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05
December

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Vice President Ma'ruf Amin urged Indonesian ulemas to prioritise boosting religious faith and economy among Indonesian Muslims rather than indulging in power and authority.

"I hope we would not indulge in power and authority because in the end, it is Allah, the Almighty God, who has the supreme authority above us," Amin noted in his opening remarks at the 25th national conference of the Islamic organisation Rabithah Alawiyah on Saturday.

Boosting religious faith and economy among Muslims is a duty that every ulema must fulfil, particularly during the globalisation era, he emphasized.

"We must partake in efforts to improve the situation with respect to two important aspects, the first one being religious faith and the second being the economy," Amin remarked.

The vice president emphasized the need to deepen religious faith to ensure that Indonesian Muslims would be protected from sinful acts prohibited by the religion.

"We must ensure that their religious faith would be unshaken and that they could defend themselves from heresy and deviation in thoughts," he stated.

Amin called on ulemas to contribute to improving the Muslims' economy to create a self-reliant Muslim populace, with stable economic conditions.

"Economic empowerment among Muslims must be continued, as the Almighty God has warned us not to let Muslims become weak," the vice president remarked.

After consolidating Muslims in brotherhood, Indonesian Muslims must also engage in brotherhood with fellow Indonesians, he remarked while drawing attention to the event's "Islamic brotherhood" theme that aligns with the conference's goal.

"Ukhuwah Islamiyah (Islamic brotherhood) is the key because without brotherhood, we will be ruined," he affirmed.

Meanwhile, Rabithah Alawiyah leader Zein bin Umar bin Smith reported that the organisation had continued its efforts focused on economic development of Muslims during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Praise be to God, we have recently partnered with several institutions, including the Ministry of Cooperatives and Small and Medium Enterprises, to distribute benefits for micro-scale enterprises in 2021," the leader stated.  (Antaranews)

04
December

FILE PHOTO: Flags of Taiwan and U.S. are placed for a meeting in Taipei, Taiwan March 27, 2018. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo - 

 

Taiwan and the United States have mutually beneficial trade relations especially in technology, and the two have "smooth" communication channels and will keep talking to each other on currency issues, Taiwan's central bank said on Saturday (Dec 4).

Taiwan, along with Vietnam, again exceeded the US Treasury's thresholds for possible currency manipulation and enhanced analysis under a 2015 trade law, but the department on Friday refrained from formally branding them as manipulators.

Responding, Taiwan's central bank reiterated the trade surplus with the United States was due to the China-U.S. trade war, which has seen companies shift production from China to avoid tariffs, and soaring tech demand from US consumers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"The expansion of the trade surplus with the United States has nothing to do with exchange rate factors," it said in a statement, repeating comments from a central bank official late Friday.

Taiwan's current account surplus has also been affected by the same factors, with domestic savings growth contributing to the surplus as Taiwanese firms increased investment at home and people were unable to travel or spend as much due to the pandemic, it added.

"For a long time, our country and the United States have maintained close and mutually beneficial bilateral trade relations, and are important partners in the technology supply chain," the central bank said.

"Communication channels between the bank and the US Treasury are smooth, and the two sides will continue to communicate on relevant issues in the future on the basis of good interaction."

The U.S. Treasury said it was working with Taiwan to develop a plan with "specific actions to address the underlying causes of Taiwan's currency undervaluation and excessive external surpluses".

The Taiwan dollar is up more than 2.5 per cent against the greenback this year, among the best-performing Asian currencies.

Taiwan's case is complicated by geopolitical pressures, including heightened military tensions with China, and the island's position as a major exporter of semiconductors that are needed to help ease a supply shortage for US manufacturers//CNA

04
December

People take coronavirus disease (COVID-19) tests at a pop-up sidewalk testing site in New York, U.S., December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid - 

 

Six more US states confirmed infections of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 on Friday (Dec 3) but the Delta strain likely remains a greater threat as winter sets in and Americans gather for the holidays, experts said.

