Coronavirus controls in Beijing have been ramped up ahead of the February Winter Olympics (Photo: AFP/Kirill KUDRY) -
When Beijing won the bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics, crowds poured onto the streets of the Chinese capital bursting with national pride. Two decades later, locals are noticeably lukewarm about the Winter Games.
The build-up to the Beijing Winter Olympics, which start next Friday (Feb 4), has been largely muted, with an absence of the ubiquitous slogans, extravagant floral arrangements and flags from last time.
"The enthusiasm is not as strong as in 2008," said one Beijinger surnamed Liu, who preferred not to give his full name.
Winter Games generally attract less attention than Summer ones, but the apparent ennui could also be down to a changing Chinese perception of their country's power.
"In 2008, the economic stature of the country was not yet so high in the world so we thought hosting the Olympics was a symbol of national rebirth," Liu told AFP.
"Today, the Games are a sporting event like any other."
Since the 2008 Beijing Olympics, China has become the second-largest economy in the world and the warmer image it pushed back then has been replaced by a fiery nationalism.
Under President Xi Jinping, China has presented a far more muscular attitude to world affairs.
"2008 really was China showing that it was firmly on the global stage," said Heather Dichter, sports historian at De Montfort University in England.
Simon Chadwick, sports industry expert for Emlyon Business School, said: "It was almost like the relaunch of brand China - it was a coming-out party, it was an announcement that China was back on the global scene.
"China perhaps feels less dependent on the rest of the world (now) and in a position of strength, which means that it no longer worries so much about the external gaze."
In addition, with Beijing 2022 the second Olympics to be held under a coronavirus shadow, measures brought in to ensure that the Games are COVID-safe have left many of the capital's residents feeling locked out.
Two years of a global pandemic have upended the organisation of all big sports events, but China has maintained a strict "zero-COVID" policy, keeping its borders largely closed since spring 2020.
Beijing is counting on the Games to showcase the success of this approach, which it has repeatedly hailed as mirroring the success of its system of top-down governance.
"If there is a resurgence of the epidemic during these Games it will clearly be a failure for China and potentially backfire for Beijing," said Carole Gomez, specialist in sports geopolitics at the French Institute for International and Strategic Affairs.
The Games will have no international spectators and only a small number of invited domestic fans.
Foreign athletes will be locked in a tight bubble and all Olympic sites are sealed off from the rest of the city.
During a recent rehearsal of the opening ceremony at the "Bird's Nest" stadium, police blocked off all the streets leading to the main Olympic Park for as much as a kilometre away.
Local Jiang Haoliang told AFP he has little interest in the Olympics.
"Most people won't be able to attend in person," he shrugged.
The reduced enthusiasm for the Games might also be down to the simple fact that winter events generally arouse less public interest than Summer Olympics.
This is particularly true in China, where government efforts to build interest in winter sports have been ramped up in recent years but started from a nearly non-existent base.
And while China is a superpower in the Summer Games, it is a relative minnow in winter sports.
"Winter sports in China tend to be much more the domain of the affluent middle classes," said Chadwick.
"For some of the events, like curling, it might be somewhat an esoteric event that doesn't capture the popular imagination the same way."
But these Games also land in a very different China to the more outward facing country from two decades ago.
A more nationalistic Beijing is riding heightened tensions with Western nations and some of its neighbours, with confrontations escalating since Xi became president in 2013.
Foreign media has been facing mounting challenges in recent years in the country, while the space for any form of domestic criticism has tightened dramatically.
"The ideological heat has been turned up," said Chadwick. "And so we don't know how susceptible people have become to this portrayal of outsiders as somehow being hostile, as well as being potential transmitters of the virus."//CNA
FILE PHOTO: Paxlovid, a Pfizer's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pill, is seen manufactured in Ascoli, Italy, in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters on November 16, 2021. Pfizer/Handout via REUTERS -
Britain will start rolling out Pfizer's COVID-19 pill to vulnerable people next month, the health ministry said on Friday (Jan 28), targeting the treatment at people with compromised immune systems for whom the vaccine can be less effective.
The health ministry said that Pfizer's antiviral treatment Paxlovid, a combination of Pfizer's pill with an older antiviral ritonavir, will be made available to thousands of people from Feb 10.
"It is fantastic news that this new treatment, the latest cutting-edge drug that the NHS is rolling out through new COVID-19 medicine delivery units, will now be available to help those at highest risk of COVID-19," National Health Service medical director Stephen Powis said.
"Trials have shown it can reduce hospitalisation and risk of death by 88 per cent, meaning we'll be in the best position to save thousands of lives."
Britain has ordered 2.75 million courses of Paxlovid, and the government said that it would set out further details on access to the treatment soon but that people who are immunocompromised, cancer patients or those with Down’s Syndrome could be able to access it directly.
It is the second antiviral being rolled out in Britain after molnupiravir, a pill made by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics which is being deployed to patients through the Panoramic trial//CNA
FILE PHOTO: Taiwanese and Lithuanian flags are displayed at the Taiwanese Representative Office in Vilnius, Lithuania January 20, 2022. REUTERS/Janis Laizans/File Photo -
A senior US official will visit Lithuania next week to discuss enhancing economic cooperation with the small Baltic nation, which has faced pressure from China for boosting ties with Taiwan.
Under Secretary for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment Jose Fernandez will be in Vilnius from Sunday (Jan 30) to Tuesday, and in Brussels from Wednesday to Friday, where he will also discuss efforts to counter economic "coercion" with EU officials, the State Department said in a statement.
In Vilnius, he will discuss bilateral economic cooperation, and US "strong support for Lithuania in the face of political pressure and economic coercion from the People’s Republic of China," the statement said.
Fernandez will be accompanied by US Export-Import Bank officials to discuss implementation of a US$600 million memorandum of understanding to expand opportunities for US exporters and Lithuanian buyers in areas such as high-tech manufacturing, business services and renewable energy, according to the statement.
In Brussels, Fernandez will discuss transatlantic trade and investment through the US-EU Trade and Technology Council, the statement said.
The United States, which is seeking to push back against growing Chinese influence worldwide, has backed Lithuania in its dispute with China over Taiwan, a self-ruled island Beijing claims as its own.
China downgraded its diplomatic relationship with Lithuania and pressed multinationals to sever ties with the country after Taiwan opened a representative office in Vilnius last year called the Taiwanese Representative Office in Lithuania, rather than using the word Taipei as is more common.
EU authorities launched a challenge at the World Trade Organization (WTO) on Thursday, accusing China of discriminatory trade practices against EU member Lithuania that they say threaten the integrity of the bloc's single market.
Lithuania's Foreign Ministry said on Thursday it hopes its trade dispute with China will be solved with consultations between China and the EU//CNA
A photo of Iceland's neighbourhoods. (Photo: AFP) -
Iceland aims to lift all its COVID-19 curbs by mid-March, which would end a three-stage easing plan that the government presented on Friday (Jan 28).
"There are real changes in our fight against the epidemic, both because the virus itself has changed and because of good vaccination coverage," Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir told a press conference.
From midnight on Friday, the cap on public gatherings will be lifted from 10 to 50 people, and bars and nightclubs, which have been closed for two weeks, will be allowed to reopen until midnight, as will restaurants.
Swimming pools, sports halls and ski resorts will also be able to accommodate up to 75 per cent of their maximum capacity, currently, they can take up to 50 per cent, and the social distancing rule will be reduced to 1m instead of 2m.
The new restrictions will remain in place until Feb 24, when the second phase will be triggered.
The capacity of public gatherings will then be increased to 200 people and swimming pools, sports halls and ski resorts will be able to function normally again.
At the same time, quarantine and isolation rules will be dropped.
"During the lifting of the measures, it can be expected that the number of domestic infections will temporarily increase, which may also increase the number of those who become seriously ill, and disrupt the operations of many businesses," the government warned in a statement.
The Icelandic authorities then intend to lift all domestic restrictions by Mar 14, provided no new strains of the virus are discovered or an increase in severe cases puts the healthcare system under pressure.
More than 80 per cent of Iceland's population over the age of five have been fully vaccinated and 52 per cent of those over 16 have already received the third dose.
The subarctic island nation has recorded 64,486 confirmed cases and 46 deaths linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The country, which has seen about 1,300 new confirmed cases a day in recent weeks, already announced a relaxation of its quarantine rules on Tuesday//CNA
A health worker inoculates a Dhaka student against Covid-19 (Photo: AFP/File/Munir Uz zaman) -
The United States began shipping another 7.4 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines to Bangladesh on Friday (Jan 28), a US official told AFP.
"Thanks to the US commitment to playing a leading role in ending the pandemic everywhere, the United States is shipping 7,434,180 doses of Pfizer vaccine to Bangladesh," a White House official said, asking not to be identified.
The latest shipment - made through Covax, the global distribution initiative co-led by public-private partnership Gavi - came as totals of US donations rose above 400 million worldwide.
Washington has pledged 1.1 billion shots to the rest of the world - more than any other country - and has already sent vaccines to countries ranging from Guatemala to Papua New Guinea.
The US shots often cross paths with shipments from China and Russia in what has been dubbed "vaccine diplomacy," although the official insisted that the US contributions "do not come with strings attached."
Bangladesh has recorded about 1.75 million COVID-19 cases and more than 28,000 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. One of the world's poorest countries, Bangladesh has fully vaccinated 36 percent of its approximately 165 million people.
The United States had already dispatched 28.4 million doses of vaccines to Bangladesh, not counting the latest batch, according to Kaiser Family Foundation's database//CNA
FILE PHOTO: Passenger walk next to a screen displaying face mask rules at Sao Paulo International Airport amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and after Omicron has become the dominant coronavirus variant in the country, in Guarulhos, Brazil January 12, 2022. REUTERS/Roosevelt Cassio -
Brazilian health regulator Anvisa on Friday (Jan 28) approved the sale of COVID-19 self-tests in drugstores across the country as the Omicron variant of the coronavirus is causing a record surge in new infections.
Anvisa directors said their decision aims to increase testing to help reduce the contagion rate in Brazil.
At home COVID test kits are already widely used in Europe and the United States. Until now, Brazil did not allow them to be used to detect viral diseases that require compulsory notification to health authorities.
Brazil on Thursday reported a record 228,954 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, along with 672 deaths, the highest toll since early October last year.
The South American country has registered 24,764,838 confirmed cases since the pandemic began, while the official death toll stood at 625,085 as of Thursday. Both are among the highest tolls in the world//CNA
FILE PHOTO: A hooded man holds a laptop computer as cyber code is projected on him in this illustration picture taken on May 13, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo -
France's justice ministry on Friday was hit by a cyberattack of unknown scale and an investigation has been launched, news agency AFP reported, citing multiple sources.
"There was something, but not of large extent, no criminal files have been affected", a report cited a source close to the investigation as saying//CNA
FILE PHOTO: Representations of the Ripple, Bitcoin, Etherum and Litecoin virtual currencies are seen on a PC motherboard in this illustration picture, February 14, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo -
Blockchain company Valereum said on Friday it would buy 90per cent of the Gibraltar Stock Exchange (GSX) to create the world's first bourse where shares and cryptoassets can be traded.
Valereum, listed on London's Aquis Exchange, said it will need approval from Gibraltar regulators to allow listed instruments on the GSX access to a regulated pool of crypto capital.
It gave no price for the transaction.
"The GSX will be the world's first exchange to create a seamless and fully regulated bridge that links the fiat and crypto markets," Valereum said in a statement.
"This will give listed instruments on the GSX access to a regulated pool of crypto capital that is not available anywhere else, and it will give crypto currency holders the ability to have a direct, verifiable holding in fiat securities."
Valereum announced last November it had signed an option to acquire up to 80per cent of GSX, subject to approval from the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission. Friday's announcement increases the holding to 90per cent.
Valereum acquired Gibraltar fund and trusts services group Juno in December to underpin the bridge between crypto and fiat currencies//CNA
A volunteer looks on at Yanqing National Sliding Centre ahead of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics in Yanqing, China, January 28, 2022. REUTERS/Edgar Su -
The Canadian Olympic Committee said on Friday five members from their 246-person Olympic delegation in Beijing have been placed in COVID-19 protocols ahead of next week's Winter Olympics.
The COC announced the numbers in a news release to outline its plans for sharing information related to COVID-19 cases or potential cases during the Feb. 4-20 Beijing Olympics.
"We are following the Beijing 2022 Playbook rules," the COC said. "Part of our strategy was to arrive early to allow time for confirmation testing and, if necessary, the Medical Expert Panel process to unfold."
Canada's delegation at the Beijing Olympics includes 215 athletes plus support staff. The names of the individuals placed in COVID-19 protocols were not disclosed.
The COC said it would not share names of anyone in protocol unless an athlete who is unable to compete due to a confirmed positive case wishes to disclose their situation.
Beginning on the first day of the Olympics, the COC said it will provide a daily update of the number of members of the Team Canada delegation in COVID-19 protocols//CNA
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a news conference at the Alliance's headquarters in Brussels, Belgium Jan 12, 2022. (Photo: REUTERS/Johanna Geron) -
Russia could conduct a "wide range" of aggressive acts against Ukraine, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Friday (Jan 28), but he emphasised the window was still open to a peaceful and negotiated resolution.
While the military alliance is still not sure what the Kremlin might do, Stoltenberg told an event hosted by the US think-tank the Atlantic Council that Russia had several options available.
"Cyber (warfare) is one, coup efforts to topple the government in Kiev, sabotage - they have intelligence officers working inside Ukraine as we speak. So we need to be prepared for a wide range of different forms or aggressive actions by Russia against Ukraine," Stoltenberg said.
But he added he was "reluctant to be going too far into speculating, because the aim now is to try to reduce tensions ... We call on Russia to sit down and engage in talks to prevent these kind of scenarios and to find a political solution".
The West is on tenterhooks over a mass deployment of over 100,000 Russian troops on Ukraine's borders, raising fears that Moscow might be planning a further invasion of its neighbour.
NATO has held several meetings on the perceived threat, and has another planned for Feb 16 to Feb 17 of allied defence ministers.
Stoltenberg admitted "there are some differences between allies" on what support should be extended to Ukraine, which is not a member of NATO and would not receive any deployment of combat troops.
The US, Britain and Canada are providing weapons and military trainers, while others, such as Germany, are holding back.
"There's no certainty about the Russian plans," he said.
"From the NATO side, we are ready to engage in political dialogue. But we're also ready to respond if Russia chooses an armed conflict, confrontation. So we are ready for both options," he said.
"We are working hard for the best peaceful political solution, but we also prepared for the worst."//CNA