Monday, December 21, 2020


Volcano erupts on Hawaii's Big Island, sends steam cloud 30,000 feet into sky



Kilauea volcano erupts

The Kilauea volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island erupted and shot a steam cloud into the atmosphere that lasted about an hour, an official with the National Weather Service said early Monday.

The eruption began late Sunday within the within Halema’uma’u crater, the U.S. Geological Survey said. The volcano is located within Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

Tom Birchard, a senior forecaster with the National Weather Service in Hawaii, said a new lava flow interacted with a pool of water inside the crater and that led to a short-lived but a fairly vigorous eruption.

All the water evaporated out of the lake and a steam cloud shot up about 30,000 feet into the atmosphere, Birchard said.

An advisory was issued by the National Weather Service in Honolulu, warning of fallen ash from the volcano. Excessive exposure to ash is an eye and respiratory irritant, it said. The agency later said the eruption was easing and a “low-level steam cloud” was lingering in the area.

By 1 a.m., USGS officials told Hawaii News Now that there were reported lava fountains shooting about 165 feet into the sky.

David Phillips, a Hawaiian Volcano Observatory spokesman, said the agency was monitoring the situation.

"We will send out further notifications on Kilauea and other Hawaiian volcanoes as we observe changes,” he said.

A magnitude 4.4 earthquake hit about an hour after the volcano began erupting.

The USGS said it received more than 500 reports of people who felt the earthquake but significant damage to buildings or structures was not expected.

Kilauea erupted in 2018, destroying more than 700 homes and spewing enough lava to fill 320,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools. An area more than half the size of Manhattan was buried in up to 80 feet of now-hardened lava.

 



USGS Volcanoes🌋
USGSVolcanoes
Video from W rim of the caldera just before midnight. As of December 21 at 1:30 a.m. HST, the growing lava lake has almost reached the level of the lowest down-dropped block that formed during the 2018 collapse events. Over the past 2 hours, the lake has risen by ~10 m (32 ft). pic.twitter.com/Qbx1d6hbq4
Twitter
COH Civil Defense
CivilDefenseHI
The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory reports an eruption at the Halemaumau Crater of the Kilauea Volcano. Trade winds will push any embedded ash toward the Southwest. Fallout is likely in the Kau District in Wood Valley, Pahala, Naalehu and Ocean View. Stay indoors to avoid Exposu
Twitter
USGS Volcanoes🌋
USGSVolcanoes
Lava is cascaded into the summit water lake, boiling off the water and forming a new lava lake. The northern fissure, pictured, was producing the tallest lava fountain at roughly 50 m (165 ft), and all lava was contained within Halemaʻumaʻu crater in Kīlauea caldera. pic.twitter.com/4uEEL7qxOT
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Hawaii Volcanoes NPS
Volcanoes_NPS
Happening now: a new eruption of Kīlauea inside Halemaʻumaʻu See live webcams inside Halemaʻumaʻu, courtesy of USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory: go.nps.gov/1o1nze pic.twitter.com/bsNmt3ZTUg
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WHO says no need for major alarm over new coronavirus strain

GENEVA (REUTERS) - The World Health Organisation cautioned against major alarm over a new, highly infectious variant of the coronavirus that has emerged in Britain, saying this was a normal part of a pandemic’s evolution.

WHO officials even put a positive light on the discovery of the new strains that prompted a slew of alarmed countries to impose travel restrictions on Britain and South Africa, saying new tools to track the virus were working.

“We have to find a balance. It’s very important to have transparency, it’s very important to tell the public the way it is, but it’s also important to get across that this is a normal part of virus evolution,” WHO emergencies chief Mike Ryan told an online briefing.

“Being able to track a virus this closely, this carefully, this scientifically in real time is a real positive development for global public health, and the countries doing this type of surveillance should be commended.”