New Jersey, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, Pennsylvania and Utah each reported their first cases of the Omicron variant on Friday. Missouri was awaiting CDC confirmation of a case involving a St Louis resident who had recently travelled within the United States.

Scientists are still investigating the impact of the highly contagious Omicron variant, which was first detected in South Africa. Early evidence has suggested it may cause milder illness than its predecessors, including Delta.

The outbreak of Omicron has made worldwide headlines and prompted political leaders to impose new COVID-19 restrictions. But the predominant US strain remains Delta, Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told a briefing at the White House.

The Utah case was discovered through ongoing genetic sequencing of positive COVID-19 samples at the state laboratory, the state's health department said on Twitter.

Nebraska had six confirmed cases, the state's health department said. Only one of the six people was vaccinated and none have needed to be hospitalized with COVID-19, the department added.

Maryland Governor Larry Hogan announced the first three cases of the Omicron variant in his state, adding that none of the three individuals was hospitalised. And in Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia man in his 30s tested positive for Omicron, city health officials said.

 

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said the state's first Omicron case had been found in a fully vaccinated woman who had recently travelled to Georgia.

 

A surge in infections could further strain US hospitals already grappling with high caseloads and fatigued staff, Dr Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University's School of Public Health, told MSNBC.

 

"I'm very worried about our healthcare system over the next few weeks and few months. I don't know how much more it can handle," he said, urging reinforcements from the National Guard and other contingency plans to bolster doctors and nurses.

 

Former FDA Commissioner Dr Scott Gottlieb said states with higher vaccination rates would likely be better protected against Omicron, saying unvaccinated people who survived Delta could find their immunity is not protective against the new variant.

 

"The risk for the future is that states that are relying on a lot of Delta infections to provide immunity to their populations ... they could be more susceptible to this new variant," Gottlieb, now a member of vaccine maker Pfizer's board, told CNBC.

Omicron has been detected in about 40 countries, including the United States, where it has also been found in California, Colorado, Hawaii, Minnesota, and New York.

The CDC said it was investigating possible cases of the Omicron variant in other US states//CNA

 

04
December

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said the fund might have to trim its forecasts for global growth due to the Omicron variant (Photo: AFP/File/Daniel LEAL) - 

The new Omicron variant of COVID-19 could slow the global economic recovery, just as the Delta strain did, IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said Friday (Dec 3).

"A new variant that may spread very rapidly can dent confidence and in that sense, we are likely to see some downgrades of our October projections for global growth," she said at a Reuters event.

In its most recent World Economic Outlook, the fund projected global growth of 5.9 per cent this year and 4.9 per cent in 2022, but the United States and other major economies suffered sharp downward revisions after the spread of the Delta variant "caused some friction", Georgieva said.

"Even before the arrival of this new variant, we were concerned that the recovery, while it continues, is losing somewhat momentum," the IMF chief said, noting that policymakers are now dealing with new issues like inflation.

The IMF's most-recent forecasts raised concerns that global supply chain issues and uneven distribution of vaccines were slowing the rebound and causing some countries to be left behind.

A surge in demand in many advanced economies coupled with shortages of key components like semiconductors has fueled a wave of prices increases.

Less than two months ago, Georgieva expressed confidence that inflation would not become a "runaway train" but on Friday she said the US Federal Reserve will have to increase interest rates in 2022, rather than in 2023, as the IMF previously predicted.

The Fed, which cut the benchmark lending rate to zero in the early days of the pandemic, already has started to pull back on its stimulus measures and has signalled it will speed up that process, which would put it in a position to lift rates off zero by mid-year.

"We do believe that the path to policy rate increases may be walked faster," Georgieva said.

Omicron has spread rapidly to at least 40 countries since it was first reported in South Africa last week, officials said, and many governments have tightened travel rules to try to keep it out.

Much remains unknown about Omicron. Researchers said it could have picked up genetic material from another virus, perhaps one that causes the common cold, which would allow it to more easily evade human immune system defences//CNA