040420 - Los Angeles Weekend Edition

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APRIL 4-7, 2020 Volume 30 - No. 26 • 2 Sections – 22 Pages

Coronavirus cases around the world surpass 1 million by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

THE total number of recorded novel coronavirus (COVID-19) cases worldwide has surpassed one million on Thursday, April 2, three months after the first case was reported in Wuhan, China. Over 1,095,000 people around the world have contracted the disease, with 58,787 fatalities and 225,796 recoveries, as of Friday, April 3, according to the latest figures from the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center. The United States has recorded the most cases with over

275,500 or about one-quarter of the world’s total. Its official death toll has reached 5,316. The top states with the highest totals include New York (102,987), New Jersey (29,895), Michigan (12,744), California (12,004), and Massachusetts (10,402). Italy trails behind the U.S. with 115,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases. It also has the most number of fatalities with a record of 14,000 deaths. Spain, meanwhile, has reported 110,000 cases and 10,000 fatalities. The World Health Organization (WHO) on March 11 declared COVID-19 a pandemic,

and countries since then have implemented measures such as lockdowns and social distancing in an attempt to “flatten the curve.” LA County numbers Los Angeles County on Friday announced 11 new deaths and 521 new cases of COVID19, bringing the total to 4,566 cases and 89 deaths. Seven of the 11 deaths reported occurred in people over the age of 65; three people were between 41– 65 years old, and one person was between 18 to 40 years old. All reported underlying health conditions except for u PAGE A2

Duterte faces backlash over ‘shoot to kill’ order for quarantine violators

USA

DATELINE Pinay detective in Santa Rosa becomes first lineof-duty death related to coronavirus in CA FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

Marylou Armer, a 20-year veteran of the Santa Rosa Police Department, died on March 31. Photo courtesy of SRPD

A FILIPINA American detective of the Santa Rosa Police Department, who became California’s first line-of-duty death related to the novel coronavirus, was honcars through

ored with a procession of patrol the North Bay on Friday, April 3. Marylou Armer, 43, was a 20-year veteran of the department and succumbed to the illness

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CA Sen. Kamala Harris condemns anti-Asian attacks, doubles down on protections for front-liners CALIFORNIA Senator Kamala Harris denounced the rise of anti-Asian violence and discrimination in the United States and called on more protections for vulnerable populations, including front-line workers. Harris, the first South Asian American senator, said she’s confronted members of the Trump administration on its usage of calling the coronavirus, the “Chinese Virus” or “Wuhan Virus,” which in part has sparked the anti-Asian sentiments since the virus broke out. “It’s fueled the hate for the president of the United States to continue to insist on calling it, the Wuhan Virus or the China/Chinese virus. It is absolutely irresponsible. It is born out of ignorance,” the senator told the Asian u PAGE A3

STERN WARNING. A coffin that bears the sign “Please stay at home or stay inside this coffin” is displayed along Rev. Aglipay in Brgy. Pagasa in Mandaluyong City to warn the residents to stay indoors to avoid contracting the coronavirus disease. Philstar.com photo by Michael Varcas

by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

President Rodrigo Duterte

Malacañang photo by Ace Morandante

PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte came under fire after ordering the police and military to shoot quarantine violators dead during Luzon’s enhanced community quarantine due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19). “I will not hesitate. My orders are to the police and military,

also the barangay, that if there is trouble or the situation arises that people fight and your lives are on the line, shoot them dead,” he said Wednesday, April 1, during an impromptu televised address. This came after 21 Quezon City residents were arrested by the police for demanding help and protesting without a permit. “Do not intimidate government. Do not challenge government.

Matatalo kayo, sigurado (You’ll surely lose),” Duterte said. His statements have since been condemned by human rights groups who urged everyone not to view Duterte’s threats as empty. “At the very least, Duterte gives the police all the justification they need to commit human rights abuses against people who may be violating these COVID-19 regu PAGE A2

PH receives nearly $4-M health assistance from US to fight COVID-19 by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

THE U.S. Department of State on Tuesday, March 31, said that it has provided approximately $18.3 million in emergency health and humanitarian assistance to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states, including the Philippines. The local government received nearly $4 million, or approximately P200 million, in health assistance to help the government prepare laboratory and event-based surveillance, support technical experts for

response and preparedness, risk communication, infection prevention and control, and more. It added that the Department of Defense’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) provided locally sourced PPE, training, exercises, and laboratory equipment and materials to the country. The Philippines received the largest amount of financial assistance from the U.S. among the ASEAN members. The United States has invested more than $582 million in the Philippines’ health care system alone and nearly $4.5 billion u PAGE A3

LA County officials discuss immigrant rights, price gouging Fil-Am designers shift from dress making to sewing masks to fill shortage

Fil-Am designer Alexis Monsanto cuts fabric to make masks at his work studio in Los Angeles. Contributed photo

by KLARIZE

MEDENILLA AJPress

THE new coronavirus, and the ways in which it has drastically capsized daily life for people across the world, has become the most pressing, quite literally life or death, issue of the new decade. Global pandemics affect everyone regardless of demographic markers, but in a world where justice and equity aren’t guaranteed, some communities are more vulnerable than others. In a press telebriefing on Wednesday, April 1, Los Angeles County leaders discussed how the COVID-19 virus affects undocumented immigrants, one of the most vulnerable communities that, for years, has fought for its own basic, constitutional

rights in the United States. In regards to the concerns over public charge — the rule that could deny legal status to undocumented immigrants who receive public assistance — Daniel Sharp, the chief of the Office of Immigrant Affairs in the Department of Consumer and Business Affairs (DCBA), emphasized that seeking out health treatment related to COVID-19 does not count as a public charge. “We are in a health crisis and I do want to make very clear that US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has clarified in writing that any preventative services, testing or health treatment related to COVID-19 will not be factored into any future public charge,” Sharp told reporters on the call. u PAGE A5

by CHRISTINA

M. ORIEL

AJPress

FOR several Filipino American designers, the spring season usually brings in orders for wedding dresses, debutante gowns, and outfits for other special occasions. But amid the coronavirus pandemic, cities like Los Angeles have ordered the closure of nonessential businesses and put large gatherings on hold.

Instead of sitting idly by, designers are re-shifting their focus and putting their sewing machines to work to meet the national demand for face masks, including those for front-line health care workers. “It was natural for me to do this because of my training. I knew the need firsthand because most of my California brides are Filipina nurses. Many of my regular Filipino clients are in the u PAGE A2

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