Citing data from Britain, WHO officials said they had no evidence that the variant made people sicker or was more deadly than existing strains of Covid-19, although it did seem to spread more easily.

Countries imposing travel curbs were acting out of an abundance of caution while they assess risks, Ryan said, adding: “That is prudent. But it is also important that everyone recognises that this happens, these variants occur.”

WHO officials said coronavirus mutations had so far been much slower than with influenza and that even the new UK variant remained much less transmissible than other diseases like mumps.

They said vaccines developed to combat Covid-19 should handle the new variants as well, although checks were under way to ensure this was the case.

“So far, even though we have seen a number of changes, a number of mutations, none has made a significant impact on either the susceptibility of the virus to any of the currently used therapeutics, drugs or the vaccines under development and one hopes that will continue to be the case,” WHO Chief Scientist Soumya Swaminathan told the briefing.

The WHO said it expects to get more details within days or weeks on the potential impact of the highly transmissible new coronavirus strain.


FARMING ON THE ROOFTOPS OF THE CITY STATE
Sip on farm-to-table drinks at a rooftop garden, grow sweet potatoes and more at these Singapore urban farming events

PHOTOS: KEVIN LIM, EDIBLE GARDEN CITY, CITY SPROUTS


Clara Lock
Travel Correspondent
PUBLISHED DEC 21, 2020


The Sundowner: New lounge-cum-urban-farm in Siglap

The Sundowner founder Clarence Chua, 37, with red dwarf honey bees at his urban farm atop a Siglap shophouse on Nov 8, 2020. 
ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM

There is a sense of raw, do-it-yourself whimsy at The Sundowner, a lounge-cum-urban-farm atop a Siglap shophouse that opened last month.

To enter, guests must pick their way through a shallow pond that brims with aquatic plants, balancing on rocks that wobble just a fraction.

Then, there is the rope-and-basket pulley system that owner Clarence Chua devised to haul up food deliveries, and lower bundles of Thai and sweet basil from his rooftop garden in return.

READ MORE HERE


Wartime food sustainability workshop by Edible Garden City and Sentosa


Participants taking part in the Wartime Food and Sustainability workshop. PHOTO: EDIBLE GARDEN CITY

For those who have lived through the wartime years, crops such as sweet potato and tapioca can still conjure up memories of scarcity and hunger.

But now, these tubers could play a small part in realising Singapore's food-security goals.

That was what urban farming social enterprise Edible Garden City wanted to highlight in its Wartime Food and Sustainability workshop, held in collaboration with Sentosa Development Corporation (SDC).

READ MORE HERE


Farm Day Out at Sprout Hub

Sprout Hub's bi-monthly Farm Day Out is a chance for the public to interact with about 36 commercial and hobbyist farmers, who rent plots in greenhouses. PHOTO: CITY SPROUTS

Urban farming has taken root here in recent years, with hobbyists growing herbs along corridors, in community gardens and soon even on HDB carpark rooftops. If you are not sure where to start, City Sprouts' bi-monthly Farm Day Out may offer some inspiration.

Organised by social enterprise City Sprouts at its Henderson Road farm Sprout Hub, it is a chance for the public to interact with about 35 commercial and hobbyist farmers who rent plots in greenhouses.

While the farm welcomes visitors daily, it is only during the open house that most farmers will be there to introduce their crops and growing methods.

READ MORE HERE

OPINION
Covid-19 vaccine
Forum: Those who live with healthcare workers should also get priority

MORE IMPORTANT THAN THE 1% 
OR THEIR POLITICIANS

Nurses outside the Singapore National Eye Centre 
on March 7, 2020.PHOTO: ST FILE

While the Covid-19 vaccines that have been approved prevent disease, there is no evidence to show that they prevent transmission.

However, while healthcare workers will be given priority for vaccination, those who live with them will not, despite also being at heightened risk compared with the general population.

Vaccinated healthcare workers are also more likely to be asymptomatic carriers of the virus, putting those they live with at risk if they are not vaccinated as well.

I hope it can be recognised that those living with healthcare workers bear hidden risks and should also be given priority for vaccination.

Shannon Lee Yu Han Chaluangco



SINGAPORE
Food bank vending machines 
for needy 
in Zhenghua

Mr Jacky Tham (left) redeemed coffee and cooked food from an automated food bank vending machine yesterday. 
PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO

Liew Ai Xin
PUBLISHED 5 HOURS AGO

Mr Jacky Tham, 73, and his wife, Madam Mary Ng, 71, got more than their usual round of exercise and activities at the Fei Yue Senior Activity Centre near their home in Senja Road yesterday morning.

With the help of volunteers, they also redeemed coffee and packets of cooked food from an automated food bank vending machine.

The vending machines are part of a new initiative launched by local organisations to supplement current ones seeking to ease food insecurity for households and seniors who live in rental blocks or one-to two-room studio apartments around Senja Road and the Zhenghua district.

Eligible residents will get a card giving them $50 in credits per month from non-profit group The Food Bank Singapore, which they can use to redeem dried or cooked food from three vending machines located in Senja Road.

Founded in 2012, The Food Bank Singapore serves 300,000 people through their network of 370 non-governmental organisations which seek to alleviate food insecurity in Singapore.

The cooked food packets, valued at three credits, are prepared by an external caterer and flash-frozen for hygiene purposes. Residents can either heat the food packets in a microwave oven near the machines or take them home to thaw later.

The dried foodstuff, valued at two credits a portion, is collected by The Food Bank Singapore from its donors, which include supermarkets and schools.


The vending machines are part of a new initiative to help those who live in rental blocks or one-to two-room studio apartments around Senja Road and the Zhenghua district. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO


Mr Edward Chia, MP for Holland-Bukit Timah GRC's Zhenghua ward, said he heard through the grapevine that The Food Bank Singapore was going to roll out more automated vending machines following a pilot last year.

But, according to the non-profit group's co-founder Nichol Ng, 42, it faced challenges in finding appropriate locations "within view of people and... (with) wiring and power points".

Mr Chia reached out to Ms Ng to ask if the machines could be placed in Zhenghua. They then spoke to Fei Yue Senior Activity Centre, which agreed to house the machines near the centre and provide volunteers to restock the supply of dried goods and assist seniors in using the machines.

Zhenghua Citizens' Consultative Committee also pitched in to help coordinate with other organisations in setting up the machines.

Zhenghua Constituency Office has sent more than 500 letters to eligible households so far.

This pilot will run until Dec 31 next year, with a review by the organisations after that.

Mr Chia said the review will look at the redemption rate of the monthly $50 credits. "It is a lot of effort by different organisations. Our whole objective is to serve our resource-low families... and we want this to be fully utilised by our residents," he added.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 22, 2020, with the headline 'Food bank vending machines for needy in Zhenghua'. 


 “plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose."

   
















Taiwanese 'trashion' designer turns waste into clothes
Taiwanese designer Wang Li-ling (far left) thanking guests for coming to her fashion show in Taipei last Friday. The clothes she designed, which are made from upcycling old wires and bolts from the power industry, drew a warm reception at the show. PHOTO: REUTERS

PUBLISHED5 HOURS AGO

TAIPEI • Inspiration for high fashion can come from strange places.

For one Taiwanese designer, it comes from upcycling old wires and bolts from the power industry.

Ms Wang Li-ling, 36, scours dumps, picking up old bits of metal and wires from Taiwan's main electricity supplier to add flair to her clothes.


"For example, there's quite a lot of material from Taipower that they have phased out," Ms Wang said.

"These materials have been used for more than 20 or 30 years. At least more than 10 years. So their colour or the mottled feeling they give you is different from new material."

The wires and other materials are stitched to dresses and other items of clothing, giving them a futuristic feeling. They drew a warm reception at a fashion show in Taipei last Friday.

