Times of Suriname

Israel announces “traffic light” plan to contain COVID-19 spread

-

JERUSALEM - Israel’s Corona Cabinet has approved a “traffic light” plan to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s, Israel’s Prime Minister’s Office and the Ministry of Health said in a joint statement released Sunday night. According to the statement, coronaviru­s restrictio­ns will be set according to local authoritie­s’ classifica­tion of four levels: red, orange, yellow and green, depending on the extent of morbidity. Each city or town will receive a grade between 0 and 10 according to the weekly morbidity rate. An authority whose average grade is above 7.5, with the highest morbidity, will be defined as a red area. One graded between 6 and 7.5 will be defined as an orange area, one with an average grade between 4.5 and 6 will be a yellow, and a local authority with an average grade lower than 4.5 will be defined as a green area. Accordingl­y, in red areas, for example, gatherings will be limited to 20 people outdoors and 10 people indoors, while in green areas gatherings of up to 250 people outside and 100 people indoors will be allowed. The program will take effect only on Sept. 6. (Xinhua)

TAIPEI - Politician­s, media and experts in Taiwan have reacted strongly against the Taiwan authority’s decision to ease restrictio­ns on pork and beef imports from the United States. The opposition Kuomintang (KMT) said in a statement Sunday that the decision did not go through full debate and ignored the policy’s challenges to farmers’ interests and risks on food safety. The Taiwan authority announced on Aug. 28 that it will set standards for ractopamin­e residue in imported pork to allow imports of such meat and open its market to US beef for cattle aged over 30 months. The use of ractopamin­e in pork has been banned in Taiwan in wake of the risks it may pose to human health while US beef for cattle aged over 30 months has been barred for fear of mad-cow disease. Years ago many politician­s of the Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP), including the island’s current leader Tsai Ingwen, had openly and fiercely voiced against the imports of US pork containing ractopamin­e but now they abandoned their stance so easily in exchange of political interests, the KMT statement said.

The DPP’s changing stance on imported meats is another example that it has tried to deceive Taiwan people on one hand and fawn on the United States on the other hand, said a statement from the office of Ma Ying-jeou, the island’s former leader. The move had gone fully against the DPP’s previous stance on US imported meats and the only explanatio­n of its motive seemed to be yielding to US pressure, said Prof. Lin Chu-chia, with the Department of Economics of Chengchi University, in an open letter.

“Those DPP politician­s who once vowed to defend the interests of local pig farmers now are all silent,” wrote the Taipei-based United Daily News in its editorial Sunday. “It proved that the new decision is nothing to do with scientific standards nor people’s welfare but the DPP’s interests.” The cities of Taipei and Taichung as well as Yunlin county announced that they will continue to ban the use of ractopamin­e in pork and forbid the sales of such meat despite the recent policy.

(Xinhua)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname