting and unpredictable.
    “The recent lockdown in Shanghai also increased the visibility of unchecked party-state power on individuals,” she said. “Yet, the costs of using their voice to try to change things are too high for Chinese citizens. So that leaves them with dreams of exit.”But Murphy said that this was not to say that these young people were not loyal to China and their nationalistic sentiments were very strong. “Right now, though, some people feel they want to escape the present circumstances of their lives.”The sense of uncertainty was shared in China’s expatriate community across different industries, too. While Chinese citizens face tough hurdles to leave, foreign residents find it tough to stay. This pains Andrea Caballé, a Spanish lawyer who has called Beijing home for the past decade.
    Last month, after she began the process of preparing to move back to Barcelona, her home town, Caballé broke into tears in her Hutong apartment in downtown Beijing. “I spent a decade of my life in China. I have loved this country, but now I feel that I have no choice but to go back home,” she said.Caballé, who turned 37 this year, began her career as an intern in 2012 in the Chinese capital. Over the past decade, she has thrived professionally. She now works for the European Union in Beijing, facilitating legal exchanges between Europe and China.But since Covid struck, Caballé said the sudden lockdowns brought her constant stress and were demoralising. “I don’t want to be told one day that I couldn’t leave due to Covid when I really have to, for example, visit my elderly parents in Spain,” she said.Luo, now finally settled in Paris after months of distress, said she will stay in France for as long as she can. “I don’t know when I’ll be back in China next,” she said. “Rumour has it that ‘zero Covid’ probably won’t end until 2025. So I’ll have to find a way to stay in France until then, at least.”

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#sante#emigration#exit#confinement#frontiere#europe#france#shanghai#runphilosophy

  • ‘The way it’s playing out is unexpected’: UK faces up to changing waves of Covid | Coronavirus | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/17/unexpected-changing-waves-covid-seasonal

    🇺🇦 Meaghan Kall sur Twitter : https://twitter.com/kallmemeg/status/1548946888057131008

    I disagree. Right now, resurgences in COVID-19 infections are variant driven. We have known this for 18 months. We have been able to detect new variants months before they spread to the UK.

    It may be unwanted, but it is not unexpected.

  • Macau shuts all casinos in bid to contain worsening Covid outbreak | Macau | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/11/macau-shuts-all-casinos-in-bid-to-contain-worsening-covid-outbreak
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/c9369f062f6b3f90b473e461e89b92180605d409/0_70_3500_2101/master/3500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Macau shuts all casinos in bid to contain worsening Covid outbreak
    More than 30 closed for a week – with extension thought likely – and dozens of city zones locked down in gambling hub. Macau has shut all its casinos for the first time in more than two years as authorities struggle to contain the worst coronavirus outbreak yet in the world’s biggest gambling hub.The city’s 30-plus casinos, along with other non-essential businesses, will shut for one week from Monday and people have been ordered to stay at home. Police would monitor flows of people outside, the government said, and stringent punishments would be imposed for those who disobeyed.Hospitals, pharmacies, supermarkets and fresh food markets are some of the essential services that can remain open.More than 30 zones in the city that have been deemed high risk are now under lockdown, meaning no one is allowed to enter or exit for at least five days. While the government said it was not imposing a citywide lockdown, the stringent measures mean Macau is effectively closed.Macau adheres to China’s “zero-Covid” policy that aims to stamp out all outbreaks, running counter to a global trend of trying to coexist with the virus.Casinos were last shut in Macau in February 2020 for 15 days.The government had previously been hesitant to close casinos due to its mandate to protect jobs. The industry employs most of the population directly or indirectly and accounts for more than 80% of government revenues.Casinos owned by Sands China, Wynn Macau, SJM Holdings, Galaxy Entertainment, Melco Resorts and MGM Resorts have been effectively shut for the past few weeks, with no gamblers and minimal staffing as per government requirements for people to work from home.Analysts said it was likely that the suspension could be extended by another few weeks, with a recovery in gaming revenue unlikely until the end of the third or fourth quarter.“Even if the outbreak in Macau gets under control, it will likely be another few weeks before Macau-Zhuhai can remove quarantine requirements,” said Terry Ng, an analyst at Daiwa Capital Markets in Hong Kong.Frustration is mounting at the government’s handling of the outbreak. Some residents have got into fights at testing centres while others have had to queue for more than 20 hours to access healthcare facilities.Residents will be required to take part in mass Covid tests four times this week as the government attempts to cut transmission chains.Residents have already been tested six times since mid June and are expected to do rapid antigen tests daily.More than 90% of Macau’s 600,000 residents are fully vaccinated against Covid but this is the first time the city has had to grapple with the fast-spreading Omicron variant.Authorities have added two hotels in popular casino resorts to be used as Covid medical facilities as they try to increase capacity to handle the surge of infections.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#sante#macau#confinement#zerocovid#omicron#depistage#vaccination#quarantaine#hongkong#mobilite#frontiere#casino#economie

  • Priti Patel’s plan to end Channel crossings in disarray as navy threatens to ‘walk away’

    Official figures reveal that number of refugees crossing in small boats has doubled since military brought in

    The Royal Navy is threatening to “walk away” from Boris Johnson and Priti Patel’s plan to stem the number of boats carrying asylum seekers across the Channel as official data shows how spectacularly the policy has backfired.

    Defence chiefs are said to be fed up with trying to enact the prime minister and home secretary’s rapidly imploding plan of using the military to control small boats in the Channel.

    Ministry of Defence data shows crossings have close to doubled since the military was given “primacy” over the issue from mid-April compared with the first three months of this year.

    Patel and Johnson were warned that deploying the Royal Navy would be likely to increase the number of crossings but ignored expert advice because, according to internal sources, they wanted to appear tough.

    One former defence minister told the Observer that their miscalculation had guaranteed the navy was effectively providing an “efficient taxi service” for asylum seekers.

    Meanwhile, senior Home Office sources have admitted the UK could receive up to 60,000 people by small boat this year – double last year’s record – with another 20,000 arriving by different routes, undermining the credibility of Patel, who has made reducing crossings her priority.

    Patel will be grilled by the home affairs select committee this Wednesday on Channel crossings, the lack of safe, legal passage to the UK and her Rwanda asylum plan. The government has spent significant sums trying to remove asylum seekers to east Africa, but has yet to deport a single person.

    Defence chiefs hope Johnson’s resignation is an opportunity to scrap the Channel initiative as it also ties up resources at a time of escalating international security threats. Tobias Ellwood, Conservative chair of the influential defence committee, which has completed a damning inquiry into the use of the military in the Channel, said: “I know the MoD really wants to walk away from this, wants this to conclude. There’ll be less political pressure now. The prime minister is going.”

    The former soldier added: “From my personal perspective, I can say this is a complete waste of naval time. The navy is already overstretched.”

    John Spellar, the Labour vice-chair of the defence committee and a former defence minister, said the scheme had effectively reduced the navy to a “taxi service”.

    Spellar added: “As is now demonstrated, it is not achieving any significant improvement in the situation, but it’s embroiling the military in a task for which they are not suited and which is potentially reputationally damaging.”

    Their committee has heard evidence from naval commanders that the use of navy assets would, far from being a deterrent, make the crossing safer and therefore more attractive to small boats.

    This Tuesday, the armed forces minister James Heappey will be questioned by the committee over the operation’s predicted and actual lack of operational effectiveness.

    His appearance comes after ministers and officials from the Ministry of Defence and the Home Office refused to give evidence to the defence committee’s inquiry. When the Home Office and MoD were asked by the Observer to explain the legal basis for the military’s involvement in the Channel under so-called Operation Isotrope, neither would answer.

    It is also understood that the national security council, the main forum for collective discussion of the government’s objectives for national security, was not consulted before Isotrope was announced.

    MoD data shows a clear increase in migrants crossing in small boats.

    In May, 2,871 migrants were apprehended crossing the Channel by small boat compared with 1,627 in May 2021, a 75% increase. Similarly, during the first three months of 2022, 4,540 people were detected arriving by small boats compared with 7,432 during the last half of April, May and June after the MoD took over.

    Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said the use of the navy had been proved to be futile. He said: “It is also expensive and demonstrates how the government is obsessed with control over both compassion and competence.

    “Prime ministers since Churchill have always given people fleeing persecution and bloodshed a fair hearing on UK soil. Using the military to repel them and seeking to expel them to Rwanda is a nasty and brutish response.”

    The MoD said: “As part of the government’s efforts to tackle illegal migration, the Ministry of Defence took primacy for the operational response to small-boat migration in the Channel in April.

    “The armed forces are supplementing Border Force assets, expertise and experience and providing operational oversight and coordination of maritime operations. This arrangement is likely to remain in place until early 2023.”

    A Home Office spokesperson said: “The government is united in tackling illegal migration and saving lives, to suggest otherwise is misleading and incorrect.

    “No one should be putting their lives at risk in the hands of people-smuggling gangs by getting into a small boat to cross the dangerous Channel.

    “The government’s new plan for immigration is the most comprehensive reform of the asylum system and will ensure we support those in genuine need while preventing abuse and deterring illegal entry to the UK.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/09/priti-patels-plan-to-end-channel-crossings-in-disarray-as-navy-threaten

    #Manche #UK #Angleterre #frontières #asile #migrations #réfugiés #armée #Royal_Navy #résistance #inefficacité #chiffres #statistiques #traversées

  • #Sri_Lanka protests: thousands storm president’s residence in Colombo | Sri Lanka | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/09/sri-lanka-protests-thousands-storm-presidents-residence-colombo

    “I have never experienced such a widespread people’s uprising,” said Fernando. “There was such a sense of achievement when people entered the president’s house, and his secretariat. These are all places maintained in luxury by people’s money at a time when the government claims that there isn’t enough money to give medicine, to give food, to give fuel. So it’s very politically significant they have been reclaimed by the public.”

  • Maître Pandaï sur Twitter
    https://twitter.com/Panda31808732/status/1543699883512811520
    https://www.jpost.com/health-and-wellness/article-711033

    Les scientifiques surveillent BA.2.75, détecté pour la première fois en Inde début juin (9 mutations sur S).

    « Depuis, le variant a été trouvé en Australie, au Canada, au Japon, en Allemagne, en Nouvelle Zélande, au Royaume-Uni et aux États-Unis »

    https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/3-new-ba-2-variants-found-may-have-role-in-ongoing-surge-experts/articleshow/92640918.cms

    D’après un scientifique de l’INSACOG en Inde, BA.2.74, BA.2.75 et BA.2.76 sont plus compétitifs que BA.5.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/03/uk-health-chiefs-brace-for-bumpy-ride-amid-fears-over-covid-wave

    En Angleterre, on s’attend à un pic BA.5 supérieur aux pics BA.1 et BA.2.

    • Il y a de quoi souhaiter un vaccin polyvalent, un vaccin nasal. Pour ce que j’ai vu sur des comptes touiteure attentifs et informés, dans les deux cas, il n’y a pas d’essai annoncé avant fin 2022. Une bonne surprise peut-elle arriver ? no sé.

      quant au « refus d’agir », il est manifeste et pour réussir à rater, on casse du thermomètre (qui se souvient des prélèvements d’eaux usées comme outil de mesure de la prévalence ?), et on refuse d’en fabriquer

      Covid-19 : pourquoi le pic de contamination de la septième vague est si difficile à prévoir
      https://www.francetvinfo.fr/sante/maladie/coronavirus/covid-19-pourquoi-le-pic-de-contamination-de-la-septieme-vague-est-si-d

      il n’existe pas de projections pour cette vague

      Samuel Alizon, directeur de recherche au CNRS, rappelle à franceinfo que "personne ne peut prévoir le futur" et que les spécialistes ne peuvent qu’élaborer "des scénarios pour capturer le champ des possibles". Il souligne que cela a été fait avec succès, en France, pour la vague liée au sous-variant BA.2, qui a sévi en mars. Mais en réalité, aucun scénario n’aurait encore été établi à ce jour pour la nouvelle montée épidémique liée aux nouveaux variants BA.4 et BA.5, explique à franceinfo l’épidémiologiste Mircea Sofonea, qui travaille avec Samuel Alizon au sein de l’équipe ETE, à Montpellier.

      "Il s’agit de la première vague en France pour laquelle nous n’avons pas de projection."

      Mircea Sofonea, épidémiologiste à franceinfo
      Cette équipe est l’un des centres de recherche français les plus en pointe depuis le début de la pandémie. Jusqu’à encore récemment, ETE publiait régulièrement des modélisations à partir des données hospitalières afin d’anticiper la date et la hauteur des pics épidémiques de Sars-CoV-2 en France. Mais ce travail n’a pas été effectué pour cette septième vague. Les chercheurs regrettent un manque de moyens. "Je passe une partie importante de mon temps à répondre à des appels à projets pour obtenir simplement les moyens de faire de la recherche", regrette Mircea Sofonea, qui affirme avoir essuyé plusieurs refus ces derniers mois auprès d’organismes comme l’Agence nationale de la recherche, qui finance les recherches publiques en France.

      Samuel Alizon juge lui aussi que "la principale difficulté actuelle" concernant les projections de la septième vague réside dans "le manque de soutien matériel pour nos équipes et le désintérêt des autorités". "Seule la Région Occitanie et l’université de Montpellier ont soutenu notre travail constant de projection des besoins hospitaliers", précise Mircea Sofonea.

      L’absence de données fiables, locales et actualisées est également mise en cause. “La dernière étude que nous avons en France sur les lieux et les circonstances de contamination, menée par l’équipe d’Arnaud Fontanet à l’Institut Pasteur, date d’août 2021. Or depuis, le contexte sanitaire – variants, mesures et comportements – a changé", s’alarme Mircea Sofonea.

      De son côté, l’Ecole des hautes études en santé publique (EHESP) explique à franceinfo "qu’aucune projection ayant vocation à être rendue publique n’est réalisée pour le moment" par ses épidémiologistes. A l’Inserm, "on continue à y travailler mais à ce stade la situation ne nous permet pas d’avoir des projections", reconnaît la directrice de recherche Vittoria Colliza auprès de franceinfo. Enfin, à l’institut Pasteur, "des analyses sont en cours" mais "elles ne sont pas encore publiées".

      #vaccin #covid-19