December 30, 2020 - January 1, 2021 Volume 30 - No. 103 • 2 Sections - 14 Pages
Duterte warns US: No COVID vaccines, no VFA by LEILA
B. SALAVERRIA Inquirer.net
MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte told the United States that he would push through with his plan to terminate the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) unless it was able to provide the Philippines with vaccines against the coronavirus. Duterte noted that the VFA was on the brink of termination, and U.S. troops would have to leave the Philippines unless he allows them to stay. Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte
Malacañang photo by Alfred Frias
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Fil-Am health care workers remind community to stay vigilant as coronavirus risk remains high
USA
DATELINE Non-profit offers US citizenship test materials in 9 languages, including Tagalog FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
THE path to U.S. citizenship may be more difficult as the naturalization test now features an expanded version of the civics portion — but a free educational tool is helping applicants prepare with study materials in their native language. USAHello, a non-profit dedicated to providing an online center of information and education for refugees, immigrants, and asylum seekers, has released translations for the 2020 version of the U.S. citizenship test in nine languages on its website (usahello. org). The organization partnered with Translators Without Borders to translate the civics test in Spanish, Arabic, French, Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Tagalog, Swahili, and Vietnamese.
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More than 2,900 health care workers died this year — and the gov’t barely kept track MORE than 2,900 U.S. health care workers have died in the COVID-19 pandemic since March, a far higher number than that reported by the government, according to a new analysis by KHN and The Guardian. Fatalities from the coronavirus have skewed young, with the majority of victims under age 60 in the cases for which there is age data. People of color have been disproportionately affected, accounting for about 65% of deaths in cases in which there is race and ethnicity data. After conducting interviews with relatives and friends of around 300 victims, KHN and The Guardian learned that one-third of the fatalities involved concerns over inadequate personal protective equipment. Many of the deaths — about 680 — occurred in New York and New Jersey, which were hit hard early in the pandemic. Signifi-
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FIREWORKS ON DISPLAY. Cyclists pedal past the fireworks on display for sale along Marikina-Infanta Highway in Antipolo City on Saturday, December 26. Metro Manila mayors and the Department of the Interior and Local Government expressed support to President Duterte’s plan to totally ban fireworks. PNA photo by Joey O. Razon
by CHRISTINA
M. ORIEL
AJPress
Dr. Antonio Moya, a neurologist, recently received his first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine as part of LA County’s campaign to vaccinate 10,000 frontline health workers by New Year’s Eve. Contributed photo
AS COVID-19 vaccines continue to be administered in the Los Angeles area, Filipino American health care workers are sharing their experiences and are reminding the community to continue following public health orders while ringing in the New Year. Dr. Antonio Moya, a neurologist and public health advocate,
recently received his jab as part of LA County’s campaign to vaccinate 10,000 frontline health workers by New Year’s Eve. “It is such a gift and blessing to be among the first in the country to receive this vaccine because I want to be able to take care of all my patients knowing that I am more protected from COVID-19,” Moya told the Asian Journal. “I knew that working in the inpatient hospital and ICU setting would put me on the
list to receive the vaccine early, however I think it is amazing that a vaccine for this pandemic was created so quickly using scientific rigor and scientific method.” Like what many other health care workers have shared, Moya felt soreness at the injection site and some tiredness afterward, but was able to exercise the next day. Though the Fil-Am physician now has another layer of pro-
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282 added to DFA’s count of Filipinos abroad with COVID-19 FOREIGN affairs officials saw 282 more Filipinos abroad contracting the coronavirus last week in total, bringing the number of infected to 12,828. DFA had acknowledged a 65.03%-surge in cases from December 20 to 26, compared to the additional 323 the week before that. The agency said it was a “slight increase” despite being more than half of the numbers it used for comparison. The highest reported increase last week was at 189 cases on December 21.
By Sunday, December 27, it reported no new infections and deaths, only a single recovery to bring the number of patients who got well at 8,342. To date, the fatality count has stayed at 911, while those continuing to receive treatment are at 3,575. The Middle East in its 7,654 cases continues to have the most number of Filipinos infected, along with 578 deaths and 4,674 recoveries.
Barangay Police Security Officers strictly implement health and quarantine protocols at the
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barangay is under lockdown from December 23 to January 3, 2021 due to a rise in COVID-19 infections in the area. PNA photo by Robert Oswald P. Alfiler
PAL readies fleet for vaccine transport Return to strict lockdown a ‘possibility’ in PH by RICHMOND
MERCURIO Philstar.com
“PAL is readying its fleet of wide body aircraft for the task of transporting vaccines to the Philippines and around the region,” the airline said. Philstar.com file photo
MANILA, Philippines — Flag carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) is preparing its fleet to help in the transport of COVID-19 vaccines to the country and around the region. “PAL is readying its fleet of wide body aircraft for the task of transporting vaccines to the Philippines and around the region,” it said. The carrier has continuously been operating repatriation flights that bring home stranded overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and other Filipinos from all over the world, along with allcargo flights to transport essential goods. In terms of commercial flights, PAL has also been increasing do-
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by CATHERINE
S. VALENTE ManilaTimes.net
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte on Saturday, December 26 raised the possibility that the government might reimpose strict lockdown measures should the new coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) from the United Kingdom (UK) spread in the Philippines. “Actually, iyong lockdown is a possibility. I said we are making some projections but if the severity in number would demand that we take corrective measures immediately, then we just have to go back to lockdown,” Duterte said in a meeting with members of his Cabinet and infectious disease experts.
“Pagkarumami sila (When they multiply) with the new strain, and in the meantime that we are not able to confront them effectively, I mean the virus, well just have to… tama iyan (that’s right) it depends on the severity in number. Kasi kapag marami na we do not have the antidote on how to kill those variants, we’re going to have a problem there,” he added. The new variant emerged in the UK and Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said that it “may be up to 70% more transmissible than the original version of the disease.” It has already been detected in other countries such as Rome, Denmark, Netherlands, Australia
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