"(This) is my first time seeing a Taiwan fashion designer turning recycled things into new ideas," said Taiwanese lifestyle influencer Andrew Chen, who was at the show.

"Everyone knows the fashion industry is about fast fashion. And it is wasteful. It expanded my horizons today that I saw how to use old materials to create something new, and then present it with creativity."

Taiwan has an up-and-coming fashion scene, and its designers are starting to make an impact on the world stage.

Though many global events were shuttered or moved online owing to the pandemic, Taiwan's Taipei Fashion Week in October featured live shows - a testament to the island's success in controlling the virus' spread.


Ms Wang inspecting a dress at her studio in Taipei earlier this month. The designer stitches wires and other materials to dresses, giving them a futuristic feeling. PHOTO: REUTERS


REUTERS

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 22, 2020, with the headline 'Taiwanese 'trashion' designer turns waste into clothes'. 





The vaccine news is great, but Big Pharma is still fooling us

Heroic work went into the development of the coronavirus vaccines. But that does not mean this industry deserves your affection.

Stephen Buranyi

A Kenyan schoolgirl walking along a railway line in a Nairobi slum after schools partially reopened in October. Pharmaceutical corporations are largely monopolising access to vaccines, which means that millions in the global south may not get the life-saving shot for months. PHOTO: REUTERS

PUBLISHED5 HOURS AGO

It's about as near as science gets to a miracle: A coronavirus vaccine has arrived - and the main reason is that mRNA vaccines, a previously untested technology, appear to work better than almost anyone had hoped.

As recently as this summer, many analysts were pushing their predictions for a vaccine into the autumn of 2021, in line with the timeline of traditional treatments. If these new vaccines perform as well in the wild as they have in clinical trials, the world will remember it as a victory perhaps greater than Salk and Sabin against polio. If this new type of vaccine also goes on to work against other viruses, it will mark an epochal advance in vaccinology, closer to the discoveries of Louis Pasteur and Edward Jenner.

But a strange thing has happened in our celebration of this scientific triumph. While we remember those historic advances as the work of individual scientists or laboratories, the vaccines against Covid-19 are being written instead as a victory for pharmaceutical companies.

The rule in press coverage seems to be that the biggest brand involved gets top credit. And so, every day now there are stories about the Pfizer vaccine (a collaboration between Pfizer and the German biotech company BioNTech); the Moderna vaccine (a partnership between the US National Institutes of Health and Moderna); and the AstraZeneca vaccine (a front-running non-mRNA candidate, in fact created by scientists at the University of Oxford and developed and distributed by AstraZeneca).

It's an incredible public relations coup for an industry desperate to rescue its image. Just last month, Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty and agreed to penalties of more than US$8 billion (S$10.7 billion) after being prosecuted for its role in America's horrific opioid crisis. Pfizer set an earlier record for a drug industry fraud settlement in 2009 at US$2.3 billion, in a case over its fraudulent marketing of a painkiller, an antipsychotic and other drugs for conditions for which it hadn't received approval.

The turpitude of the pharmaceutical industry is so commonplace that it has become part of the cultural wallpaper. The screenwriters of the 1993 movie The Fugitive knew they could find a perfectly plausible villain to menace Harrison Ford in a faceless drug company out to cover up its malfeasance. (The film was a hit.)


In John le Carre's 2001 novel The Constant Gardener, a British diplomat uncovering a pharma giant testing dangerous drugs on poor Africans is similarly easy to swallow: Its plotline echoes a real case involving Pfizer in Nigeria. (The company has denied any wrongdoing and settled out of court the suit brought by the families of children who died during the testing.)


And yet, since the pharmaceutical industry stepped in with the vaccines, generations worth of ill will appear to be melting away. Last year, Gallup polling had the pharmaceutical industry ranked the most disliked in America, below both big oil and big government. By this September - even before the vaccines arrived - the industry's approval rating was already improving.


This isn't lost on the industry itself. A financial analyst recently told this paper that Pfizer's involvement in the coronavirus pandemic was about "as much public relations as it is a financial return". In April, the chief executive of Eli Lilly, the company that put out an antibody therapy for Covid-19, told investors that the pandemic offered "a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reset the reputation of the industry".

We've all been hoping for a vaccine for so long, the moment the medicine is finally being delivered, it seems almost perverse to question the name on the vial. But the industry isn't our saviour. Each of these vaccine candidates is a complex scientific project with many collaborators - and a substantial level of state support. Giving the industry not just plaudits but also control over the vaccines themselves would be a mistake.

Even amid this public relations coup, pharmaceutical corporations can't help but revert to type. They will profit handsomely from these vaccines, even when they claim to be acting selflessly. And they largely are monopolising access, which means that millions in the global south may not get the life-saving vaccines for months.

We've all been hoping for a vaccine for so long, the moment the medicine is finally being delivered, it seems almost perverse to question the name on the vial. But the industry isn't our saviour. Each of these vaccine candidates is a complex scientific project with many collaborators - and a substantial level of state support. Giving the industry not just plaudits but also control over the vaccines themselves would be a mistake.


The mRNA vaccines in which people are now staking so much hope wouldn't exist without public support through every step of their development.

Moderna is not a pharma giant. In fact, it is, in a way, a home-grown success story. The company, founded in 2010 after a group of American university professors acquired support from a venture capitalist, has been working on this technology for years. But Moderna's original work rests on earlier discoveries by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania who have received funding for their research from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Once the race for a vaccine began, governments supercharged their efforts. Moderna has received about US$2.5 billion in federal research and supply funding over the past year from the government's Operation Warp Speed programme, as well as shared technology the NIH had developed for previous coronavirus vaccines. The NIH also provided extensive logistical support, overseeing clinical trials for tens of thousands of patients.

Pfizer, meanwhile, likes to say that it eschews federal money to maintain independence. But it is co-producing and distributing a vaccine from BioNTech, a company that received more than US$440 million in funding from the German federal government. The vaccine is based on BioNTech's technology, with Pfizer stepping in to speed up development and manufacturing.

Pfizer had never produced an mRNA vaccine, but it retrofitted several factories to do so. In effect, it traded its immense capital and logistics network for branding rights. Moreover, the US government claims that by placing a nearly US$2 billion order before the vaccine's final clinical trials started, it removed significant financial risks for Pfizer.

The development of these vaccines involves a patchwork of academic research, biotech firms, public institutions, public money and Big Pharma. This has always been the case, but in the past, governments and academic scientists were able to have far more control over their contributions. Both Salk and Sabin made their polio vaccine discoveries patent-free. At the time, Pfizer was among the main manufacturers and distributors of the Sabin vaccine - making a tidy profit for providing this service, but rightly acknowledged as a small part of a larger whole.

What do these kinds of partnership get us today? The US government negotiated bulk pricing for both the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, US$15.25 to US$19.50 per dose over several different contracts. This is significantly less than the US$25 to US$37 Moderna says it will charge governments in the rest of the world, but analysts suggest that even US$19.50 could yield Pfizer a 60 per cent to 80 per cent profit margin. Moderna has announced it won't enforce its patents, but the company hasn't forgotten about the profit opportunities.

Whenever it looks as if we're getting a good deal, it turns out to be an even better one for the drug companies. Even ostensibly selfless actions might very well turn out to work to the industry's benefit.

True, Oxford's deal with AstraZeneca included a commitment to at-cost pricing for developing countries for now. But the Financial Times has reported that an agreement the company has signed with at least one manufacturer indicated that this particular deal could end as soon as July. (The company has said it will seek expert guidance as to when it can declare an end to the pandemic.) And AstraZeneca's deal with Oxford, according to the Financial Times, still allows for a healthy profit margin of up to 20 per cent.

This isn't surprising. The ship has long sailed on the idea that the giants of American capitalism would help anyone without extracting a fee. Even in this disaster, even after the untold sacrifices that millions of ordinary people have made. The real issue is not the price - we'll pay, obviously - it is about access.

With control over the production of these vaccines, these companies will largely provide them on their own schedule, using their own factories or licensed producers - while other facilities around the world sit idle. Governments will almost certainly order more of the approved vaccines in the weeks and months to come, but the production capacity for each company is limited. Companies should pledge not only to waive their patents but also to share all their technical knowledge so that other manufacturers can help produce the much-needed vaccines.

As it stands, most people outside high-risk categories likely won't get vaccinated until "later in 2021", according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. Many countries in the global south are expected to be able to vaccinate at most 20 per cent of their populations by the end of next year. Project the current daily death toll onto that timeline and despair.

It doesn't have to be this way. The especially galling thing is that mRNA vaccines were supposed to be a disruptive, liberatory technology. They can be produced faster and more simply, in smaller and cheaper facilities - basic laboratories, even - compared with traditional vaccines. Scientists envisioned a world where vaccines could be produced quickly, anywhere, for a small fraction of the traditional vaccines' cost.

That was before the industry stepped in.

Nations across the global south are demanding a suspension of patent rights for coronavirus vaccines, and last month, American academics and activists - including Ms Chelsea Clinton on behalf of the Clinton Foundation, hardly a revolutionary outfit - called for a similar plan, including sharing patents on vaccines and allowing worldwide manufacturing to begin. This would probably mean not just poorer nations but you - the person reading this - would get vaccinated faster because more vaccine doses would be produced. None of this is likely to happen.

I recall feeling, at the start of this pandemic, both horror at the unfolding calamity, and also a small sense of hope that as in other times of hardship, people would find ways to change the world for the better. There was talk of community support, mutual aid and the rediscovery of the positive powers of the state to protect its citizens. Much of that has dimmed now, and it often seems that we simply want relief - to go back to the way the world was before, and as soon as possible.

We have to get back to that place. Yet this may be the best chance in our lifetimes to break the hold of an industry that, until recently, was rightly vilified. The public is following these developments closely, and the state support that underwrites pharmaceutical profits couldn't be more obvious: Operation Warp Speed alone has dispensed over US$10 billion to the industry.

Pay it to make the vaccine, sure. That's a service. But we shouldn't be afraid to demand more: Public support should mean a public vaccine, one that reaches people as quickly as possible - profitable or not. The pharmaceutical industry wouldn't be able to rake in its profits and restore its reputation without funding that comes from our tax dollars. We shouldn't let Big Pharma forget it.

NYTIMES

• Stephen Buranyi is a science journalist in London and a visiting lecturer at the European Business School.


Everyday War Crimes: Israeli PM Netanyahu Gets Covid Vaccine, Squatters Get Vaccine, But Not Occupied Palestinians

Vaccines will be supplied to the hundreds of thousands of government-backed illegal Israeli squatters on Palestinian land in the West Bank, but not to the indigenous Palestinian population.


 Published on Sunday, December 20, 2020

"There are roughly 3 million Palestinians in the Palestinian West Bank, so their 25 deaths are the equivalent of 2,750 American deaths daily, one of the worst rates in the world," Cole writes. (Photo: AFP/YouTube Screengrab)

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu received a coronavirus shot on Saturday. He has pledged that the 9 million Israelis will be vaccinated in a matter of months.

Inside Israel, Netanyahu was widely thought to have mishandled the pandemic, and it hurt his popularity as the country goes yet again to the ballot box. He is no doubt hoping that the vaccine will save him. If he loses the next election, he could well go to prison on current corruption charges for which he is being tried.

Vaccines will be supplied to the hundreds of thousands of government-backed illegal Israeli squatters on Palestinian land in the West Bank, but not to the indigenous Palestinian population.

Netanyahu’s government militarily occupies 5 million stateless Palestinians. He has worked with the Mad President Trump to kneecap all international aid to the Palestinians.

Under the Geneva Convention and the Rome Statute, the Occupying power is responsible for the health and well-being of the Occupied peoples, and failing to look after it is a war crime.

Middle East Eye reports:

Israel’s Deputy Health Minister Yoav Kisch told Kan Radio that Israel was working to attain a surplus of vaccines for Israelis and that “should we see that Israel’s demands have been met and we have additional capability, we will certainly consider helping the Palestinian Authority.

Just consider that it is 1941 and Mussolini is occupying the city of Nice in France. And there is a big pneumonia outbreak. (Pneumonia used to be the third leading cause of death). And Mussolini says, after we take care of all the Aryan Italians, we might think about giving sulfapyridine to the occupied population in Nice, way down the road. In the meantime, the French will just have to die.

What would that sound like to you? That’s the equivalent of what Kisch just said.

The policy enunciated by Kisch is a war crime. The 1949 Geneva Convention on the treatment of occupied populations, which was intended to stop people from acting as the Axis leaders did, has this to say (Article 56):

To the fullest extent of the means available to it, the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring and maintaining, with the cooperation of national and local authorities, the medical and hospital establishments and services, public health and hygiene in the occupied territory, with particular reference to the adoption and application of the prophylactic and preventive measures necessary to combat the spread of contagious diseases and epidemics. Medical personnel of all categories shall be allowed to carry out their duties.

Meanwhile, the spokesman for Palestine’s health ministry, Kamal Shakhri, is warning of a health care “catastrophe” this winter as coronavirus cases skyrocket toward 2,000 or possibly even 3,000 a day (the US equivalent of 220,000 to 330,000 a day– one of the worst rates in the world).

On Saturday, in the West Bank, the health department in Ramallah reported 1,750 new cases of the coronavirus and 25 deaths.

The office added, “The rate of recovery from the Corona virus in Palestine reached 80.07%, while the rate of active infections reached 18.7%, and the death rate was 0.9% of all infections.”

128 patients are in intensive care units. The bad news is that under Israeli military occupation, the West Bank has been unable to develop economically, suffering billions losses in opportunity costs. There are not that many intensive care units in Palestinian hospitals. I wrote earlier this year:

AFP reports that the two million Palestinians in Gaza only have 60 ICU or intensive care beds, and not all of them are functional. The israeli blockade, which disallows importation of many key goods, has devastated the health care system in the Strip. In Palestine over all, there are only 1.2 hospital beds per 1,000 people. Compare to Germany with 8.3 beds per thousand people.

I suspect a lot of old people are just dying undiagnosed at home.

UNICEF rushed last spring to equip 25 ICUs in the West Bank and Gaza. It isn’t enough.

There are roughly 3 million Palestinians in the Palestinian West Bank, so their 25 deaths are the equivalent of 2,750 American deaths daily, one of the worst rates in the world. If 0.9% of all infections die, and they have over half a million active cases in the territory, we can expect 5,490 to die out of the current situation. But, the situation will get worse, and apparently Israel isn’t planning to bother to get the vaccine into the West Bank for many months.

Israel continues to keep the little Gaza Strip, with a population of 2 million — half of them children — under blockade during the pandemic. California let a lot of its inmates go to avoid a penitentiary mass outbreak, but Palestinians are treated worse than California inmates. Occasionally the Israeli government has even blocked diesel for electricity. Who knows when its people will get the vaccine, or will be permitted to by its Israeli prison guards?

Juan Cole

Juan Cole teaches Middle Eastern and South Asian history at the University of Michigan. His newest book, "Muhammad: Prophet of Peace Amid the Clash of Empires" was published in 2020. He is also the author of  "The New Arabs: How the Millennial Generation Is Changing the Middle East" (2015) and "Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East" (2008).  He has appeared widely on television, radio, and on op-ed pages as a commentator on Middle East affairs, and has a regular column at Salon.com. He has written, edited, or translated 14 books and has authored 60 journal articles. 


With Perdue and Loeffler Under Fire for Shady Transactions, Warren Intros Bill to Ban Lawmakers From Trading Stock

"With U.S. senators brazenly trading stocks to profit off a raging pandemic, the Anti-Corruption and Public Integrity Act is more urgent than ever."


 Published on Saturday, December 19, 2020

Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) attends a rally on December 04, 2020 in Savannah, Georgia. 

(Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Friday reintroduced legislation that would bar members of Congress from owning or trading individual stock as two of her Republican colleagues—Georgia Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler—continue to face criticism from their Democratic runoff opponents over suspiciously well-timed transactions earlier this year.

"This legislation would dramatically improve some of the greatest systemic weaknesses in our laws and enforcement structures that allow corruption—both illegal and legal—to pervert the powers of government against the people."
—Liz Hempowicz, Project on Government Oversight

Warren and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), the lead sponsor of companion legislation in the House, alluded to the controversy surrounding Perdue and Loeffler's trades, some of which came around the time senators were receiving briefings from the White House as the coronavirus first began spreading in the United States. Faced with accusations of insider trading, Perdue and Loeffler have both denied wrongdoing.

"After nearly four years of the most corrupt president in American history and with U.S. senators brazenly trading stocks to profit off a raging pandemic, the Anti-Corruption and Public Integrity Act is more urgent than ever in order to rein in corruption, strengthen ethics, end lobbying as we know it, improve the integrity of our judiciary, reform campaign finance laws and finally ensure that we put people over profits and communities over corporations," Warren and Jayapal said in a joint statement Friday.

As the New York Times reported earlier this month, Perdue—who made an estimated 2,596 trades in a single Senate term—"purchased up to $260,000 worth of Pfizer stock between February 26 and February 28, in the early days of a market downturn. On the 28th, he issued a news release reporting that he had regularly attended briefings led by the coronavirus task force; records subsequently showed that he had bought the third tranche of Pfizer shares that same day."

Jon Ossoff, Perdue's Democratic challenger, has repeatedly called attention to the Georgia senator's prolific trading and labeled him a "crook."

"His blatant abuse of his power and privilege to enrich himself is disgraceful," Ossoff said of Perdue during a "debate" earlier this month that the Georgia senator refused to attend.

Loeffler, one of the richest members of Congress, has also come under fire for her stock trades. As Mother Jones reported last month, "On January 24, just three weeks into her Senate career, Loeffler attended a private Senate briefing by Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Dr. Robert Redfield, the head of the Centers for Disease Control, about the coronavirus threat."

"Afterward, Loeffler continued to publicly downplay the risk from the virus and its economic impact," Mother Jones noted. "But in the three weeks following the meeting, Loeffler and [her husband Jeff] Sprecher made more than 20 stock sales amounting to between $1.25 million and $3.1 million. Loeffler also bought stock in two companies that produce teleworking software."

During a debate earlier this month with Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock, Loeffler was asked directly whether she believes members of Congress should be barred from trading stock while in office.

Loeffler dodged the question, saying, "What's at stake here in this election is the American dream. That's what's under attack."

In addition to prohibiting members of Congress from owning and trading stock, Warren and Jayapal's legislation would also ban lawmakers, cabinet secretaries, federal judges, and other top government officials from serving on corporate boards; impose a lifetime ban on lobbying by former members of Congress; and overhaul the nation's campaign finance system.

"This legislation would dramatically improve some of the greatest systemic weaknesses in our laws and enforcement structures that allow corruption—both illegal and legal—to pervert the powers of government against the people," Liz Hempowicz, director of Public Policy at Project on Government Oversight, said in a statement.